Christmas Miracle Stories

Thanksgiving Time

Scratchy crunch of deadened leaves;

Musky scents of garden’s past;

Fading blues and reds and greens;

Shadows’ longer-reaching cast.

 

 

Spicy ciders, chocolate hot;

Comfort foods and pies and cake;

Fudge with nuts or maybe not;

Laden tables we can take.

 

Cozy fires with dancing flames

Mesmerize our dreams and thought;

Sweet traditions, years the same;

Sure reminders we were taught.

 

 

Heart’s desire is to express

In a place of grateful prayer

God’s abundance, His goodness;

And His kind and gentle care.

 

 

Poem: Connie Miller Pease; Images: wikimediacommons.jpg; Pexels.com; thanksgiving-1060214_960_720-pixabay-cco-public-domain.jpg

Shattering Stone

Whenever I fault myself or someone else for giving in to anger, I think of Moses. He’s right near the top, if you’re thinking about righteous people in the history of, not one generation or even five, but in the history of time. In the history of the world! Shy? I don’t know about that, but he wasn’t a fan of public speaking. Maybe he stuttered. Maybe he was just slow in putting words together. Maybe he wasn’t very articulate. Maybe his neck got blotchy.

At any rate, he came up with excuse after excuse regarding why he shouldn’t be the one to lead Israel out of Egypt. Who could blame him? With the Ten Commandments overshadowing everything, it’s easy to forget that he killed an Egyptian guy. Actually, that guy – the guy that Moses killed and hid in the sand – was overseeing the hard labor of some Israeli men who, by this time, were slaves. That came about out of jealousy and fear a Pharaoh felt, which is a good reminder that covetousness has no place in a decent person’s character, but I digress.

By the time everyone had either experienced or witnessed the plagues, Israel had crossed the Red Sea on dry ground while God parted it in two, and Moses had gone up on the mountain and fasted 40 days, there was some water under the bridge, you know? So when he came down and saw the folks that he’d led out of Egypt – the ones he’d put his own neck on the line for, the ones God was doing all sorts of beyond amazing things for – had made a golden calf and were worshiping it – worshiping it – you might understand his distress, frustration, and anger.

So, as I was saying, I think of Moses. Who. Broke. What. God. Wrote. In. Stone. Moses slammed those commandments down so hard, they shattered. Stone shattered! He must’ve really crushed it. He was mad. Witnessing corruption will do that to a person. But think how embarrassing it would be to be the one to shatter the 10 Commandments. It makes me like him even a little more. Fortunately, God made a second set for him to give to the people, and he put it in the Ark. Safe and sound.

There’s a lot to be righteously angry about these days. If you are, you’re in good company. I mean, I didn’t even mention Jesus overturning the tables at the Temple. I hope our anger is for good and not evil. And if we’re having trouble telling one from the other, we can just read the Ten Commandments, one of which is Thou Shalt Not Covet. Oh the irony.

References: Exodus 4:10-15; Exodus 2:11-12; Exodus 32:19; Images: SnappyGoat.com

How Tor Saved My Garden (conclusion)

I didn’t want to think it, but I had to admit the evidence wasn’t exactly looking good. A body had been buried under my deck – a deck that hadn’t existed until the previous owner who, by the way, had asked me to help burn a rather large leaf pile in the general location where Tor had dug it up. Of course, it could’ve been coincidental. Hope and doubt changed places the more I thought about it.

Then there was the issue of a bag of gold coins; money I was loath to part with. However, I was more averse to parting with my good name. Even if no one discovered my secret, I would know it. The Bible verse, “A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches” had been drummed into my skull throughout childhood, and was now pestering me like a very determined mosquito.

I got up, washed my lunch dishes, and grabbed the leash to take Tor out for a walk until I could safely let him in my backyard again. But as I headed for him, leash in hand, he bolted, and knocked over my coffee table. Darn dog! Now I had a 3 legged coffee table – one I wouldn’t be able to replace soon at the same great price I’d gotten from Susan, my house’s former owner. I snapped his leash on rather more aggressively than usual. It didn’t take long for Tor to do his business. That was one good thing about my dog. He’s focused. By the time we got back to the house, so was I.

