Topic: A Midwinter Poem – Insight For Living Daily Devotional by Chuck Swindoll Ministry 27 December 2020

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A Midwinter Poem

December 27, 2020by Pastor Chuck SwindollScriptures: Hebrews 10:23–24

AS WE MOVE TOWARD the close of this year, we must refocus our priorities. Here is an anchor passage for us as we end one year and begin another:

Let us hold tightly without wavering to the hope we affirm, for God can be trusted to keep his promise. Let us think of ways to motivate one another to acts of love and good works.

HEBREWS 10:23–24

By entering this poem, you may feel the temperature drop a degree or two. But even more, I hope it will stimulate you to reach beyond the bounds of your territory to serve others. It’s called “At the Winter Feeder,”1 by John Leax, who has served for over three decades on the faculty at Houghton College:

His feather flame doused dull

by icy cold,

the cardinal hunched

into the rough, green feeder

but ate no seed.

Through binoculars I saw

festered and useless

his beak, broken

at the root. Then two: one blazing, one gray,rode the swirling weatherinto my visionand lighted at his side. Unhurried, as if possessingthe patience of God,they cracked sunflowersand fed himbeak to wounded beakchoice meats. Each morning and afternoonthe winter long,that odd triumvirate,that trinity of need,returned and atetheir sacramentof broken seed.

If birds had souls, I have no doubt that cardinal would, yield to the God of his friends. Attractive adjectives plus unselfish verbs equal faith in the Noun of truth. It’s an axiom that holds true at the winter bird feeder. Let’s make certain it holds true in our lives, too.

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