Showing posts with label seasons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seasons. Show all posts

Friday, November 17, 2017

When God Leaves You In the Dark. Devotion by Dianne J Wilson


Some days I pop out of bed with a sparkle in my eye, excited about everything that God is doing in my life. I can see the purpose behind every chance meeting, strange happening, even the bad stuff makes sense. These are seasons of clear vision.

I wish I could say that this is always the case. Some days, I only just manage to peel myself out from under the duvet, the bad things gang up on me (really, Cat, you choose today to start using the carpet behind the couch as your toilet?) and I can't see the purpose in anything. On those days, I feel like God picked everyone to play on His team but me. Sometimes those days can carry on for weeks. Months. Years.

How do you make sense of being left in the dark like that? Well, here's a picture for you. Sometimes a mother hen tucks her little chicks under her wing. They are safe from predators, close to her heart, and though they cannot see where she's headed, it doesn't matter because they will be going with her. They can't see, but she can.

Sounds great, right? Not so much from the chick's perspective. He was just discovering how great worms taste and how well his little stick-legs work and now here his is, in Mom's armpit, sweaty feathers getting up his nose when he tries to breathe. Not exactly the high point of his chick-life.

And yet...

   He is close to her heart.

   He is safe from predators.

   Even though he doesn't know where he's going, momma hen does.

    He is held close enough to go with her no matter which way she turns.

If you're in a season of breathing in feathers in the dark, take heart! God has you close enough that you'll move with him whichever way he goes. Don't fight it, cuddle close. Tune in to his heartbeat. Allow him to take you with as he moves.  Trust him. It will be worth it!

Proverbs 3:6 “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight.”


Dianne J. Wilson writes novels from her hometown in East London, South Africa, where she lives with her husband and three daughters. She is writing a three book YA series, Spirit Walker, with Pelican / Harbourlight. Affinity (book 1), releases on the 8th of June 2018.

Finding Mia is available from AmazonPelican / Harbourlight, Barnes & Noble and other bookstores.

Shackles is available as a free ebook from Amazon & Smashwords.


Find her on FacebookTwitter and her sporadic blog Doodles.


Friday, July 15, 2016

Your Winter Is Over

Image
Today's post is a little unusual, so bear with me. If you get to a point that you feel it's not for you, you are most welcome to go make some tea and carry on with your life, or move on to the next blog. I won't be offended in the slightest. Promise.
I decided to move our Allamanda from one side of the garden to the other. We'll be building a garage sometime and that bed will be abandoned. (You can read the tragic saga of our ensuite garage here.) I love my Allamanda with its bright happy trumpets, I couldn't bear the thought of giving up on it. We planted it way back when we first moved in, so it's pretty much part of the family. You know, that part that lives in the garden and doesn't come in for meals. Surely every family has one? Many years of happy growth means it was broadly spread on top and underneath the soil. I needed to move this rather large plant by myself, and the only way to do it, was to chop back the top and the roots quite harshly.  
I know what all the books say about transplanting - take all the roots with, dig a square 1m x 1m and so on. I'm a girl. I can only do so much and, in faith, I did. For weeks, seven to be precise - not that I'm counting - there was every indication that I had committed vicious planticide. The severely hacked branches looked good for only one thing - firewood. BUT! At the beginning of this week, I went over to have a look... and it was sprouting! Vibrant green life peeping through the seemingly dead wood. I won't lie. I nearly hugged my little plant.
Why am I telling you this? You see, that first day when I started hacking my plant in preparation for the move, I felt God whisper to me that this action was significant. I'm learning to listen when He whispers, He often says the most important things in a whisper. This is what I believe He was saying...
You may feel as if your life has been severely chopped back. Things have been stripped away from you, top and bottom. You've been in a place of fruitlessness with no sign of any life or progress.
That season is over. You have been moved to a different place - not one doomed for destruction and abandonment, but a place of growth and fruitfulness. A place of LIFE. For a time there was no visible evidence of His working inside of you, in your life - but now its bursting through the seams in glorious technicolor!
No more dry, dead bark.
Now green shoots and bright flowers.
Welcome to Spring!
Dianne J. Wilson writes novels from her hometown in East London, South Africa, where she lives with her husband and three daughters. She has just signed a three book contract for a YA series, Spirit Walker, with Pelican / Watershed.

