Slip Sliden Away
It's not as if the landscape is not beautiful. The branches glisten in the light of the sun. A red sundown sets them on fire. Early in the morning it's as if God sprinkled diamonds everywhere. The juncos look like some Dalmatian has lost its spots, and they are ricocheting down my driveway. The icicles on the house are stretching to reach the ground. The tracks of the smaller animals and the birds leave geometric patterns on the surface of the ice covered snow. In the wind the icy branches sound like castanets (but trust me, I am not tempted to try to dance.) Yes, it is gorgeous, but my trepidation affects my focus, causing me to concentrate more on the placement of my feet than the beauty surrounding me.
And the animals don't help. The red squirrel, a fox squirrel I guess, because of his diminutive size, is usually practically invisible in deep snow--a pair of small red ears running across the landscape. In the ice, though, he scampers across the acres "high and dry"--full speed ahead. Even Gus is light enough to trek across the frozen tundra unfazed by the treachery. And Bonnie who is heavier just races along the ice like it's not there. She does take smaller strides--it's actually a little comical--but she still speeds along when the mood fits her. And here's the old man slip sliding along ever so carefully, worried about every step, missing half the beauty that surrounds him. I wonder how many times in life imagined or even actual treachery has caused me to miss the loveliness permeating my life--to take my eyes off the beauty of Jesus and to focus on the evil that He has promised cannot keep me down, even if I fall? I wonder. . .
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