Thought for the Day 1/13/2023
Friday Tale - A Miracle Morning
I stumbled out the
door of a mountain cabin where I was spending the weekend working with youth
and their families at a rustic resort center. I had a 7:30 AM appointment to
keep and squinted from the early autumn sun peeking over pine-blanketed
mountaintops.
I
was started by a voice behind me. “Today is a miracle!” I turned to find one of
the teenagers following behind.
“How?”
I asked her. It looked like it might be pleasantly warm later in the day.
Otherwise, fairly ordinary. The word “miracle” seemed like an overstatement.
Anyway, I wasn’t sure if I could handle much excitement this early in the
morning.
“Think
about it,” she smiled. “The sun rose, didn’t it?”
“Yeah.”
I found it easy to hide any enthusiasm. It seemed to rise on every other
morning without my getting involved.
“That’s
a miracle! It is miraculous that the earth turns as it does. At night, the sun
goes down and in the morning, it rises. It just happens!”
I
already had this figured out. I rubbed sleep from my eyes. I was also busy
thinking about how to get a cup of coffee.
“And
look at the mountains! Covered with trees and grass, they look so beautiful.
And there,” she pointed, “a valley. It’s incredible.”
Was
she always this perky? And shouldn't there be a rule against perkiness this
early in the morning? Especially before coffee?
“Did
you notice the wildflowers?” she continued. “It all smells so fresh and clean
and so good.” She took a deep breath and I thought I might have caught a
sparkle in her eyes. Though it may have also been a trick of the light. “All of
nature receives water and sunlight and everything it needs. Things grow and
blossom – it really is lovely.”
Now
I started to worry. I thought I was actually coming around. Well, a little bit,
anyway. Is perkiness contagious? I felt something stirring inside. Up until
then I thought this was just an ordinary morning in the mountains. I didn't
know what spell she was secretly weaving, but she had a point. It really was
beautiful, even if there was nothing magic about it.
Then,
with a smile that gave her pronouncement a note of finality, she said, “And
best of all, it will happen again tomorrow. And the next day. And the next!”
Then she sighed. “See? It's a miracle morning.”
In
her poem “Aurora Leigh,” Elizabeth Barrett Browning wrote:
Earth's crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire
with God:
But only he who sees, takes off
his shoes,
The rest sit round it, and
pluck blackberries...
Along
the early morning path, my friend had removed her shoes. For her, earth was
“crammed with heaven” and “every bush afire.” It wasn't just perkiness; she had
eyes to see what I had completely missed. I was, as Browning might say, sitting
around plucking blackberries.
I
haven't seen that young woman for many years. She's grown up now. Maybe she has
a family of her own. She's no doubt seen a good measure of heartache and
trouble – who hasn't? But I would be surprised if she isn't basically a happy
and contented person. Why? Because she discovered a valuable secret about
happiness – she learned to find wonder in commonplace things and to feel
gratitude for the ordinary. And life is nothing if not filled with the
commonplace and ordinary.
Oh LORD, how many and
varied are Your works! In wisdom You
have made them all; the earth is full of Your riches and your creatures.
~ Psalm 104:24 (Amplified)
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