Finding Mia is available from AmazonPelican / Harbourlight, Barnes & Noble and other bookstores.

Shackles is available as a free ebook from AmazonSmashwords.

Find her on FacebookTwitter and her sporadic blog Doodles.

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Seasons of a Writer's Life

Life is all about seasons, isn’t it? Year in and year out we see them in nature. But we see them in our personal lives, too—good times, bad times; times of prosperity, difficult times; sickness, health. I’m sure you’ll agree that the seasons are here for growth, whether in the flowers and trees, the birds and the bees, or our own personal emotional, physical, mental, or spiritual growth.

I found a great Pinterest board with encouraging sayings about this very same thing. Things like embracing the season you’re in, or that fact that seasons come and seasons go.  I’m sure you’ll enjoy a visit to https://www.pinterest.com/ladybnubian/seasons-in-life/

Even the Bible speaks about these seasons of life in the book of Ecclesiastes—a time for this, and a time for that. The same is true for the life of the writer. We have definite seasons of summer, autumn, winter, and spring. I believe for the writer, the seasons begin with...


...that awesome, fun, and exciting season when our minds explode with new story ideas, when words (excuse the pun) spring to mind. It’s a time of busyness, a time of planting—words, thoughts, ideas. Oh my, isn’t that manuscript going to be magnificent come summer?

Mark Twain has this to say about the season: “It’s spring fever. That is what the name of it is. And when you’ve got it, you want—oh, you don’t quite know what it is you do want, but it just fairly makes your heart ache, you want it so!”

And as writers, struck with spring fever, we want to get that story down on paper. So, with our ideas seeds sown, our story begins to grow, and before we know it, we’re into the heat of ....


...slogging and sweating to get to those last two words—The End—and reveling in the warmth of each day as we watch with excitement, anticipation, and yes, even anguish. Ten thousand words. Twenty. Fifty. As in nature, the days are longest during summer; the nights shortest. We work much, sleep little. Got to get that first draft done.

I love what Russel Baker has to say about this glorious season: “Ah, summer, what power you have to make us suffer and like it.”

We delight in the writing process, but let’s face it, it’s hard work. And oh, don’t we just love it!
“There is something deep within us that sobs at endings. Why, God, does everything have to end? Why does all nature grow old? Why do spring and summer have to go?” ~ Joe Wheeler.

I hate seeing a manuscript come to an end, because it’s almost time to say goodbye to a place that I’ve spent hours in, and a hero and heroine I’ve come to adore. But there’s a season that’s waiting, that must follow summer—it’s the law of nature.


It’s also the law of the writing process. Editing is the writer’s autumn and there’s a good reason this season is known as fall. It’s a time for all those unnecessary words to fall away, a time to kill those darlings with the editor’s pruning shears. But autumn is also a beautiful, colorful season, and the same can be said for the writer’s autumn because it is in this busy cutting and shaping season that our writing takes on the rich hues of a piece worthy of publication. I just love these two autumn sayings:
  • October’s poplars are flaming torches lighting the way to winter. ~Nova S. Bair
  • Autumn carries more gold in its pocket than all the other seasons. ~Jim Bishop
How true—for nature, for the writer. But autumn must make way for...


 And so begins the long, cold season of life. Every mile is two in winter says George Herbert and he’s absolutely right. There’s no season I dread more in my writing life. That waiting, waiting, waiting for this endless season to cease with that glorious publishing contract we check our in-boxes daily for.

Awake, thou wintry earth -
Fling off thy sadness!
Fair vernal flowers, laugh forth
Your ancient gladness!
~Thomas Blackburn, "An Easter Hymn"

If you’re stuck in the dead of winter, ponder on this very wise proverb:  “No matter how long the winter, spring is sure to follow.” And when it comes, our minds come alive once more with the colors of spring. New story ideas. New heroes and heroines to fall in love with. New armchair places to journey to. And, along with that, a brand new book to begin marketing before that long-awaited release day.

More planting. More work. Another busy cycle in the seasons of a writer’s life. I think contemporary Turkish playwright and novelist, Mehmet Murat ildan, hit the nail on the head when he wrote: Winter is dead; spring is crazy; summer is cheerful and autumn is wise!

What season of your writing or personal life do you find yourself in today?