I called the local police and asked if someone could drop by. Good thing I live in a small town with a bored police force. Thinking I’d better make the living room presentable, I picked up the coffee table leg to see if there was any chance Super Glue could come to my rescue. Ha! No need! It appeared I could just screw the thing in. As I congratulated myself on this bonus and turned the table upside down, a slip of paper fell out of the leg. I should’ve known they were hollow. You don’t get much for five bucks. Weird, though.

Squinting, I peered inside the leg. Nope. Nothing else. I unfolded the paper. It said: Hypocrisy is the audacity to preach integrity from a den of corruption. – Wes Fesler. Okay. I’m not much of a sports fanatic, but why was a quote from him written down? And stuffed in the leg of my end table?

Sitting back on my knees, I stared into space, then quickly screwed in the leg and unscrewed the other three. I looked into their small openings and shook each one. The first two were as empty as an old sock, but another slip of paper fell out of the third one on my last shake. I barred my door to bribery, and knocked it to the floor. He’ll eat his gold in silence and bother me no more. Who wrote it? The former owner, Susan? I righted the table as the doorbell rang.

By the time I’d given sweet tea to the officer, told him and showed him everything, including the two slips of paper, I was ready for an old movie. I was also richer. Detective Timmons informed me they’d do a cursory investigation, but most likely I’d be able to keep the money under the ‘finders keepers’ law. That’s not really what it’s called, but that’s what it amounts to.

As far as Simon – well let’s just say after snipping some pieces here and there and filling some plastic bags with them, Timmons confided to me he suspected it was a fellow by the name of – O why should I spread tales? Suffice it to say that he’d caused trouble for town folks for a long time, including corrupting a number of folks who didn’t have it in them to turn down a dollar; and the whole town should be grateful someone finally put a stop to it. The coroner (who I suspect had been on the bullying end of the not so dearly departed) didn’t seem interested in storing the body after doing her thing and talking to Timmons. I’d made the mistake of calling him Simon, so she asked if I had a preference for his final resting place. Small towns. Ya gotta love ’em.

 

It’s been a couple of months since. Tor is free to roam the back yard again. I planted my garden and, for the first time ever, its blooms are brilliant.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Images: Pexels.com

How Tor Saved My Garden (cont. 1)

Well, that’s not entirely true. Can something be kind of true? I mean, at the moment I wished I hadn’t looked, but after I examined it more closely, I was of two minds. My mother used to use that phrase a lot. My father would always reply that he only needed one. Getting back to the thing Tor dragged out from under the deck – I guess I’d have to say that I was glad for part of what it was and horrified at the other part. That’s not kind of true. It’s absolutely a true statement. Score one for clarity.

I knelt down and looked at it. Okay, I admit I jumped back a little after my first glimpse. I grabbed a big stick and, scrunching my face, poked at it. Best guess, originally 145 lbs and maybe 5 feet 9 inches, or 8 or 6. It was hard to be sure. It looked like the body had been buried long enough for the clothes to decay which, in the climate I lived in would take longer than, say, the tropics. Then again, I’m no mortician.

What looked like it had been some sort of bag was stuffed in the mouth of – oh – for the sake of my sanity I’d begun calling him Simon. Giving him a name preserved my humanity (and his) to my way of thinking. The bag was nearly decayed, so its contents were visible. I looked around at my neighbor’s yards to see if anyone was watching me. Fortunately, no one was out. Who knew what was behind the curtains, but as far as I could see, there didn’t seem to be any activity. And really. If I hadn’t been up close, I would’ve thought it was a big pile of dirt. I hurried into the house for a baggie, then out again, and stuffed it full of the decayed bag’s contents. Laying the baggie carefully on the deck’s railing, I grabbed my gardening gloves and shoved the body back under the deck as well as I could.

I know. I should have called the police. But here was the problem. The bag had a decent amount of money in it; money I wasn’t altogether sure I was ready to part with without some consideration. I coaxed Tor into the house and hosed him off in the tub, but not before pouring the gold coins into a mixing bowl and covering them with the white vinegar I’d gotten a week before to clean my washing machine. It’s a good thing I procrastinated.

