Bold Like an Easter Egg Dip
Please WELCOME Julie Arduini today with a VERY SEASONAL devotional!
Forgive my excitement over something so mundane but I have a confession: I don't eat eggs.
Alright, I eat chocolate peanut butter eggs but not the real kind that you scramble. I'm so against eggs I never decorated them for Easter. When I had children I saved that project until grandma came to town.
This year we had snow storm after snow storm and this last one occurred when my son had a friend visit. Our original plans to travel across state lines to visit a chocolate factory went with the blizzard like winds.I took them to a nearby store for snacks and spotted the egg decorating kit. I went for it.
Since my past experience with making things out of a box rarely translated to success, I read the egg directions a few times. The following directive took me way beyond Easter egg decorating.
To make bolder colors, add vinegar.
The longer you keep the egg dipped, the bolder the egg color becomes.
Vinegar is
Bold outcome calls for a long stay in bitter liquid. I can't think of anything more horrific than beating, mocking, whipping and lashing coming from leather strips with sharp blunt objects attached to expose not skin, but bone. T
Five years ago our family was submerged in the vinegar of life. Job changes, abnormal newborn test results, medical mix up, doctor error, croup, near death, RSV, pneumonia, new job, moving, terminal diagnosis in family, surgery for oldest child, death of parent, grief, selling home in one state to buy home in another, leaving everyone and everything to obey God's call on our life.
Does the last line sound like the One who took a bold dip in vinegar? If you are facing adversity, think about the decorated eggs. My very favorite ones are the bold and brilliant ones. The ones that carry the trace of vinegar because they stayed in the bitter stuff the longest.
And thrived.
Just like you can.
Just like HE did.
"The soldiers also came up and mocked Him. They offered him wine vinegar and said, "If you are the king of the Jews, save yourself." Luke 23:36-37, NIV
Julie Arduini is a graduate of the Christian Writer’s Guild and a columnist with both Take Root and Write and The Cypress Times. She has published credits as a contributing writer. Her quote about being buried by a snow plow will be featured this year in Kathy Vick’s gift book by Howard/Simon & Schuster, Run Like a Girl. To see more of her writing resume, please check the right sidebar of her blog, The Surrendered Scribe. Julie lives in Ohio with her husband and two children.
Labels: Faith, Guest Contributor, holidays
7 Comments:
Fantastic post.
thank you for an incredible post.
Oh Julie, this is positively anointed. Yes, amen.
Well...of all I've read today...this one HIT me. Smack on the nose. And the tears came. I have battled...and here I sit. Facing the choice. Do I become the bold color He's calling me to?
I say yes. I do.
Julie...thank you for this post. It ministered to me in a REAL way. In a needed time.
Oh yeah, I can taste the bitterness. But to a hungry soul, every bitter thing is sweet (Pr. 27:7), and so our hunger for Christ turns even our bitter times sweet...at least in hindsight!
Thanks for this wonderful post.
That was great!
I originally found my way over here because I followed from Kristen's blog (we are THAT family), then kept reading every post until I was so joyful I had to stop and put my cursor back up to the top and subscribe!
Loved your post! Keep up the good writing!
:)
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It is good to hear from you... thank you so very much for leaving a note on the table. That makes us smile!
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