MARION UECKERMANN's passion for writing was sparked in 2001 when she moved to Ireland with her husband and two sons. Since then she has published devotional articles and stories in Winners, The One Year Devotional of Joy and Laughter, Chicken Soup for the Soul: Miraculous Messages from Heaven, and her debut novella, Helsinki Sunrise (White Rose Publishing, a Pelican Book Group imprint, Passport to Romance series). Her second Passport to Romance novella, Oslo Overtures, and her first Indie novella, Orphaned Hearts (Book 1 in her Heart of Africa Romance series), both release mid 2015. Marion loves writing romances set in novel places. She lives in Pretoria East, South Africa in an empty nest with her husband and their crazy black Scottie, Wally.

You can find her at www.marionueckermann.com or her Amazon author page.

Follow Marion on:

Thursday, April 4, 2013

SEASONS

Pixabay/public domain image/Creative Commons Deed (CC0)

“There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven:” Ecclesiastes 3:1

Seasons come and then they go. Activities begin and so do they end, depending on where you are in that temporal duration.                                      

“Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November; all the rest have thirty-one, excepting February alone, and that has twenty-eight days clear and twenty-nine in each leap year.” Mother Goose

Those are a lot of days. They can be long or short days, depending on how you fill them up, especially in our modern societies in which we have tendencies to take on too much.

I’ve reflected a lot on recent seasons. Through floods to blooming flowers of spring, drought to languid warmth of summer, wilt to dancing leaves of autumn, frigid to frolicking in snowy winter. I’ve pondered deeply. And I sensed my heart’s song shift directions.

Sometimes the sense of shifting can cause fragile humans to become rigid, uncomfortable with change. Indeed, I’m a fragile human. Even so, in tasks, directions, a heart’s song altering tempo, I ask God to ever lead, guide me through whichever season happens to play out in this present time. An unnamed saying I’d first learned years ago comes to mind again.

“Blessed are the flexible, for they shall not be broken.”

If we’re flexible, we then can be molded. We don’t need to understand how or why, necessarily, just be obedient, and in turn, optimism for the future might lead us into a clearer vision of significance. If led, of course, by the hand of the One who guides. Jesus, the clearer and trimmer of our paths…

This happens to be my last post with International Christian Fiction Writers. I have deeply appreciated my time contributing to this blog. ICFW is a great group and I’ve enjoyed connecting with all of you. Thank you for having welcomed me aboard! The voyage proved to be a great blessing in many ways. I will remain a reader of this blog and plan to stop in every so often to say, “Hey.”

I do hope your present season proves exhilarating, one where you are exactly where God wants you to be. Wherever you are, whatever the elements bring, even if circumstances howl, burn, wither, or chillingly slice, I pray you will stand to perceive only the best in every situation. If March comes in like a raging lion, may you see only the lamb bouncing in lush pastures, in the endless days of summer may you live in the full force of its glorious warmth! Let autumn exhibit the colors of growth and change revealing maturity and endurance, in winter the pristine purity of freshly fallen snow positively fashioned with fortitude.

This is my wish for you.

A veteran of the performing arts and worldwide missions, Tessa Stockton also contributed as a writer/editor for ministry publications, ghostwriter for political content, and headed a column on the topic of forgiveness. Today, she writes romance and intrigue novels in a variety of genres. www.TessaStockton.com

 

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Seasons


"To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven." - Ecclesiastes 3:1



Autumn is touching western South Dakota already. Gone are the blazing days of over-a-hundred-degree temperatures, settling into soft warmth for cricket-filled night. No, the minute the calendar switched to August, a coolness crept into the evening air. A crispness, like a one of the season's last melons. Stars burn clear and bright in the night sky--thousands of them--thick as glittering morning fog. When my son goes out to play in the golden-hued late afternoon, he pulls on a jacket. Goldenrod pokes up in yellow beacons along a roadside choked with empty raspberry bushes, fallen wild roses, and elm leaves tinged the color of late squashes.

Even our ginger-striped tabby cat, christened "Charlie Broccoli" by my three-year-old son (don't ask; I don't know why, either, except it had something to do with Veggie Tales and Charlie Brown) is reluctant to slip out the door at nightfall as he's done for months. Last night I scooped him off the sofa at nearly ten o'clock, a warm ball of purring fuzz, and set him on the front step. "Go catch mice," I said, or something to that effect. "Good night." He gave the moon a chilly look, then me, and slipped back inside between my ankles.

