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The Treasures Of The Snow Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 1, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: That part of nature we want to focus on is--snow. There are 25 references to snow in the Bible, and we are to live by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God, and so snow is to be a part of creation that teaches us something about God.
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It was one of the strangest funerals on record. Nobody was being
buried, but things were being buried in a lot of little graves, and in
one, the Bible was being buried. Shackleton and his men were
exploring the Antarctic when they were over whelmed by the forces
of nature. Their ship, Endurance, unfortunately, could not endure
the pressure of the ice, and it was crushed into splinters. Shackleton
and his men were adrift on an island of ice. He was convinced their
only hope was to move across the ice to the other side of the floe.
He ordered his men to sift through their belongings and reduce
their luggage to two pounds each. It was a sad sight to watch as they
each went apart, dug a hole in the snow, and began to dispose of
their possessions. Bundles of letters they had from their wives were
placed in their miniature mausoleums. Little gifts that they had
received before leaving from England, and all of the sentimental
things had to go, except the lightweight pictures of their wives and
sweethearts.
Meanwhile, Shackleton had to make a decision as he sorted
through things. What should he do with the ships Bible. It was a
gift from the Queen Alexandra. It was too heavy to carry along, but
could it be abandoned? Shackleton decided to compromise. He tore
out the fly leaf burying the Queens inscription in her own
handwriting, and he tore out one page of the Bible. Which page
would you choose to save if you could only save one? It would not
likely be the one which he choose, but you would not likely be in his
situation either. He selected the leaf containing the 37th and 38th
chapters of Job.
They were marooned on an island of snow and ice, and these
chapters reminded them that God was the author and creator of
snow and ice. It seemed like a God forsaken place, but these
chapters kept them aware that they were never out of the hand of
God, for His hand is in all of nature. God, in these chapters, is
challenging Job and all men to look at nature and learn from it why
they need to stand in awe before their Creator.
That part of nature we want to focus on is--snow. There are 25
references to snow in the Bible, and we are to live by every word
that proceeds out of the mouth of God, and so snow is to be a part of
creation that teaches us something about God. Doctor Talmage, that
great preacher of nature sermons, tells of two rough wood cuts he
saw as a boy. They hung side by side, and one portrayed a lad
warmly clothed, looking out of the door of his farm house upon the
first flurry of snow. Hearing the jingling sleigh bells and the frolic
of his play fellows in the deep banks, he is clapping his hands and
shouting: "It snows! It snows!"
The other sketch was of a boy, haggard and hollow-eyed with
hunger, looking for the broken door of a wretched home. Seeing the
falling flakes is to him a sign of more cold, less bread, and greater
privation. Wringing his hands, and with tears rolling down his
cheeks he cries: "It snows! It snows!" Two boys seeing the same
thing, but with totally different emotions. What we have here is not
just a matter of different strokes for different folks. Snow means
different things to different people, but it also means different things
to the same people at different times. Snow is one of those aspects of
reality that is both a potential burden, and a potential blessing,
and which it becomes depends a great deal upon your perspective.
Snow is a great deal like its creator. God is love, and the warmth
of His grace is the source of all our comforts and joys. But God is
also a consuming fire, and His judgment can be the source of great
sorrow. Snow, like God, can be a blessing or a burden; a joy or a
judgment. It has been both in my life as I am sure it has been in
yours. You have no doubt been awed by its beauty, but also made to
feel awful by its brutality.
Snow has been a major force that has determined the destiny of
many people. Such was the case with Napoleon. In the winter of
1812 Napoleon marched away from Moscow with 200,000 men on a
bright and beautiful October 19 morning. As the day wore on, the
sky darkened, and soon the snow began to fly. Harmless little
missiles, but in sufficient quantities one of nature's most deadly
weapons. Multiplied billions of these insignificant flakes fell until