Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Friday, February 14, 2014
You Are My Valentine
Oh boy! What every girl dreams of waking up to on Valentine's Day morning—a gorgeous valentine carrying a silver tray with freshly-brewed coffee, love note and that unmistakeable turquoise box tied with a red ribbon!
Here are a few more highlights of our day...
To my darling Sandi,
I love you now and forever with all my heart. You are the best wifey in the world and I am the luckiest husband. But of course we know it was not luck but God's hand that brought us together on that beach far away in the Dominican Republic. Now what an exciting future we have together according to His guidance. All my love, Tim
My darling Tim,
My valentine, my husband, my best friend, my knight in shining armour—you are that and so much more and I want you to know how special you are to me and how blessed I am to have you in my life. You are a precious and rare treasure, a gift from God, and everything I always dreamed of—strong, handsome, sweet, tender, funny, patient, loving, generous, caring, smart, wise... there's not enough room on this card to list all your wonderful qualities! I live in the warm embrace of God's love and yours each and every day—nothing is more precious to me. Happy Valentine's Day my love. I love you and adore you forever, Sandi
Love Day calls for love food so we’re on our way to The Aura Restaurant at Nita Lake Lodge but not before a bubbly love toast.
Roasted sunchoke risotto, celeriac puree, black trumpet mushrooms, truffle reduction.
Pan-roasted diver scallops, dungeness crab fritter, charred leeks, house-cured giancale fennel puree, fennel pollen, citrus buerre blanc. Can you feel the love? We can.
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Twelve Days of Christmas
On the first day of Christmas the Vancouver Bach Choir’s rapturous tones
resonate through the Orpheum Theatre right down to our bones.
On the second day of Christmas we join the Whistler Rotary Club
at The Fairmont for dinner and drinks in the pub.
On the third day of Christmas we deck our halls
with snowmen and Santas and baubles and balls.
On the fourth day of Christmas we enjoy the conduction
of great music and story in Santa’s Christmas production.
On the fifth day of Christmas we happily indulge
in homemade eggnog and the battle of the bulge.
On the sixth day of Christmas one of our favourite traditions
is watching old Christmas movies with no intermissions.
On the seventh day of Christmas we toast to this season
of hope and peace, purpose and reason.
On the eighth day of Christmas we worship and sing
thankful to God for the new-born King.
On the ninth day of Christmas we celebrate Christmas Day
with Sandi’s sister and family who invite us to stay.
Chef Randy prepares the whole marvelous feast—
the pudding, the beans—he even carves the roast beast.
On the tenth day of Christmas we trip down memory lane
at a historic village on a carousel and train.
On the eleventh day of Christmas we don’t mind the chill
as we wander through our own Whistler Who-ville.
On the twelfth day of Kissmas we ring in the new year
with a fireside dinner and lots of good cheer.
Happy New Year!
Friday, December 20, 2013
Merry Christmas
“The Saviour—yes, the Messiah, the Lord—has been born today in Bethlehem, the city of David! And you will recognize Him by this sign: You will find a baby wrapped snugly in strips of cloth, lying in a manger.”
Suddenly, the angel was joined by a vast host of others—the armies of heaven—praising God and saying, “Glory to God in highest heaven, and peace on earth to those with whom God is pleased.”...
[The shepherds] hurried to the village and found Mary and Joseph. And there was the baby, lying in the manger. After seeing Him, the shepherds told everyone what had happened and what the angel had said to them about this Child. All who heard the shepherds’ story were astonished, but Mary kept all these things in her heart and thought about them often. LUKE 2:11-19
*****
The Saviour—yes, the Messiah, the Lord—has been born today! (Luke 2:11)
The heavens dome different this day, the light all different.
The glory’s rising—glory to God in the highest heaven, and peace on earth, because God has left the glory of the galaxies and come down to our depths.
God is here! God is here! Christ is born to you, to you! The glad tidings are to you, to you!
It’s like you can hear the beating of angel wings over Bethlehem—a whole vast host—as if the sky lifts with a light that isn’t of the sun or of the stars or of this world.
Angels leaned in near the mystery so large that has become the Babe so small, and they caught Light, like catching fire.
One star hovered too close to the infinite God-become-infant and combusted bright.
And the flame of it all grazed the shepherds up on the hills, and they blazed, full of wonder, to the source—to the stable where the star seemed dim in the incarnated brilliance of the Light of the World.
God, divine Light, tabernacles Himself in skin and lights the darkness of men.
Jesus left the starry heavens to save us from our sins.
This day, this night—this is the time of the awed silence.
Now, a thousand thousand trees dance with light.
Now, a thousand thousand gifts carry love.
Now, at the foot of every tree, we are all only recipients of grace.
Christ, who called all things into being, gives you sun and moon and stars, the earth under you and the sky over you, and this ocean of air for every breath that fills every lung of every living thing—to you, to you, to you! We live in an ocean of grace. Gifts are our air.
And when we sinned and weren’t satisfied with what God gives, as if we refused to breathe air and died, when we longed for something different, something more, something better, He came and gave us Himself.
Am I enough?
Jesu, joy of man’s desiring.
I’ll take your broken heart and give you My warmed one; I’ll take your broken body and give you My fresh Spirit; I’ll take your burden-broken back and give you weightlessness.
Take Me? Let Me be your enough? Always now, no matter what—let Me be your enough.
You can have this as the best Christmas ever as much as you gaze into your Father’s face and receive His gift.
“Only He who has experienced it can believe what the love of Jesus Christ is,” whispers the pen of Bernard of Clairvaux.
A heart could burn with a love like this.
The whole of the journey, the whole of the Scriptures, is of Him. “Did not our hearts burn within us?” (Luke 24:32, ESV).
This day, this night, the Light comes, and whose heart isn’t kindled by this Love that’s a wildfire? The shepherds got angels, were lit by the angels. Everyone else that night got shepherds, heard the news from kindled, heart-burning shepherds who went and “told everyone.” When your heart burns, you’re a flaming match for other hearts. When you’re a manger tramp who came with nothing but your ragged heart and leaned in close over that crèche, when you’ve beheld His glory, the white heat of a Love like this—who doesn’t tramp out of the manger and into the world with a heart glowing like hot embers in your chest?
A heart like this could catch the world on fire.
Christ came into the world for you—and you came into the world for Him.
The world will be still tonight.
There will be lingering. Longing. We will long for this wonder to all go on. One Christmas candle will flame in the quiet. This cannot fade—none of this can ever fade. “For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given” (Isaiah 9:6, NKJV). God is with us.
God stays with us.
The Christmas candle burns hot, give its light, gives its Light—and the world lights up, and Christmas goes on forever now.
Christ, the always Gift for all our days.
Excerpt from The Greatest Gift by Ann Voskamp.
Wishing you and yours a wonderful Christmas.
Monday, December 2, 2013
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