It is different to get...
Illustration
It is different to get excited about celebrating a promise in a day when promises are cheap.
We are bombarded by false promises. Advertisements scream out the promise of a happy, romance-filled future if you buy the right brand or drink the right beverage or wear the right product or smoke the right cigarette. The mail regularly brings the hollow promise that "You have been selected to receive ..." The fine print of life always reveals we really haven't won a prize at all.
Don graduated from college last June. It was really tough, but he made it. Now he just received the job offer he had been waiting for. This is it! New worlds and a new life lay before him. It is time to celebrate. He is excited -- excited not just because of what he has accomplished, but because a promise could soon be fulfilled. Mary, his high school sweetheart, had not been able to go to college. She stayed at home working as a waitress. A year ago they were engaged; no date was set for the wedding: "When I graduate, and when I have my job, we will get married as soon as possible. I promise," he had said. Now they can celebrate the promise!
In a day of junk-mail promises God invites us to celebrate the promise -- his promise.
We are bombarded by false promises. Advertisements scream out the promise of a happy, romance-filled future if you buy the right brand or drink the right beverage or wear the right product or smoke the right cigarette. The mail regularly brings the hollow promise that "You have been selected to receive ..." The fine print of life always reveals we really haven't won a prize at all.
Don graduated from college last June. It was really tough, but he made it. Now he just received the job offer he had been waiting for. This is it! New worlds and a new life lay before him. It is time to celebrate. He is excited -- excited not just because of what he has accomplished, but because a promise could soon be fulfilled. Mary, his high school sweetheart, had not been able to go to college. She stayed at home working as a waitress. A year ago they were engaged; no date was set for the wedding: "When I graduate, and when I have my job, we will get married as soon as possible. I promise," he had said. Now they can celebrate the promise!
In a day of junk-mail promises God invites us to celebrate the promise -- his promise.