Once Tor was cleaned up and I was, too, I gave him a second breakfast and sat down to think this through. Whoever had buried the body there must have buried it before the deck was built because it would’ve been nigh unto impossible to do it flattened out underneath a structure. I started thinking about who had owned the house before me. It was known as the K house, I think because whoever built it had a name starting with K. Once upon a time people probably called it by name, but by the time I came along, it had become just K. I tried to recall what I could of the person who owned it before me.

She was actually, a sweet woman, big-boned some would say, and a little bookish. It was by now close to noon. I got up to make myself a sandwich. Don’t judge. I’d washed and I was hungry. And as I was spreading mayonnaise, my thoughts drifted back to the first time I had met the previous owner. I’d seen an ad on Craigslist for an end table and had come to take a look at it. She’d invited me in, and we actually had begun something of a friendship of convenience. Every once in a while she’d call me to do something for her – burn a leaf pile or change her furnace filter – and then we’d sit down to tea and cookies and she’d send some home with me. I’m not much of a baker, so it was a nice little perk.

But as I was thinking about it, I remembered that she hadn’t always had a deck on the back of the house. I remembered it because the first time she’d had me over to manage the burning leaf pile for her, I’d thought to myself that it was too close to the house. I’d even told her so. It was after that she’d burned them farther back. Huh.

to be continued . . .

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Image: Pixabay through Pexels.com

How Tor Saved My Garden

Hi. My name is Ginger Teigh. Yes, it sounds like “tea”. Yes, my parents thought it was funny when they named me – each of them having safe names like Gary and Ramona. No, I don’t mind when people ask. Yes, I do get tired of the jokes.

I was sitting outside on my rather small deck – large enough to hold  two sun chairs with pink and green Hawaiian print, a small stump I lugged up the two steps from the yard on which to put my sweet tea, a couple of flowering plants I picked up on sale at Sam’s Club, and the dog. It’s not as small as you might imagine. My dog is huge. And my dog is the problem.

He likes to dig. Fine. Dig away. I’m not in the market for a layout in Birds and Blooms, anyway, being the type of gardener with a less than admirable success rate. See, I have all sorts of grand plans every spring. I buy dirt. Whoever thought of selling dirt is probably very wealthy and living somewhere where someone takes care of every speck of dirt for him. He probably sits on a pristine beach and drinks something with an umbrella in it. I don’t imagine it’s sweet tea. Anyway, I drag the bags over to my “gardens”, cut them open, and dump. Then I smooth the area with a hoe, and lovingly plant delightful little plants in even rows. And as the spring turns to summer, I watch them die a slow death. It’s tradition. But I digress.

So the dog – I might as well tell you his name – Tornado (Tor, for short) – had been digging up a storm under the deck for two days. This morning as I was sipping my morning brew of green tea and Mountain Dew, I noticed he was heaving and panting; even whining a little. That’s unusual for Tor. He’s not a whiner. He came out from under the deck as black as sin a couple of times, looked at me, and returned to his digging.

His project had by now become my project. I wondered how big a hole he was making and was wondering how many bags of dirt I’d have to buy to refill them. Then I wondered if it was necessary. Who looks under a deck anyway, right?

I was on my second cup when Tor pulled a huge bag of something out where I could see it. I hopped down to the yard to have a closer look. And immediately wished I hadn’t.

to be continued . . .

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Image: Pexels.com

Opening The Door

He scraped the key back and forth in the lock again. Nothing. He rubbed the tip of his nose with the side of his finger and looked at his watch. Humph. Seventeen minutes. The first minute was annoying, the next four – irritating. The ten after that were demoralizing.

It shouldn’t be this hard! He had the key. He was in front of the door. Sure, the lock might be a bit old. Used many times? No doubt.

He took the key out of the lock and rubbed it on his pants, then between his fingers. He prayed. Again. Skritch skritch . . . faster, then slower . . . skritch skritch skritch. He pulled the key out, dropping as he did so. His fingers scraped on hard cement as he retrieved it from the step. Sighing, he put it in his pocket and started down the stairs.

This wasn’t the first time he’d worked to get through the door, but maybe it should be his last. He was tired. Disconsolate, truth be told. He glanced over his shoulder and stopped.

Once more. Just once more, then he would leave. For good, this time. He trudged back up the stairs, inserted the key, and . . . click. It turned like new. No. Really? Really. He turned the knob and opened the door.