Even I am changing as I try to fit my bulging belly into shirts and jeans that once skimmed a smooth waistline. I toss them wistfully one-by-one into the "after-December-when-I-can-finally-bend-over-again" box and thumb through my shrinking closet for something, anything, that will button or fasten or whatever it's supposed to do without gapping or making me hold my breath.

We are all changing. Nothing, no matter how permanent it may seem, usually is.

One of the biggest changes I've noticed lately is in my own writing habits--which have been a part of me since even before I could pen (or crayon) correct sentences. I've spent far more time staring at a blank screen than I have in years, and my idea list looks more like a grocery list gone insane: "...how about that historical fiction novel?... don't forget to pick up peaches at the grocery store... holy cow, you forgot to pay the trash company again... the Colorado peaches, not the California ones that ripen to the consistency of wrinkled softballs... so... what am I supposed to be writing about again...?"

I have almost no ideas--or no good ideas--and my brain feels like the Cream of Wheat I ate this morning as I put my hands on the keys.

It's bothering me. A lot. HELP!! When was the last time I didn't write... anything? Really? I mean, I just pumped out four full-length novels in less than three years--one of which finaled in the Christy Awards, for pity's sake--and have edited galleys, critiqued, proofread, worked on cover art, written interviews and articles, posted on blogs, and made a general nuisance of myself to the writing world. 

Oh, and all of this took place after we 1) adopted a preemie with health issues; 2) raised said preemie to a running, jumping, bilingual, always-yakking, always-smiling three-year-old (how I'm not really sure; I know nothing about babies or children); 3) went through a harrowing process of brain surgery with Ethan to correct a malfunctioning shunt for hydrocephalus, and 4) underwent the grueling immigration process for my husband and son and moved to the U.S. after eight years abroad. So it wasn't like I was sitting around knitting for those three years. (If I knew how to knit, which I don't). We were busy. Our lives were upside-down. We barely slept.

So what's my problem now??!

Why can't I write? Why won't the words and ideas flow like they used to? Especially now that I'm not doing night feedings (yet) or running to the American Embassy with more paperwork or trying to explain to my annoying, rude neighbor why the U.S. supports Israel over Iran all in Portuguese. We speak ENGLISH in South Dakota, for crying out loud!

I've been praying about this problem for a while, and the thing that floats up to the surface of my thousand thoughts are this: seasons.

We are always moving and breathing and living in seasons. Life changes. Moods change. Pregnancy saps brain cells and productivity (so it seems for a lot of women)--especially when running after a three-year-old who is probably either trying to climb to the top of a huge feed tank, spray himself and everybody else with the garden hose, or ride our friends' chocolate lab like a horse. (Yes, all of those things actually happened, and recently).

Perhaps for me, the season to furiously write is passing. Fading. Melting into a season of quiet patience and reflection that I, having never been pregnant before, have never known. 

Perhaps now is the time for me to put down my pen and my laptop and just watch my curly-haired son play in the afternoon sun, the gold of the light turning his hair glorious rusty brown. Perhaps now is the time to gather him up in my arms, all laughter and dirty knees and joyously kissable cheeks, and hold tight the little body that doctors once said might never walk or never talk, and praise the Lord for His mercies--for "they are new every morning."

Perhaps now is the time to fall on my knees in prayer for that same little one who is scheduled to undergo brain surgery once again next month--to fix that shunt that saved his life last year, now starting to malfuction--and thank God for every day of his life, and for protection and peace as we go through such a traumatic process all over again. And yet grateful that we, and not someone else, are called to the task.

Perhaps now is the time for me to close up my notebooks of half-baked ideas and circle my belly with my hands in wordless wonder. For who would have thought that after eight years of nothing, this womb would hold a child? A fluttering, kicking, healthy growing baby whose rounded head and limbs we watched, with rapt disbelief, on the fuzzy black-and-white ultrasound screen? I am not as old as Sarah (yet) but like her I laugh--and cry--at this miracle called life, and how it has been granted to me not once, but twice--to hold and nurture and give back to the Creator.

Perhaps now is a new season for me. A new dawning of responsibilities and priorities. An autumn of sorts, blooming out its golds and rusts before a quiet winter of birth and motherhood, and a family made four from nothing--like the inhabitants of Eden formed from earth and a single rib.

