Sunday, January 15, 2006

Windshield Wipers and God

One rainy afternoon I was driving along one of the main streets of town, taking those extra precautions necessary when the roads are wet and slick.

Suddenly, my daughter, Aspen, spoke up from her relaxed position in her seat. "Dad, I'm thinking of something."

This announcement usually meant she had been pondering somefact for a while, and was now ready to expound all that her six-year-old mind haddiscovered. I was eager to hear.

"What are you thinking?" I asked.

"The rain," she began, "is like sin, and the windshieldwipers are like God wiping our sins away."

After the chill bumps raced up my arms I was able to respond. "That's really good, Aspen." Then my curiosity broke in.

How far would this little girl take this revelation? So I asked.. "Do you notice how the rain keeps on coming? What does that tell you?"

Aspen didn't hesitate one moment with her answer:"We keep on sinning, and God just keeps on forgiving us."

I will always remember this whenever I turn my wipers on.

Isn't it distressing to know that when you forward this message you will not send it to many on your address list because you're not sure what they believe, or what they will think of you for sending it to them. Funny how I can be more worried about what other people think of me than what God thinks of me.

In order to see the rainbow, you must first endure some rain.

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

This picture is reportedly by Thomas Kincaid (and is definitely in his style). The comentary is supposedly by his daughter. I don't know if this is true or not, but the picture is certainly impressive, as is the commentary.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi, I just discovered your blog and I like it a lot! I was just wondering, where is that "life is a journey" quote from? It's really neat.

In Christ,
~Corey

Anonymous said...

Before I get anymore of these, I figure that I should nip this hoax and piece of maudlin crap right now. All these things do is give true inspiring words a bad name and it preys on one's gullibility. This piece from Kincaid is nice but the story is an out and out lie. Someone has a lot of time on their hands and enjoys jerking people off. As Puck said to Lord Oberon, "O Lord, what fools these mortals be"
Kincaid has three daughters and they are named Merrit, Chandler and Winsor. His wife is named Nanette. You will notice that he has no offspring named Aspen as this hoax notes.
PS: Kincaid has some art series titled Aspen