Skip to main content

A Fresh Start




In the bleak midwinter, frosty wind made moan,
Earth stood hard as iron, water like a stone;
Snow had fallen,
snow on snow
snow on snow,
In the bleak midwinter, long ago.

—In the Bleak Midwinter

Do you like winter? Perhaps it depends on where you were raised. I grew up, went to school and spent 14 years working in climates where winter is a significant season. Now, as a central Virginia transplant, I'm still trying to understand why winter is fussed over the way that it is. No one can drive or go to school when it snows. It's fascinating to me, but I'm starting to get used to the idea.

Christina Rossetti's poem, from which we get our hymn In the Bleak Midwinter, paints quite a vivid picture of the harshness of winter in her opening lines. 'Moan,' 'hard as iron,' 'like a stone'—it all sounds very painful, or should I say 'bleak.'

When we carry out our sinful lives, without recognition of a Savior, we create a similarly bleak picture for ourselves. Sin makes us miserable! It makes us hard, icy hard. It makes our hearts hardened to seeing any other life beyond the one that we're trying to make for ourselves.
But they refused to pay attention; stubbornly they turned their backs and stopped up their ears. They made their hearts as hard as flint and would not listen to the law or to the words that the LORD Almighty had sent by his Spirit through the earlier prophets. So the LORD Almighty was very angry.

"'When I called, they did not listen; so when they called, I would not listen,' says the LORD Almighty. 'I scattered them with a whirlwind among all the nations, where they were strangers. The land was left so desolate behind them that no one could come or go. This is how they made the pleasant land desolate.'"

—Isaiah 7:11-15

The children of Israel were so stuck in their sin that God had to discipline them. They were no longer in one place, because He scattered them all over the world.

I like Matthew Henry's commentary on this passage. He says, "
Nothing is harder than the heart of a presumptuous sinner (Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary on the Bible). Israel was "wise in its own eyes" and didn't understand that their sin was pushing them further and further away from their loving Father.


"Come now, and let us reason together," says the LORD, "Though your sins are as scarlet, they will be as white as snow; Though they are red like crimson, They will be like wool."

—Isaiah 1:18


Sin doesn't make God happy. In fact, sin, by definition, is that which separates us from God. A holy God and a sinful people cannot have a relationship. God knows that, and He loves us so much that He did something about it—the only thing He could do.


Brightly shone the moon that night,
Though the frost was cruel.

—Good King Wenceslas

As you know, God sent Jesus! There was nothing that a sinful, fallen, frosty cruel world could do on its own power or merit, but Jesus, the Savior, could save His people from their sins. That's why He's named Jesus (Matthew 1:21). He would bear the sins of the world, even unto His own death, so that we could once again have a relationship with God and, one day, stand before Him, snow white as an angel!

But, it's not enough that God sent Jesus. We have to receive Him, and we have to pray in confession for His forgiveness. Not that we have to wait for it, like snow in central Virginia. Jesus told us to pray for it. And He will cast it out of us, as far as the east is from the west, and remember it no more.

No ear may hear his coming,
But in this world of sin,
Where meek souls will receive Him still
The dear Christ enters in.

—O Little Town of Bethlehem

So, while the winter may be harsh, it is not without its quiet beauty, as in the snow which falls from Heaven—a reminder of God's forgiveness and fresh start through His Son, Jesus.



But as long as You love me so
Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow.

—Let It Snow



* * *


Jesus—Not just the reason for the season,
but our eternal season of reason.

* * *

You can follow my Countdown to Advent-ure posts, from now through Christmas Day, at my Mothers Of Preschoolers Mentor Mom blog, In-between time.
(Click on the nativity picture above to visit.
)

Comments

KelliGirl said…
Loved the pictures. Loved your message. "In the Bleak Midwinter" has been playing in my head these past few days. Your words cast a fresh light on the icy hardness of our sin. Yikes, it's pretty convicting!

Blessings,
Kelli
Kelly said…
I always think of snow in a positive light, as we get it so infrequently it really is a gift When everything is covered in white, it does make me feel closer to God and think of being clothed in white by him. Because he loves me so...let it snow, let is snow, let it snow.
Edie said…
We have been listening to Christmas carols on our way to and from school everyday and "Let it Snow" has become a favorite of Ashleighs. I now have a new perspective when I hear that phrase. :)
The Patterson 5 said…
Since we see snow so seldomly it is such a treat! Winter though can be bleak on some days and I do think if I lived where it was harsh I would not like it. I like the life of Spring and Summer. The seasons do teach us about the death of a life in sin and the rebirth we recieve through Christ!
On Purpose said…
You have a beautiful gift to write, and tie in some many different angles...I love to read your writing. I leave feeling touched and challenged and thinking about things for awhile!

And of course my favorite picture...the last one...I LOVE snow!!

Popular posts from this blog

On this Merry Christmas Night....

Merry Christmas, blog friends! I know you're wondering, "Did she finish painting her family room (finally....)??" (Nope!) * * * D oesn't this look like how our days are sometimes? Myriad things scattered about, unfinished. Trying to take a cozy, restful seat by the fire, but still that seat stays empty. We try to make things brighter, but the light strings don't quite have the power to make things clear for us. And we wonder how many coats it will take to cover up what had been there before, without splotches and unevenness. (Three may just be right--sigh....!) * * * We may have things unfinished. We may have "miscalculated" the use of our time. Or perhaps we were called away to other things for which we were needed, even if they weren't part of our plans. Even in our peaceful approach to Christmas, that seat of rest may be vacant. But the opportunity to "Be still...." doesn't always lie in a cozy sea

When I was 45....

I t was a very good year! (Yep, celebrating again! I hijacked my own blog--LOL!) The glass is half full, and things have never looked more browniful! Awesome day on tap.... sunshine, take-out barbecue for dinner, cake.... Thanks for celebrating with me! Enjoy.... ( Let it rise....One of my all-time favorite praise songs! )

Post #100

L ong before we bloggers celebrated our first 100 posts, the psalmists provided us with theirs. In recognition of my 100th, let's celebrate by looking at the Bible's "Post #100" (a.k.a., Psalm 100, A Psalm for Thanksgiving or Thank Offering): Make a joyful noise unto the LORD, all ye lands. Surprisingly, there is no direct Hebrew translation for the English word 'joyful' as used in this verse in the King James Version. That leaves things a bit open to interpretation. My study Bible (NASB) says 'joyful' is "a shout of loyalty and homage." The dictionary defines 'joy' with the word rejoicing, meaning "to be made glad again." 'Noise,' however, does come with a Hebrew equivalent, meaning "to split the ears with sound," as in to shout, shout for joy. Lands implies all the earth, the nations, the world. We, those of all nations, are to present to the Lord, out of our loyalty and homage to Him, joyful shouts that