New Church Life Mar/Apr 2014 | Page 102

new church life: march / april 2014 Life Lines winter of our discontent Folks throughout much of the United States and Canada suffered through a hard winter, with a relentless succession of storms and the prolonged bonechilling cold of an “Arctic vortex”. Olivet Church members in Toronto, Canada, celebrated a frigid, dark Christmas as a week-long power outage doused holiday lights – but not holiday spirit – across a wide region. Much of Bryn Athyn lost power in singledigit temperatures for four days or more in early February. It helped us all appreciate the ruggedness of ancestors who knew nothing of the comforts of electric lights, central heating and indoor plumbing that we so take for granted. By the time you are reading this the worst of the winter is just a repressed memory, overtaken by the coming of spring. But while it lasted, it was a grim experience. With other “snow birds,” my wife and I escaped in the midst of the misery for a respite week of Florida sunshine at the Boynton Beach Retreat, where the locals were also complaining of the cold – 60-70 degrees! One of the presenters, the Rev. Dr. Jonathan Rose, talked in part about the Acts and Epistles, and how we should pay more attention to them in the Church. Well, I did my part. What came to mind immediately was this alluring promise from the Song of Solomon 2: 11,12: “For lo, the winter is past, The rain [snow!] is over and gone. The flowers appear on the earth; The time of the singing of birds has come, And the voice of the turtle Is heard in the land.” I have no idea what “the voice of the turtle” sounds like, but if it is anything like the spring peepers chirping that “the winter is past” and spring is finally here, it’s the sweetest song many of us will ever hear. (BMH) 198