“Man, it’s cold out there!”, I said to a friend this week. I’ve made that same statement several times since and I believe it’s going to be one of my go-to statements for the next foreseeable future.
I’m having visions of when I lived in Alberta. I remember driving across Edmonton one February day, on my way to a conference at another church. There were about five pastors from our church in an iced up car, traveling in what seemed to be fog, at minus 28 degrees Celsius.
I thought it was fog – for all intensive purposes it acted like fog – you couldn’t see the cars ahead of you on the road. But it wasn’t really fog; it was so cold that there were ice crystals in the air!
That’s what created the fog-like condition, and it created another phenomenon that fascinated some of the passengers in the car: sun dogs.
These sun dogs are not what you are thinking … dogs that love to lie out at the beach and tan their underbellies. No, these sun dogs are like phantom suns. The light refracts off the ice crystals creating a bright spot on either side of the sun when it’s still low on the horizon.
These mock suns took people’s minds away from the fact that the inside of the car was still ice cold despite the five bodies that were huddled together.
I didn’t look at the sun dogs that much. I was concerned that my eyes were starting to water, and I didn’t want my boss to have to use the car scraper on them so I could see again.
It was cold that day. I still remember it even though it took place over twenty years ago. I still get shivers thinking about it right now!
The next sun dog I want to see is my brother’s bulldog, Chopper, wearing sunglasses at the beach.
I was remembering all this because it’s cold here in Ontario right now. And I was talking with my daughter the other day, bemoaning the fact of how cold it is.
She wanted to comfort me, ease my pain, get me thinking nicer thoughts, so she said, “at least it’s sunny.” My response to that was, “Karlie, that’s what they say in Alberta!” and immediately my mind went straight back to those sun dogs and ice crystals.
By this time of year, the snow on people’s front yards should be all stomped down by kids playing in the snow, building snowmen.
But it’s been so cold for so long that kids in Kingston have forgotten what snowmen are. They don’t know how to build a snow fort or form snow balls anymore.
This is a childhood right of passage, but with temperatures of -24 C the snow won’t stick together.
I’m afraid if this keeps up we’ll have to retrain a whole generation of kids. They will have to teach a class called “Snow 101” to our grade 3 kids … which would be better than some of topics they’re proposing to teach next year!
Here’s the thing: Have you gone a long time feeling cold and distant from God? Maybe it’s time to try a new spiritual discipline to help you enter into a warmer, deeper, richer relationship with God. In Richard Foster’s book, “Celebration of Discipline”, he gives 12 spiritual disciplines: inward disciplines of meditation, prayer, fasting, study; outward disciplines of simplicity, solitude, submission, service; corporate disciplines of confession, worship, guidance, and celebration. Why not give one of these a try to warm up your relationship?
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: On a scale of 1 – 10, how warm would you say your relationship with God is? Leave your comment below.