But what about writing? Will it vanish, too, like so many other things in my life?

Of course not.

"Life has its seasons," author Valerie Comer wrote to me just yesterday. "Sometimes it's okay to go with them... (Remember that) God has given you a gift as a writer and author. He hasn't removed it, but your body and brain are busy with other things right now. It's okay. It'll come back."

It'll come back.

I promise. 

Just like green grass after winter snows, and tender shoots where the dried winter grasses lay cold and blond across the field. The clamor of meadowlarks and robins, and the lowing of cattle as spring-young calves leap in green pastures.

I know because I saw it; I lived it. We watched the frozen white fields and mountains of South Dakota turn gold and then green, and spring came once again.

Just as it will in a few short months.

For while our worlds change around us, our Lord will not. He is the rock immovable, the fortress that will never be shaken. "The grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of our God stands forever."

He will not fail, and He will not fade. Just sa He transitioned me from missionary to international wife and then to mother and author, He will not forget me--or you. Our times are in His hands, and He alone holds our future.

And while season after season may shake our private thoughts and fears, we can hold fast to Him, knowing that He puts the words in our mouth and pen in our hand--and will bring everything in our lives to fruition to give Himself glory.

--

What season are you in now? Have you ever felt like you're in transition and out of control? What holds you in place when the world around you shakes?

--

Jennifer Rogers Spinola lives in Belle Fourche, South Dakota, with her Brazilian husband, Athos, and three-year-old son, Ethan. She has lived in Brazil for nearly eight years and served as a missionary to Japan for two years. Jenny is the author of Barbour Books' "Southern Fried Sushi" series and an upcoming romance novella collection based on Yellowstone National Park (also with Barbour Books). Her first novel, “Southern Fried Sushi,” was a Christy Award finalist in 2012. Right now Jenny is sharing her side of the bed with Charlie Broccoli and hoping Ethan sleeps a little longer this afternoon so she can put her feet up.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

The Seasons of Novel Writing


It’s spring in my corner of the world. 

Spring blooms

Buds burst forth in greens, whites, and cherry reds. Yellow daffodils open their petals and reach for the heavens. Each morning, I wake to a chorus of birds outside my window instead of the usual rhythmic beeping, or toddler cry. And every evening, the sun lingers just a little longer.

I love this season of new life and hope. It’s a glorious time of year.

Yet, as I pen these words, I know that many of you reside in different corners of the globe, and though I’m experiencing the newness of spring, you may be feeling winter’s grip.  At this very moment, you and I walk through very different seasons.

And isn’t that how it is in our writing lives as well? From the birth of a story idea and growth of a novel, to barren times of waiting and the joy of a book contract, we writers know the ebb and flow of the seasons. 

Some of you may be walking through the season of spring along with me. You’re new to novel writing, or you’ve stumbled upon a new story idea. You’re enthralled with the newness, the potential. Yet, your story is just a seedling. It needs tender care, careful watering, plenty of sunshine. And once it’s written, it needs weeding and pruning—ruthless editing. Overall, this season is a fabulous one ripe with possibilities.

Perhaps you’re in the thick of summer. Your novel is a full-fledged story complete with flowers and fruit. It’s a masterpiece, a beautiful work of art, and you’re thrilled. You’ve spent days toiling under sweltering sun, crafting the characters, weaving the plotline, developing dialogue. Can there be a more beautiful baby?  You’re ready to show your work to a critique partner or editor. They’re just going to love it.

Maybe you’ve taken the plunge and shown your work to a faithful critique partner who tells you your story has potential but yada, yada. The returned manuscript’s sidebar is peppered with comment boxes, and that paper is baptized in red ink. It’s the first time you realize your story isn’t perfect; in fact, its flaws are now evident as a rather large pimple, and you enter a season of winter. It’s a time of reworking, rewriting, rethinking everything. An icy chill grips your heart. Doubts assail. Do I have any talents at all? Do I have what it takes to be an author? You pray, seek out a friend's encouragement, and cry for awhile. But at the end of the day, you smooth out the wrinkles in your shirt and your story.

A few of you may be in the glorious harvest of fall. After much perseverance, hard work, and support from others, you’ve made the revisions. Your story now sparkles—it’s ripe for the plucking. An agent notices your work and then a publisher. You now hold a contract in your hand, or your book is about to release. It’s a glorious time of celebration.

