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10-25-2014, 11:39 AM | #1 |
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Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 74,204
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A Cold Turnip and Mud
A New Day eDevotional
A Cold Turnip and Mud James 1:17, “Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.” Frederick Buechner, in his book The Sacred Journey (HarperOne, 1991), said that one winter he sat in wet army fatigues somewhere near Anniston, Alabama, eating his supper out of a mess kit. The infantry battalion to which he had been assigned was on bivouac. “There was a cold drizzle of rain, and everything was mud. The sun had gone down,” Beuchner said. “I was still hungry when I finished and noticed that a man nearby had left something that he was not going to eat. It was a turnip. When I asked him if I could have it, he tossed it over to me. I missed the catch, and the turnip fell to the ground, but I wanted it so badly that I picked it up and started eating it, mud and all. Time deepened and slowed down. With a lurch of the heart, I saw suddenly that not only was the turnip good, but the mud was good too, even the drizzle and cold were good, even the Army that I had dreaded for months was good. Sitting there in the Alabama winter with my mouth full of cold turnip and mud, I could see at least for a moment how if you ever took truly to heart the ultimate goodness and joy of things, even at their bleakest, the need to praise someone or something for it would be so great that you might even have to go out and speak of it to the birds of the air.” A cold turnip and mud. Not much to praise God for? Or are they? To Buechner, his menu that evening might as well have been prime rib. It was not what had been on his plate (or in the mud, for that matter), but what was in his heart—a heart of thanksgiving and praise to the One who had graciously provided for him. Take inventory, my friend, of all you have been blessed with. There are so many far less fortunate than we. It is imperative, therefore, to always maintain a mind set of thanksgiving for all gifts that God has given. May that giving of thanks begin now, with the gratitude we should express, for this and each new day.
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"No matter what you have done up to this moment, you get 24 brand-new hours to spend every single day." --Brian Tracy
AA gives us an opportunity to recreate ourselves, with God's help, one day at a time. --Rufus K. When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on. --Franklin D. Roosevelt We stay sober and clean together - one day at a time! God says that each of us is worth loving. |
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10-25-2014, 12:20 PM | #2 |
Super Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: Hamilton, ON
Posts: 25,078
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Couldn't resist the title, still haven't done my readings and I am behind, but had to take a look.
Sometimes we never know when we will find a blessing or what for a gift or a need will take. So often we dismiss things out of hand, and judge things by there appearance or from where they come from or from who gives them to us. We look at where they come from or where they are located and we are afraid of getting ourselves 'a little dirty' in order to get it' and "Heaven forbid" if anyone should just happen to see us pick it up.! I happen to love turnip. Most people don't like it, and yet I am not too sure about eating it raw. I guess they say if you are hungry enough, you will eat anything. I am such a picky eater, I haven't experience too much of that and have been fortunate. Yet in some ways, that isn't true, I remember just eating bread and butter, rather than putting something on it that I didn't like. Something that might have been healthy, but something that I turned my nose up at. White bread and butter is far from healthy, but I would tell myself, "It is food!" How easily we deceive ourselves. The blanket of denial we wrap around ourselves. The lies we tell ourselves and others to hide our shameful faces, forget that God knows. I don't want to see or hear that because she or he said. I don't want to take that because someone said and we listen to gossip and we reject prior to investigation, we don't try for ourselves, we accept another person's word, and don't have a wee talk with our own God. What is good one day, may not be good on another day. It is a one day at a time program. What was good in early recovery, may not serve me in today. What was not good in early recovery, may be just what I need in today. Sometimes I just have to brush off the mud and the mud slinging and see what the raw material is underneath. Maybe it needs a little spice added to it to make it palatable.
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