Light For The New Year
Stories
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"Light for the New Year" by John Fitzgerald
Light for the New Year
by John Fitzgerald
Here is a poem you might find interesting:
LIFE LOOKED BETTER IN BLACK AND WHITE
You could hardly see all the snow.
Spread the rabbit ears as far as they go.
Pull up a chair on the TV set,
“Good night, David; Good night, Chet.”
Depending on the channel you tuned
You got Rob and Laura or Ward and June.
It felt so good, felt so right.
Life looked better in black and white.
I Love Lucy, The Real McCoys
Dennis the Menace, the Cleaver boys
Rawhide, Gunsmoke, Wagon Train
Superman, Jimmy & Lois Lane.
Father Knows Best, Patty Duke
Rin Tin Tin and Lassie too,
Donna Reed on Thursday night
Life looked better in black and white.
I want to go back to black and white.
Everything always turned out right.
Simple people, simple lives
Good guys always won the fights.
Now nothing is the way it seems
in living color on the TV screen
Too many murders, too much fight,
I want to go back to black and white.
In God they trusted, in bed they slept.
A promise made was a promise kept.
They never cussed or broke their vows,
They would never make the network now.
But if I could, I’d rather be
in a TV town in ‘53
It felt so good, felt so right
Life looked better in black and white.
Maybe it is just nostalgia. Or perhaps it is just being sentimental about the so-called “Good old days.” But, there did seem to be a simpler time when we could distinguish between right and wrong. Now, everything is complicated and complex. We have seemed to lose our way in moral confusion and swamped by ethical challenges.
The Good News of Christ’s Gospel stands against present darkness. The Bible teaches that in Christ we have light to help us maintain high standards. Today, marks the traditional close of our Christmas season. Twelve days after Christmas Day-three wise men found their way to Bethlehem and Worshipped a New Born King. January 6 marks an Epiphany-or revelation of Light discovered in the Christ Child.
Each one of us like the Wise Men portrayed in our scripture must discover our personal path to Jesus. Light shines and guides us on the road we must travel. We come before Jesus bearing precious gifts. Our time, talent, and energy are the greatest presents we can give to the Lord. The New Year will present new twists and bends in our highway to God. None of us knows exactly what lies ahead. We do know that Jesus promises to be with us in occasions of joy and sorrow.
We have sufficient Light, and unending Hope to guide us in living with a culture which is increasingly becoming secular and without any spiritual compass.
Epiphany is a good time to latch ahold of God’s Light and trust in the Lords promises for 2016. As we continue our pilgrimage of love and light the refrain of We Three Kings speaks to us:
O star of wonder, star of night, Star with royal beauty bright,
Westward leading, still proceeding, Guide us to thy perfect light.
John Fitzgerald lives in Leesburg, Ohio, with his wife Carolyn and has served as pastor at the Leesburg Friends Meeting for the past 27 years. Cornfield Cathedral (Fairway Press, 2013) is the second book authored by Pastor Fitzgerald. John has earned a Master's of Ministry Degree from the Earlham School of Religion in Richmond, Indiana.
*****************************************
StoryShare, January 6, 2016, issue.
Copyright 2015 by CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Lima, Ohio.
All rights reserved. Subscribers to the StoryShare service may print and use this material as it was intended in sermons, in worship and classroom settings, in brief devotions, in radio spots, and as newsletter fillers. No additional permission is required from the publisher for such use by subscribers only. Inquiries should be addressed to permissions@csspub.com or to Permissions, CSS Publishing Company, Inc., 5450 N. Dixie Highway, Lima, Ohio 45807.
"Light for the New Year" by John Fitzgerald
Light for the New Year
by John Fitzgerald
Here is a poem you might find interesting:
LIFE LOOKED BETTER IN BLACK AND WHITE
You could hardly see all the snow.
Spread the rabbit ears as far as they go.
Pull up a chair on the TV set,
“Good night, David; Good night, Chet.”
Depending on the channel you tuned
You got Rob and Laura or Ward and June.
It felt so good, felt so right.
Life looked better in black and white.
I Love Lucy, The Real McCoys
Dennis the Menace, the Cleaver boys
Rawhide, Gunsmoke, Wagon Train
Superman, Jimmy & Lois Lane.
Father Knows Best, Patty Duke
Rin Tin Tin and Lassie too,
Donna Reed on Thursday night
Life looked better in black and white.
I want to go back to black and white.
Everything always turned out right.
Simple people, simple lives
Good guys always won the fights.
Now nothing is the way it seems
in living color on the TV screen
Too many murders, too much fight,
I want to go back to black and white.
In God they trusted, in bed they slept.
A promise made was a promise kept.
They never cussed or broke their vows,
They would never make the network now.
But if I could, I’d rather be
in a TV town in ‘53
It felt so good, felt so right
Life looked better in black and white.
Maybe it is just nostalgia. Or perhaps it is just being sentimental about the so-called “Good old days.” But, there did seem to be a simpler time when we could distinguish between right and wrong. Now, everything is complicated and complex. We have seemed to lose our way in moral confusion and swamped by ethical challenges.
The Good News of Christ’s Gospel stands against present darkness. The Bible teaches that in Christ we have light to help us maintain high standards. Today, marks the traditional close of our Christmas season. Twelve days after Christmas Day-three wise men found their way to Bethlehem and Worshipped a New Born King. January 6 marks an Epiphany-or revelation of Light discovered in the Christ Child.
Each one of us like the Wise Men portrayed in our scripture must discover our personal path to Jesus. Light shines and guides us on the road we must travel. We come before Jesus bearing precious gifts. Our time, talent, and energy are the greatest presents we can give to the Lord. The New Year will present new twists and bends in our highway to God. None of us knows exactly what lies ahead. We do know that Jesus promises to be with us in occasions of joy and sorrow.
We have sufficient Light, and unending Hope to guide us in living with a culture which is increasingly becoming secular and without any spiritual compass.
Epiphany is a good time to latch ahold of God’s Light and trust in the Lords promises for 2016. As we continue our pilgrimage of love and light the refrain of We Three Kings speaks to us:
O star of wonder, star of night, Star with royal beauty bright,
Westward leading, still proceeding, Guide us to thy perfect light.
John Fitzgerald lives in Leesburg, Ohio, with his wife Carolyn and has served as pastor at the Leesburg Friends Meeting for the past 27 years. Cornfield Cathedral (Fairway Press, 2013) is the second book authored by Pastor Fitzgerald. John has earned a Master's of Ministry Degree from the Earlham School of Religion in Richmond, Indiana.
*****************************************
StoryShare, January 6, 2016, issue.
Copyright 2015 by CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Lima, Ohio.
All rights reserved. Subscribers to the StoryShare service may print and use this material as it was intended in sermons, in worship and classroom settings, in brief devotions, in radio spots, and as newsletter fillers. No additional permission is required from the publisher for such use by subscribers only. Inquiries should be addressed to permissions@csspub.com or to Permissions, CSS Publishing Company, Inc., 5450 N. Dixie Highway, Lima, Ohio 45807.