Yet, I imagine, that even after obtaining an agent, or receiving a contract, you may still experience all the novel writing seasons anew. You may once again taste the newness of spring, the heat of summer, the chill of winter, and the joy of fall. And I’m certain I will too.

For now, I press on in this season of spring.

What season of writing are you experiencing? What season is it in your corner of the world?

Melanie N. Brasher is a full time mama of two boys and wife to an incredible husband who understands her bicultural background. She moonlights as a fiction and freelance writer, crafting stories and articles toward justice and change. She's a member of American Christian Fiction writers and a contributing blogger for Ungrind. Though she's an aspiring author, she'll never quit her day job.

Monday, August 30, 2010

GIANT HARVEST--By Christine Lindsay

It happened just as we prayed. Don’t you just love that when it happens? It doesn’t always, but man . . . when it does . . . .

I was there to see a Guinness World record beaten. On a quarter section—for the non-farmer-type reader that means a quarter of a square mile— I saw 200 giant, gleaming combines harvest wheat in record time. The event was so big that Guinness sent not one of the regular people out to judge, but one of their main administrators.

It was a hot August day under a clear, cerulean sky. And this Canadian felt pride in the size of the golden wheat field around me. To me that represented a lot of bread baskets--a lot of food for empty stomachs.



I also felt joy to see the various Christian communities from this small prairie town come together in support of the event. You talk of old fashioned barn raisings—this was bigger.

Over 200 farmers gave up their time out of a busy harvest season. Many local businessmen in southern Manitoba, Canada, gave of their product and time to cultivate, plant, and nurture this wheat field.



I felt goosebumps as I watched the mammoth combines, in two steady rows of 100 combines each, roll in an unwavering line to meet in the center of the section. And my heart rejoiced with these God-loving prairie people.



The event began with a group of farmers singing our national anthem--Oh Canada--and then heading out to their machines. Three yellow crop-duster planes flew in formation over the field. Several helicopters and two other visiting planes also flew overhead. The Lord even sent a gentle breeze to blow the chaff away so that the spectators weren't covered in dust. A petting zoo entertained the children, and Christian music entertained everyone.

It was a great day. And it all happened because of the love of hundreds of volunteers who want to make a difference in the world, folks who want to feed the souls of the spiritually starving with the Bread of Life—Jesus Christ. But why would simple, Christian farmers go to the bother of breaking a world record? Why work so hard for 15 minutes of fame?

A Christian organization I’m associated with arranged this huge fund raiser. I’m not naming or promoting this group on this website, because most of the writers on this forum are involved in ministries all over the world.

But for all of us in the Lord’s service, it’s good to share when the sun breaks through the clouds of struggle, hard work, and months and years on our knees praying for something. In each of our own ministries and our work, it’s good to be reminded that God does allow our plans to succeed . . . more often than not.

God couldn't have provided a more perfect day for our event that brought in over 10 thousand spectators, TV stations, radio stations, newspapers, and dignitaries. So that on this past August 6th, the Lord graciously rewarded this ministry I associate with. It was especially sweet when many of us remembered the faith-testing disappointments of a day back in 2006 when they attempted the same thing, and did not receive the prize.

It just goes to prove that when we step out in faith, and our hearts are set on honoring God first, He lovingly rewards that faith.

So I say to you today, Go to it—whatever the Lord has called you to. Though you win no awards on this earth, though no one sees the hard work you put in. The Lord sees, and the Lord will reward.



To read more by me, Christine Lindsay, please stop by my website www.christinelindsay.com There you can find encouragement if you are someone whose life has been touched by adoption or missions, or the grinding struggles of life. You can find out about my recent trip to India, and the books I am currently writing. Thank you for dropping by. Blessings on you today.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Autumn in Tasmania

Autumn - the time of resting for nature to be ready for winter when the nourishment has to be sought deep in the ground ready for the new birth at springtime.

This time of relief from the hot sun arrived 15 days ago. That first week of March in the southern hemisphere was still very warm but each day, especially each night, is becoming cooler. Those very cold days and freezing nights will soon be here.

