Here's Pastor
Dave McDowell's weekly devotional that he sends out to members of his church.
Dave is my brother and serves as the Music Minister at Stewartstown UMC in PA.
Sometimes cliches are so.........well,
cliche
We use them so often that we don't even
need to finish them....
There's no place like
_________
Any friend of yours is a
______ __ _____
Absence makes the heart grow
_________
We say them at funerals in our attempt to
comfort people
If you need anything at all,
just ____ me.
They pop up when we get philosophical
about life....
the best things in life are
____
We use them to encourage
people
Everyone has their cross to
_______
Graduation ceremonies are littered with
them.
My all time favorite.....
Every ending is a
_________.
As predictable as cliches can
be,
much of the time, they can be
true,
because they are often based on the
reality of life.
The last two weeks,
as my siblings and I prepared for
an estate sale on the family
farm,
we were flooded with memories
of our life together.
As we cleared out room after
room,
we were reminded of all those
circumstances and events
that had shaped our lives,
that molded us into who we are today..........
that made us family.
The cliches were everywhere.
The couch in the living room
spoke of our mother
who while she worked a night
shift,
would come home and sleep on the
couch,
so that she could look after our aging
grandparents during the day
Mom indeed burned the candle
at both ends, and in doing so,
taught me the
importance of caring for family.
The table in the dining room
reminded me of all the family holiday
gatherings
where the table would be filled to
overflow,
and our eyes were larger than
our stomachs.
The after-the-meal discomfort
reminded me of how much we had been
given.
The upstairs bedrooms
in a farmhouse where only the lower level
was heated......
in the winter were
as cold as a cucumber,
Yet while my
brother and I
would battle it out on the electric football field,
wearing our winter coats,
we were as happy as a
lark.
Our playtime in those early
years,
forged the deep love we have for each
other.
The kitchen was the center of the
home.....
and how I loved sneaking to the kitchen,
where more than once,
I was caught with my hand in
the cookie jar.
It reminded me of all the nourishment we received.....
physically, emotionally, &
spiritually.
The paddle in the closet
that mom rarely used but when needed,
reminded us of.
Those famous words she would utter
when there was no other
recourse....
This is going to hurt me more than
it hurts you.
My parents were faithful to discipline
us,
to teach us about right and
wrong,
to teach us about actions and
consequences.
I walked outside and looked at the end of
the driveway,
where one day I had gotten off the school
bus,
THEN remembered that I had driven the
car to school that day.
To this day, I continue to forget
things,
like where I placed my keys, or my
glasses.
I am reminded that I would
lose my head if it wasn't attached.
But the bigger lesson I was
taught,
was that for
those who are patient and who trust
every situation has a way of working
itself out.
I looked down at the meadow
and saw the once proud tree that had
been reduced to a stub by multiple lightning strikes.
And though it is said that
lightning never strikes the same place
twice,
the tree tells me otherwise,
and that in life,
anything is possible,
and one is wise to be prepared for that reality.
The sidewalk from the house to
garage,
where both mom and dad
would daily pilgrimage to and from work,
to bring home the
bacon,
reminded me the extent at which my parents
worked
to meet the needs of all 4
children.
I was taught the value of hard
work,
work that benefit others.
The barnyard fence,
where as the brother six years
older,
I convinced my
little brother,
that if he just believed
enough,
he could jump off the fence and
fly.
To some, this would be flying by
the seat of your pants.
For me, I have since learned
that what I say and what I do
influences people,
so I must be wise in both speech and
conduct
(and thankful that my brother didn't hurt
himself)
Perhaps every ending is a
beginning of some kind.
And so, as our preparations for the sale
wound down,
my siblings and I journeyed to the center
of the farm,
to the grove of pine trees.
The place where family pets were
buried,
the place where Christmas trees were cut
down
and delivered by Santa's
tractor,
the place where one would walk for times
of quiet reflection.
In the moments as the four of us looked
around
taking in the beauty of the
land,
we realized that time flies
when you are having fun,
for we all wondered where the years had
gone.
Though we were
not rich by man's standards,
be it ever so humble, there is
no place like home.
None of us would have traded
our childhood for any other.
Because the words farm and extravagance do
not exist
well with each other,
we learned that the simplest gifts
are indeed the best gifts,
The deer that leaped across the
field at just the right moment,
reminded us of that.
Home, health, and love cannot be bought.
As we prayed,
we gave the farm back to God
for we were entrusted with its care for
only a while.
We realized that this ending is
really a beginning,
that God is always doing a new
thing.
And
we have every
reason
to be thankful for the past, the
present,
and the days to come.
Thanks to God,
and to Norman and Janelle McDowell.
We are who we are because of
you.
May you find thanks in all the
cliches of your life.
Happy Thanksgiving to
all!
always giving thanks for all
things,
in the name of our Lord, Jesus
Christ
to God, even the
Father.
1 Thes
5:20
.
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