It is labour indeed that puts the difference on everything.     

Image: Wikipedia.org; Quote: John Locke

Doorkeeper III: Hold The Door Open (cont. 3)

George Washington is sometimes referred to as the father of our country. Though he was born into a family just a step below nobility and could have lived an easy life, he worked first as a surveyor, was appointed as a military ambassador at the age of 21, and learned as he rose through the ranks. He took a stand against what had become tyrannical British governmental rule; suffered a brutal and desperate winter at Valley Forge; endured much hardship as he led troops across the Delaware, pulling off a surprise attack and victory at Trenton; and eventually became the first president of the United States of America. It was a post he did not seek nor  want. He wasn’t seeking fame. He was just doing what he considered to be his duty. He put his life at risk for the sake of opening the door of freedom to a new nation. If we end up standing next to G.W. at judgment, how do we compare to that kind of courage?

We have a responsibility to welcome. We also have a responsibility to warn.

When I thought a loved one was in danger, I yelled at the top of my lungs. I didn’t want him to die. I knew I was too weak to help, but at least I could call his name to give him an idea of where safety was despite the dark.

The door was the one thing between Pat and me and the unknown. We were glad it was there, but alarmed that people we loved were on the other side. Whether we needed to protect them or they needed to protect us wasn’t something to which we gave much consideration. We just knew separation was scary.

Ezekiel 3:18-21 tells us the following: When I say to a wicked person, ‘You will surely die,’ and you do not warn them or speak out to dissuade them from their evil ways in order to save their life, that wicked person will die for their sin, and I will hold you accountable for their blood. But if you do warn the wicked person and they do not turn from their wickedness or from their evil ways, they will die for their sin; but you will have saved yourself. “Again, when a righteous person turns from their righteousness and does evil, and I put a stumbling block before them, they will die. Since you did not warn them, they will die for their sin. The righteous things that person did will not be remembered, and I will hold you accountable for their blood. But if you do warn the righteous person not to sin and they do not sin, they will surely live because they took warning, and you will have saved yourself.”

Now we all agree that standing at the church door and screaming frantically to passersby to come in before it’s too late is not an effective way to influence others in heaven’s direction except for several of a select few who are probably on certain types of medication. However, we need to have that passionate of a drive about the gospel. There are folks who are doing a pretty impressive 5k Open Water Swim to the lake of fire. Is there some way we can throw them a life jacket without knocking them under? I don’t have any fool-proof answers, and there are people with more knowledge than I have who have written plenty of books and given enough seminars on the subject to provide us all with some ideas. In fact, this is where Christians find themselves conflicted. What is the best way to extend Christ’s invitation? Do we keep it happy and easy and fun? Do we just put it out there, hell fire and all? Part of our preferences come from our own personality, some stem from cultural norms, and, if we’re willing to admit it, some is due to our belief about how long we have until the end. I tend to be one way one day and another the next. What about you?

What I do know is that we need to be in emergency mode about now. Time is short. Go ahead. Be friendly. Invite your un-churched neighbor to do un-churchy stuff. Be approachable. All good. But one of those times, that neighbor needs to hear the truth about Jesus, and they need to hear it before it’s too late. They need to receive information about God’s love, but also about His expectations. Standing at the door, making friends, and smiling at them as they keep swimming the hot water 5k isn’t exactly neighborly. We need to stand at the door and give them an idea where safety is despite the dark. We need to stand at the door and tell the truth (the whole truth and nothing but the truth). Our job as a door keeper is to hold the door open! Don’t make it any harder than necessary to get in. And . . . invite them back for happy hour!

Images: Pexels.com

Doorkeeper III: Hold The Door Open (cont. 2)

A doorkeeper has different jobs depending on what side of the door he’s standing. While he welcomes small and great alike, he has a duty to also monitor potential danger and takes steps to protect.

There’s a little cabin up in northern Minnesota nestled among trees and sitting on the edge of a lake that is a second home to me. As years have passed and families of other cabin owners have expanded their cabins, our little cabin has, for the most part, remained the same. It’s a rectangle, a sketch my dad drew when we were all young. The windows are right where he drew squares on the rectangle and the door at the back of the cabin is on one side. Up until not too long ago there was a screen door, too; the kind made up of mostly screen, that closed with a satisfying slam if you didn’t shut it yourself, and with a hook for a lock.

