We glided on the groomed trail, our skis squeaking on the snow. Under the stars on this clear and frosty night, we were caught in a Christmas card moment. Pine
trees trimmed with white bordered the trail. Branches swept downward
in a graceful arc and crowded us into single file. We huffed up the hills, my
three children climbing easier and huffing less than I, and glided
thankfully down their other sides.
Our cheeks rosy with health, we occasionally
stepped off the path to let others whiz by, sacrificing our momentum for
courtesy. One man, a scowl on his face to show he was in earnest about this
skiing business, groaned when he passed us on a straight patch. I wonder if he
sees the trees, I thought. Or the stars. Does he recognize the snow under his feet
as a gift from a Creator with a universe full of design to his credit? Can he
read God’s message to him in the aroma of pine, in the moon that makes shadows
dance around us, in the untouched snow to our left and right that covers a
naked and embarrassed earth with its blanket of purity?
An
ancient, man, Job, was asked this question by God, “Have you entered into the
treasures of the snow?” He meant, “Do you get it? Do you get the message of the
snow?” (Job 38 is a magnificent piece of writing.)
King
David of Israel, wrote this:
"He gives snow like wool . .
." (Psalm 147:16). Wool is used to make warm coverings.
Snow, like a woollen coat, covers the ground. Every human needs a spiritual
covering – a blanket of purity. Everyone who asks receives one.
Isaiah brings the whole of Biblical thought on snow to a conclusion. “Though your sins be as scarlet,” he wrote, “they
shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as
wool” (Isaiah 1:18).
Here’s
the message of the snow:
Jesus will take your sins far away from you and leave you covered in a warm blanket of purity – you'll be like newly fallen snow, unmarked, as if you’d never sinned at all.
The
memory of this golden night on the ski trails at Hiawatha, one of life’s
perfect moments, clings to me. We weren’t the best skiers out that night, my
darlings and I, or on any night after that, but when others limped home
chilled to the bone, we limped pleasured to the core by God’s amazing gift of
creation.
Rose McCormick Brandon lives in Caledonia, Canada
with husband Douglas. Her book, One Good Word Makes all the Difference is
available at http://writingfromtheheart.webs.com. or by contacting the author at: rosebrandon1@yahoo.ca
2 comments:
Thank you Rose . . . For me this is a beautifully descriptive account, devotionally oriented and gently challenging. Loved it! ~~+~~
Lovely article, Rose. The snow is so totally apparent on the fields around me and it is an ongoing message of how we stand in Christ.
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