The other night my wife, Lily, and I celebrated our wedding anniversary – our 33rd.
It’s pretty normal to mark special occasions with a celebration of some kind. Some celebrations include many people, some just a special place.
Lil and I have celebrated in different ways over the years. There were some that are more memorable than others.
There was the time on our tenth anniversary that we stayed a night in the Fantasyland Hotel at West Edmonton Mall. We had a choice between choosing the Trucker Room, where the bed was actually in the back of a pickup truck, or the Polynesian Room with a canopy bed, a large fountain jacuzzi tub, and greenery that gave the feeling of being in a garden.
Lil picked the Polynesian Room over the Trucker Room which was okay because I wasn’t really drawn to sleeping in the back of a pickup truck anyway.
Many of our anniversary celebrations have involved just the two of us going out for a nice dinner to a unique or special restaurant.
But there have been times when the celebration got bigger and extended – like for our 25th anniversary. That was kind of a whole year celebration.
We started out at the beginning of the year going a cruise with our children, marking likely our last family vacation. Then a few months later, we spent 14 days on a tour of Israel. We finished off our “year of jubilee” with purchasing a park model trailer at our vacation spot at Sauble Beach.
It was an expensive anniversary celebration, but one year we won’t forget.
Celebrations are necessary; they highlight something that is special. They cause us to reminisce about the past and recall the good things, accomplishments, and milestones of life.
They cause us to remember why the thing we are celebrating matters.
We celebrate birthdays, achievements, goals, successes, victories, and even sometimes we celebrate for the sake of celebration.
The thing about celebrations is that they pertain only to those on the inside of the celebration.
The other night Lily and I had dinner at a restaurant on the St. Lawrence River, overlooking the water from a screened in porch. As the sun went down and the moon came up, the light glimmered across the water. The boats below us gently rocked back and forth tied to their docks.
It was special, but the people who were seated at tables around us had no idea we were celebrating anything. They weren’t party to our celebration.
It was a private celebration in public.
A celebration can include many, but the many will only celebrate if they are connected in some way to the special occasion. Otherwise they are completely oblivious to it all. It makes no impression, no remembrance, no reminder.
Only the celebrants experience the richness of the occasion. But for them, even when it is quiet, it’s a true celebration … Happy anniversary, Lil.
Here’s the thing: There will be a celebration when Christ returns. When Christ returns, this world will be made right. There will be peace; there will be joy; there will be a celebration. But that celebration, like any celebration, will be for those who are connected to Christ. It will be the greatest celebration this world has ever known, but it will be anything but a celebration for those who have no tie to Jesus. No one will want to miss being part of this celebration, so make sure you have a personal relationship with the One who is being celebrated.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: What do you have to celebrate today? Leave your comments below.