It was to this cabin I was allowed to bring a friend one week when we were in high school. My friend, Pat, was the kind of friend you could depend on to be in the moment with you. She was full of energy and fun.

One night we were alone in the cabin. I don’t know where anyone in my family was. I do know they were far enough away to be inaccessible. It didn’t matter. We were having a grand time. But the evening was wearing on, and the cabin seemed kind of quiet. When night falls up there among the uninhabited pines it gets dark; the so dark you can’t see your hand in front of your face kind of dark.

We opened the door and peered into blackness. We could see nothing. Then we noticed something unusual. It was some sort of splotch, some mark, some stain right on the screen. Being the reasonable and imaginative teenage girls we were (no doubt Pat having the better part of reason and I having the better part of imagination), we decided that my brother had been walking to the cabin and been mauled by a bear. The stain must be his blood spattered during the awful encounter! I kid you not. It made perfect, if somewhat alarming, sense to us. After some panicked conversation, I yelled his name through the screen. A short moment, then the sound of feet running down the long driveway, then the blessed sound of his out-of-breath voice. Seeing his un-mauled, annoyed self in front of us we rather sheepishly confessed our concern. He was not amused. No. No, it never occurred to us there was rust on the screen. Why would it when there were so many other possibilities?

Some threats are imagined. But – oh yes – some are very real.

If you have the type of personality that is pretty laid back and are someone who is bothered by very little, I have one question. What is it like, dude? Make that two questions. Has any of that changed during these action-packed last days? (Or the un-edited equivalent, “Are you nuts?!”) We have a plethora of information bouncing around the world of which the truth is uncertain. We have Christians imprisoned and beheaded and set on fire. Right here in the United States, a nation that prides itself on freedom, some who must sit through senate hearings in order to be confirmed for a job to which they were appointed by the president are asked about their Christian beliefs as though such beliefs will prevent them from carrying out their job in a manner fair to others. We have schools, colleges, and universities that have opened their hallowed halls to indoctrination mixed in with their teaching. We have cyber attacks. We have souls marching in the streets for justice while destroying property and attacking people. And we even have some of our churches sitting back and approving. Doorkeeper, do not let your church be guilty of that.

As a doorkeeper you welcome. But, when necessary, you also warn.

to be continued . . .

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Images: Pexels.com

 

Doorkeeper III: Hold The Door Open (cont. 1)

It doesn’t matter what gifts you believe you have or don’t have, because you, my friend, are a doorkeeper just now. A doorkeeper doesn’t need a special gift of greeting. Even a shy person can find it in his or her heart to say hello and smile.

We have the most wonderful thing in the world! It’s the Lord Jesus Christ and the promise of salvation for the life after this one. Hear me now. The life after this one is real. There are people outside the church doors who don’t know that. Whatever it is they think or have been taught, life after death remains a mystery. Maybe it exists, they might think, maybe it doesn’t. If heaven exists, they might think, everyone can go; a good God wouldn’t keep people out, would He? People think all sorts of things. Perhaps you’ve thought some of those very things yourself. There are so many incorrect assumptions flying around out there, so much Biblical illiteracy, so much untruth, a Bible-believing church is a great place to rectify at least some of it. So there is something much more important than wanting our church to grow or having people think of us as friendly or getting a write-up in the local paper. Eternity is at stake. A doorkeeper might not be a preacher, but a doorkeeper has what a preacher does not: First access!

We’re the ones who get to give someone who approaches the door a smile and maybe a handshake. We’re the first ones privy to the astounding news available to someone who might be exposed to it for the first time. We are the ones who, with grateful hearts, get to beam our love to both new and seasoned attendees! There is no better place they could have chosen to come to! We’re the ones who get to send up silent prayers for each one stepping over the threshold. Can’t you see our whole Doorkeeper 101 class nodding a friendly nod and blinking invisible love, joy, and peace darts from our place at the door?

And the host at the Blue Fox? He reinforced one more thing. He invited us back for . . . wait for it . . . Happy Hour.

to be continued . . .

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Image: Pexels.com