In his wonderful book, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, C. S. Lewis describes Narnia
as a place where it’s “always winter, but
never Christmas.” Wow! And you think you’re tired of winter? Winter doesn’t
bother most of us until after Christmas. In fact, when I was a child growing up
in Atlanta,
we’d pray for a White Christmas. We’d been brainwashed by Bing Crosby J. We never had one. Then, when I was a freshman in
college, I spent Christmas with my brother and his family in the New York City area, and
again, there was no snow. I was so disappointed. I’d never seen a white
Christmas and thought that by being up North, I’d finally see one. Instead, it
was just brown and dingy. It was a very dismal Christmas.
Yet, when we have a white Christmas, before
you can hardly say, “Happy New Years,” most of us are ready to zap away that
monolithic coating of white covering the world. We can pretty much handle it through
January and will even suffer with it through February, as long as we get a
periodic reprieve of warmth and a little melting.
One of the reasons that this winter has been
so tedious is that we’ve not really had a reprieve. Not only have we had snow
storm after snow storm, the weather has been brutally cold. It’s been always winter. Yet, though we joke,
groan and grimace, we know winter will eventually come to an end. Spring will finally
break through. It’s scheduled to arrive on March 20th. I’m counting
the days and hoping it comes a little early.
Then, the snow and ice will begin to melt. The
air will warm up. The grass will begin to turn green. Leaves will return to the
trees. Flowers will bloom. The birds will sing. A world of dull white will give
way to a myriad of bright color. Even the sun will stay in the sky longer each
day. But what if it didn’t? What if it was always
winter? What if there was no hope of spring?
This past week I didn’t know it was going to
snow. My heart dropped a bit as I opened the garage door to leave and found my
car encased in a fresh layer of white. Jane and I still talk about the winter
storm of May 10, 1990. Shortly after we moved to Wisconsin, we had a blizzard in May. I
thought I was going to cry when I saw our greening world blanketed once again
with white. It wasn’t a few flakes. We got a good three inches, with some areas
receiving six inches. I thought that winter would never end. And that was
Narnia.
But Lewis’ tale is not just a literary fantasy.
He painted for us a picture of life without Christ, the Lion of the Tribe of
Judah. Winter in Narnia was caused by a spell cast by the White Witch. And winter
only ended when Aslan, the true king, the royal lion, returned to rescue the
Narnia kingdom from the curse of the White Witch. Without Aslan, Narnia was a
land without hope.
Are you tired of snow? Is the winter getting
to you? Do you find yourself feeling dismal, even a bit hopeless that it will
never end? Yet, you know that it will, but what if it didn’t? Always winter, never Chritsmas is the
condition of someone who doesn’t know Christ. It’s a life without hope. Jesus
Christ, the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, has not given them new life and with
it, hope.
Can you imagine living in the perpetual winter
of unforgiven sin? How hopeless! You’ve fought some dark habit. You’ve had
victory over it for months, even years…and then you trip, stumbling back into
the tar pit of that sin. Someone who doesn’t know Jesus can only remorse or
worse, wallow in their guilt. They don’t know that no matter how horrible their
sin is, Christ’s sacrifice is more than enough and then more. He longs to
forgive us and heal our souls.
Can you imagine living in the perpetual
winter of depression? Some years ago I went through a serious bout of
depression. It seemed my dark valley would never end. Yet, even in the midst of
the darkness, I still had hope. Those words so familiar to me as a child echoed
back to my soul, even in the midst of the shadows, “Jesus loves me, this I know, for the Bible tells me so.” Though I
hurt, though I wanted to give up in despair, I knew that there was still hope.
I was not alone and even the pain was temporary.
Can you imagine living in the perpetual
winter of broken relationships? You feel so alone, so unloved, perhaps
betrayed. After my Mom was killed in a car accident when I was ten, I felt so
alone. My father and I never did have a relationship. I remember how wounded I
felt when one of his wives felt that she needed to tell me that he had informed
her that I was an “accident.” But I had another Father, who loved me and wanted
me. I was no “accident,” I was part of His eternal plan. Psalms 27:10 was my
anchor and is still a precious promise to me, “For my father and my mother have forsaken me, but the Lord will take
me in.” I can’t imagine facing a divorce, the death of a spouse, a broken
family, a lost friendship without “a friend who sticks closer than a brother” (Proverbs 18:24)…and I know His Name. C. S. Lewis
called Him Aslan but He’s the Lion of the Tribe of Judah and His Name is Jesus.
Can you imagine living in the perpetual
winter of economic stress? You can never make ends meet. There’s never enough
food, heat or money. A better job, some times any job is an impossibility.
There are many suffering in America
from poverty. Can you imagine what it’s like though in places like Sudan or North Korea? No hope. Ultimately,
facing a death of impoverishment and starvation. So how do believers there
survive? How do they cling to hope when it’s so hopeless? They hold on to the
same promises that brought the Apostle Paul through his suffering and loss, “For this light momentary affliction is
preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look
not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the
things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal”
(2 Corinthians 4:17-18).
Do you ever wonder why we continually urge
you to share the Gospel? Why we are so passionate about reaching our community,
those around us with the Gospel? Of all the things that Jesus could have shared
before He left this world, why did He give us marching orders to reach our
world? Because if you don’t know Jesus, it’s always winter, but never Christmas. It’s a world without hope and
when we have the message of eternal hope, spring and summer for the soul, how
can we not share it?
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