01/04/2013
FOLLOW YOUR STAR!
"We saw His star as it rose and have come 
to do Him homage" (Matthew 2:2).
During World War II, a young bride from New 
Jersey followed her soldier-husband to an 
army camp on the edge of the California 
desert. Her husband had advised her against 
going because he knew that living conditions 
would be primitive, at best. But she wanted 
very much to be with him and he was unable 
to change her mind. When the couple arrived 
at the desert camp, the only housing they 
could find was a run-down shack near an Indian 
village. The heat was unbearable: up to 115 
degrees in the shade. The wind blew constantly, 
spreading sand all over everything. And, for the 
young bride, the days were long and boring. 
Her only neighbors were the Native Americans, 
none of whom spoke English. When her husband 
was ordered farther into the desert for maneuvers, 
the loneliness and wretched living conditions got 
the best of her. She wrote to her mother, "I can't 
take any more of this. I want to come home!" 
Several days later, she received a reply. In it, the 
mother reminded her of the old family placard on 
which these two lines were written:
Two men looked out from prison bars, one saw 
mud, the other saw stars.
The daughter read these lines over and over again. 
She began to feel ashamed of her response to the 
situation she was in. She really didn't want to leave 
her husband, and so she said to herself, "All right, 
I'll look for the stars." In the days that followed she 
began to make friends with her Native American 
neighbors. She began to take lessons in weaving 
and pottery from them. She became fascinated with 
their culture and history -- everything about them. 
Moreover, she began to study the desert. In the 
process, she saw it wonderfully transformed from a 
desolate, forbidding place to a marvelous expanse 
of beauty. She studied the various forms of cacti, 
the yuccas and the Joshua trees. She collected 
sea shells that had been deposited there millions 
of years before when the sands had been an ocean 
floor. Later, she became such an expert on the area 
that she wrote a book about it. A remarkable 
transformation had taken place. But what had 
changed, really, to make that possible? Not the 
weather. Not the desert. Not the Native People. 
What had changed was the woman's attitude. 
Simply by changing her own attitude ("All right, 
I'll look for the stars," she said), she had 
transformed a miserable life situation into a highly 
rewarding experience.
The Epiphany story invites each of us, now, to 
follow that same star all the way down to the 
center of our being. There, like the Magi, we 
will know the true wisdom of the Christ Spirit. 
There we will discover that without the Love of 
Christ there is neither wisdom nor life. There we 
will open our treasures and present to the 
Redeemer our very lives, dedicated to His 
ministry of loving service. We know our 
Redeemer lives, because He lives in our soul! 
( excerpts from Sunday Sermons Online) 
16:00 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)


 
 
The comments are closed.