I read the book, The Stranger in the Lifeboat, this month. The new Mitch Albom book isn't a "Christmas" book, per se. However, Albom is typically an author who makes you think. (Remember his Tuesdays with Morrie and The Five People You Meet in Heaven? This was no different.)
As I was reading it, I also saw a meme on a Facebook post. I emailed it to myself, but then made my own version, using my own photo:
A Time to Think
A Time to Act
Praise God for the gift of today. Reflect on blessings you may be taking for granted.
I have thought about that many times, given the stranger in our lifeboat. I call him a stranger because if he were truly something divine, he must be as far from me as you can get. We are taught as children that we come from God, that we were created in His image, but the things we do as we grow, the way we behave, what is godlike about that? And the terrible things that befall us? How does a supreme being permit them? ...
From The Stranger in the Lifeboat by Mitch Albom
We don't have to look farm outside our own "lifeboats" to see the "ungodlike" behavior in our world. Here we are - a year later - and people are still fighting about vaccinations or no vaccinations. We are divided by politics. We are divided by race and gender and culture and immigration and ... and the list is unending.
From the book:
It's as if we'd been sorted by our beliefs. I suppose, when I think about it, much of the world is separated this way.Benji, the narrator in The Stranger in the Lifeboat
Did he love others? the Lord asked. "Did he tend to the poor? Was he humble in his actions? Did he love me?"
"Did you know that when I created this world, I made two Heavens? ... Above and below. At certain moments, you can see between them.""Just stop, OK?" I said. "Can't you see we're slowly dying here?"
"People are slowly dying everywhere," he said. "They are also continuously living. Every moment they draw breath, they can find the glory I put here on Earth, if they look for it"
There is lots of "glory" here on Earth, isn't there?
From family to friends to community ... the list goes on and on.
We just have to look for it. And that can be a challenge when there seems to be so much to do ... and pesky humans to deal with. (And the most perplexing human of all is often yourself - at least, I find that's the case.)
In the end, there is the sea and the land and the news that happens between them. To spread that news, we tell each other stories. Sometimes the stories are about survival. And sometimes those stories, like the presence of the Lord, are hard to believe. Unless believing is what makes them true.
From the conclusion to The Stranger on the Lifeboat
And that's my wish for of all us this Christmas season!
Thank you. And Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and yours as well!
ReplyDeleteTerri Dunning
Thanks, Terri! I always like hearing from you!
DeleteMerry Christmas, Kim! I need to check out this book!
ReplyDeleteMary Jo Mann
Merry Christmas, Mary Jo! Have a wonderful time with your boys!
DeleteA special message as always!
ReplyDeleteI'm sure your day was filled with love and happiness.
Our friends looked after us and we had wonderful facetimes with our family in Canada and Austria.
As I will share tomorrow, our Christmas didn't go as planned. Bah humbug to Covid!
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