As I type it is a beautiful, early autumn day here in Tasmania with clear blue skies and only a light breeze. This past summer once again Australia has known bushfires, drought and floods at various times and different places. Yes, even here in Tasmania so close to Antarctica we have needed the fans on! Last week we had a few days and nights of much needed rain and cool winds but this morning my husband and I thoroughly enjoyed our walk. However, soon the sun’s rays will be weak enough that the leaves start to rest. Before long the vineyards between here and Launceston will transform the slopes into seas of gold. Then when they have fallen and carpeted the ground beneath them the sharp pruning will commence.

Many parts of Australia are still recovering from the summer months and sure need a rest for awhile!

A couple of weeks ago the ten years of drought in the western regions of my home state of Queensland were officially declared over. Many places are still surrounded by seas of flood water. Homes in many towns have been flooded. Many communities and especially farmers are now counting their heavy losses. Now the water in the rivers is travelling south into western New South Wales and other towns are watching the river levels in their areas. The big question being asked is ‘Will the water reach the Darling River and will there be more rain out west to help it flow also into the Murray River thousands of miles away’. These rivers have been ‘dying’ now for years and causing immense concern across our nation. Hopefully now they will know new life, a new season of prosperity.

There is a favourite poem for many Australians called My Country by Dorothea Mackellar. When at school many years ago I memorised this poem written by a homesick Australian living in England. While I love her wonderful description of our land there have been a couple of lines that often come to mind during summers like this last one. She reminds us:
‘For flood and fire and famine,
She pays us back three fold-.’
You may like to see this beautifully written description of Australia at her official website:- http://www.dorotheamackellar.com.au/

What about you? This past year have you known times in your spiritual life of famine, of floods, even the fires of physical pain or emotional anguish and the following blackness surrounding you? Are you ready for your autumn? Are you ready to check out your circumstances, your life’s goals, your work load and recognise that you too need a period to rest and relax in God’s arms? Never forget that even God rested on that seventh day after He created the heavens and the earth and saw that ‘it was very good.’

Sometimes writers too forget there are periods we need to be quiet before God, to rest in Him, to let Him prune us of all that has become dead wood and no longer should be in our lives. As we rest in an intimate relationship with Him through His Word, prayer and fellowship with fellow believers, let our roots go even deeper into Him ready for the spring and the new things He wants to do in and through our lives.


And a reminder from Colossians 2:6,7 So then, just as you have received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live in him, rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness

Monday, February 1, 2010

Sunrise, sunset



By Alice Valdal

At Bible Study the other night, the leader asked us to name a particularly special moment from the past week. A moment? Hard to distill all the lovely times with friends and family and a short vacation into one moment. But I decided to name the sunrise.

For thos of you familiar with the West Coast of Canada, you'll know this is our season of grey, wet days. But, amidst our rain, we have had some lovely sunrises. I find myself watching that moment when the sky lightens and the red ball of the sun appears, streaking horizon beneath the clouds with brilliant colour.
My Dad loved the sunrise, so I find myself sharing those early morning moments with him, in spirit, and smiling. When he first passed away, I wondered if I would ever feel like smiling again, wondered if the memories would ever bring comfort instead of pain. Now, I know. Time does heal and God never leaves us to bear our sorrow alone.

With all the grief and suffering that have occurred in Haiti recently, it is so important that we remember that death is not the end for us. The cycle of birth, death, rebirth rolls on with every sunrise, every seed we sow, every turn of the tide. God's world is infinitely intricate and infinitely wonderful. How perfectly amazing that He cares for us, in all our seasons.

On Sunday, my Dad would have turned ninety. I'll watch the sunrise, then go to church and lead my junior choir in the anthem "Sing a New Song." And I'll thank God for all the seasons of my life.

Music speaks to me in ways that mere words cannot. Among my favourite hymns that remind us of the never-ending stream of life, is this one.

The day Thou gavest, Lord is ended,
The darkness falls at Thy behest
To Thee our morning hymn ascended
Thy praise shall sanctify our rest

The sun that bids us rest, is waking
Our brethren 'neath the western sky
And hour by hour fresh lips are making
Thy wondrous doings heard on high
( from a hymn by John Ellerton )



I'd love to hear about your favourite hymns. Leave a comment saying why a particular hymn or verse speaks to you and I'll enter you in a draw for a cd of Welsh Revival Hymns. Winner to be announced on Feb. 26, 2010. No purchase necessary. Void where prohibited by law.
To learn more about me, check out my website http://www.alicevaldal.com