Reflections on spiritual themes (and a few other things).

Tag: Weather

Yes or No?

Why is it that weather forecasts and forecasters try to make you feel miserable?

In the summer, it’s the “heat index.” The forecaster can’t just say it’ll be hot. Or very hot. The forecaster must explain that the temperature will feel even worse than it is. In the winter, it’s the “wind chill factor.”  The forecaster can’t just say it’ll be cold. Or very cold. The forecaster must explain that the temperature will feel even worse than it is.

I’m sure they mean well. But sometimes I wish they’d just tell me the facts as accurately as possible and let me decide how I should act upon them. Instead, they try to sell me on the weather, tell me how I’m supposed to dress and behave, and how I’m supposed to feel. It’s less about weather forecasting and more about weather marketing.

In our media-saturated, consumer-oriented culture, much of everyday life is shaped by marketing. We must be sold on a concept. Someone wants to create a need in me that really isn’t a need, a need I didn’t realize I had until I saw a particular ad on TV or on social media (which involved tracking all my preferences and clicks). 

I can’t just buy toothpaste – my mouth, life, and relationships must be transformed. I can’t just buy breakfast cereal – I must buy something that’s kid-friendly, tasty, fun, has a toy, and provides 100% of my nutritional needs. I can’t just buy a new shirt – I should make a fashion statement. I can’t just buy a vehicle to get me to and fro – it must be sexy. I can’t just say that this product is good – I have to say it’s phat, dope, lit, sick, or (of course) awesome. 

Enough already!

It’s estimated that adults speak about 16,000 words per day (in Science, August 2007). If you translate that into a text document, that’s about 32 pages of text per day (letter-sized paper, one-inch margins, 12-point text). That’s about 500 pages in a two-week period. In other words, you speak enough to produce a novel every two weeks. 

Jesus once warned “that every careless word that people speak, they shall give an accounting for it in the day of judgment” (Matthew 12.36). How many of our 16,000 words per day (or 500 pages per fortnight) are worth remembering? Even more, were our words truthful? Clear? Direct? Loving? 

There’s a reason why Jesus said, “let your statement be, ‘Yes, yes’ or ‘No, no’; anything beyond these is of evil” (Matthew 5.37). How elegantly simple! Just say what needs to be said, nothing more, nothing less, no spin, no manipulation. Just truth. 

For today and every day say just exactly what needs to be said.

The God of Ice and Snow

This week, the Mid-South has been hit hard with snow and frigid temperatures. Memphis averages 2.7 inches of snow per year, most often in the form of one or two snowfalls of one or two inches each. This week we’ve had about six inches, and the city is pretty much shut down.

When we think about ice and snow, it should also make us think about God. In the Book of Job, God challenged Job by saying, “Have you entered the storehouses of the snow, or have you seen the storehouses of the hail, which I have reserved for the time of distress, for the day of war and battle?” (Job 38.22-23)

That text is remarkable for many reasons, not the least of which is that the land of Israel rarely saw snow. Yet there are over 80 references to snow, hail, ice, and winter. Mount Hermon, which is 145 miles north of Jerusalem was visible for miles and usually snow covered all year. The Book of Job has more references to wintery weather than any other book, and Job lived in the middle of the Arabian Desert!

Let me suggest three powerful lessons about God that we can learn from the snow and ice.

First, when we think about snow and ice, we should think about the power of God. In the book of Job, Elihu says, “God thunders with His voice wondrously, doing great things which we cannot comprehend. For to the snow He says, ‘Fall on the earth,’ and to the downpour and the rain, ‘Be strong’ … from the breath of God ice is made, and the expanse of the waters is frozen” (Job 37.5-6, 10). Only God causes the snow and ice to fall and uses them for his purposes.

Second, when we think about snow and ice, we should think about the providence of God. We tend to think about the inconvenience of snow, ice, and cold weather, but God uses the weather to meet the needs of his people. Speaking of God’s provisions for Jerusalem, Psalm 147 says, “He makes peace in your borders; he satisfies you with the finest of the wheat. He sends forth His command to the earth; his word runs very swiftly. He gives snow like wool; he scatters the frost like ashes. He casts forth His ice as fragments; who can stand before His cold? He sends forth His word and melts them; he causes His wind to blow and the waters to flow” (v. 14-18).

Finally, when we think about snow and ice, we should think about the purity of God. After his sin with Bathsheba, David prayed, “Purify me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow” (Psalm 51.7). There’s nothing as white as snow. I have a dear friend in Iowa, who whenever it snows says, “There’s no white like God’s white.” The Bible uses the whiteness of snow as a metaphor for moral cleanness. Sin is portrayed as an ugly stain, but God offers to cleanse our spirits and make them “as white as snow.”

Snow and ice are a bit inconvenient and messy. But like all of God’s creation, they’re a powerful witness to the limitless power of God. Praise God for cold weather!