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In the midwinter of the soul, all is cold and fruit is nowhere to be found. Leaves and blossoms that once sat spinning light and health have fallen off and lie there, broken down below. The forest floor beneath me, one time, was carpeted with remnants of my last sweet spring of growth. Abandoned, all but lost, and listening, to a moaning in the wind. But trees don't die in winter; nor did I. Spring crept in slowly, bit by bit, an undiscovered quickness in the heart, and hints of breath so far away, so deep within, that stirrings heard were no more spent than darkness closed back in. But still that gentle pressing in the heartwood of my soul, kept on, and stronger day by day until, with terrifying clarity the parts of me that died were seeking fully to control each waking thought. In the midwinter of the soul, the heart is cold, and fruits that once were juicy lie there rotting on the ground. And all seems lost within. But 'tis not so for me, I know, for Spring has come again once more, the sap runs true, runs through each drooping limb. Lift up your heads, you forests of the Lord, bowed down, surrounded, cold within. Let light shine forth within you, let the woodland fairies swim through waterfalls of blossoms as they slip from limb to limb, delighting in the tearing of the chaining wounds within. "Bleed once more," He told me, "let the terror of your sin, destroy the cold unfeeling that has wormed at you - and then at last, the living, green delight will sparkle like the stars of every clear and silent night." Bear fruit in keeping with the cleansing of your soul, for every tree drinks deeply of the river's rushing flow; take confidence, a promised voice to hear: "Well grown, my tree. My good and faithful bough." + And in the brightness of His majesty, I will forever bow.
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Apr 2, 2019
Apr 2, 2019 at 6:54 PM UTC
midwinter of the soul
In the midwinter of the soul, all is cold and fruit is nowhere to be found. Leaves and blossoms that once sat spinning light and health have fallen off and lie there, broken down below. The forest floor beneath me, one time, was carpeted with remnants of my last sweet spring of growth. Abandoned, all but lost, and listening, to a moaning in the wind. But trees don't die in winter; nor did I. Spring crept in slowly, bit by bit, an undiscovered quickness in the heart, and hints of breath so far away, so deep within, that stirrings heard were no more spent than darkness closed back in. But still that gentle pressing in the heartwood of my soul, kept on, and stronger day by day until, with terrifying clarity the parts of me that died were seeking fully to control each waking thought. In the midwinter of the soul, the heart is cold, and fruits that once were juicy lie there rotting on the ground. And all seems lost within. But 'tis not so for me, I know, for Spring has come again once more, the sap runs true, runs through each drooping limb. Lift up your heads, you forests of the Lord, bowed down, surrounded, cold within. Let light shine forth within you, let the woodland fairies swim through waterfalls of blossoms as they slip from limb to limb, delighting in the tearing of the chaining wounds within. "Bleed once more," He told me, "let the terror of your sin, destroy the cold unfeeling that has wormed at you - and then at last, the living, green delight will sparkle like the stars of every clear and silent night." Bear fruit in keeping with the cleansing of your soul, for every tree drinks deeply of the river's rushing flow; take confidence, a promised voice to hear: "Well grown, my tree. My good and faithful bough." + And in the brightness of His majesty, I will forever bow.
mldetwiler
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Apr 2, 2019
Apr 2, 2019 at 6:54 PM UTC
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