Judy A Knox

Dewdrops of Grace

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God’s Goodness and My First Haboob

August 14, 2018

I love God’s intricate timing. Sometimes I end up late somewhere when I thought I’d left home in plenty of time, or I make an accidental wrong turn. Then later I learn my “mistake” kept me from a dangerous situation. In Psalm 37:23 we are told, “The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord.” When we commit our day to God, He’ll see that we’re always in the right place at the right time.

One bright, sunny 108° afternoon I went for a nice cool walk in the air-conditioned mall near my home. Walking my usual route, as I passed the entrance to Dillard’s department store, I noticed a pretty shirt I hadn’t seen before. “Lord,” I said, “if that would be a good thing for me, please remind me of it before I leave the mall.” I was almost to the escalator when I remembered the shirt, so I walked back to the store, grabbed one in each of two likely sizes, and proceeded to the fitting room.

Neither of them looked right. Surprised that God had drawn my eye to something, then reminded me to try it on, when I wouldn’t be able to use it, I hung the shirts back on the rack and headed to the mall exit. Outside the door, the air around me was brown. Dust. I was enveloped in dust. The air was perfectly still as if that dust was a natural part of the air.

As a new Arizona resident, I’d heard of the desert dust storms called haboobs, but had never experienced one. I walked to my car through the eerily still brown air. Just as I opened the door, the wind started. By the time I’d turned on the engine and fastened my seat belt, debris and palm tree parts were beginning to fly around me.

Still not realizing the severity of the storm, I drove out of the parking lot and turned onto the main street. It was like driving in a blizzard, except everything was brown instead of white, and the road wasn’t slippery. Visibility was limited, but I was on a familiar street and less than two miles from home. Then the rain came, and what a rain it was! Drops as big as quarters hit my windshield. Tiny hailstones pinged against my car.

When I arrived at the gate to my “park” (55+ gated community) the stoplight wasn’t working, due to a power outage. Rain continued to pour by the bucketful, and water rushed down the sides of the streets, but the wind had slowed down. I continued through the park, about a mile from the gate to my home, driving through rivers of water and around trees and piles of debris lying in the road.

When I arrived at my condo, I was thankful that unlike the stoplight at the entrance, my home — including my garage opener — had electricity. Safely home at last!

Later I learned I had driven through the edge of a haboob, which had been followed by a microburst. The microburst had torn through our park, knocking down trees and tearing apart all kinds of vegetation. It also ripped out two of my window screens, dumped over some large flowerpots on my patio, and tore one barrel from the barrel cactus in my front yard.

It was some time before I realized if I hadn’t stopped to try on those shirts, I would have been driving through the park right when debris was flying and trees were falling, instead of out on the main road where all I had to contend with was rain. “The angel of the Lord encamps all around those who fear Him, and delivers them” (Psalm 34:7). I had been protected from serious danger and safely delivered home. Once again I had experienced God’s goodness in everyday life.

Have you had a similar experience of protection due to God’s timing where you didn’t realize till later what had happened? I would love to hear about it.

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Spring is Here! The Equinox Says So!

March 20, 2017

Today is the Spring Equinox, the First Day of Spring! The sun and the earth are in their places. Hopefully the weather will get the message soon! It’s at this time of year that the sun is directly in front of you if you’re heading west near the time of sunset, or east at sunrise, making driving a bit of a challenge. This happens because wherever you are on the planet, the sun is rising due east and setting due west.

When I was teaching Earth Science in high school, I celebrated this day with my students in a way I hoped they would remember what the equinox is all about. Twice a year on the days of the spring and fall equinoxes, I would bring cupcakes to school – but not just any cupcakes. These were Equinox Cupcakes: half chocolate and half yellow, with frosting to match, representing the fact that on this day there are 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness all over the world, no matter how far north or south you may be.

The equinox is caused by the earth’s position in its orbit around the sun. On all other days of the year, the tilt of the axis causes more sunlight to fall in one hemisphere or the other, causing winter in the northern hemisphere while it’s summer in the southern, and vice versa. But on the Spring and Fall Equinoxes everybody gets 12 and 12.

I am also fascinated by phases of the moon, and many other observable occurrences caused by the movements of the earth, sun, moon, and planets. I have been known go out and measure the angle of the sun in the sky, or measure the sun’s shadow at various times of the day, simply out of curiosity.

Nowadays there are websites a person can use to find out anything he wants to know about angles, length of daylight, and any other calculation he might be curious about. My days of measuring these things directly are probably over too, although I must admit, as I am out walking if I see a straight pole casting a shadow, I may try to estimate the length of the shadow compared to the height of the pole and mentally calculate how high the sun must be right now.

You may be wondering why I’m sharing this with you. Just to show you that I am truly weird? No, that isn’t why. I have mentioned in previous blogs how reassuring I find it that we can count on astronomical line-ups taking place at their appointed times, as they have been for thousands of years. I get excited about tangible evidences of God’s faithfulness. He tells us why He set this all in place: “Then God said, ‘Let there be lights in the heavens to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs and seasons, and for days and years’” (Genesis 1:14).

Maybe the equinoxes are also a bit special to me because it sounds like my name is in the word. The name comes from two Latin words: equi meaning “equal,” and nox meaning “night,” because the length of night is equal everywhere on that day. But there’s more than that. What most intrigues me about the equinox is the fact that it is a time of balance, perfect balance between the day and night, and that it’s happening everywhere. But when I celebrate the equinox, it is not a celebration of the sun, the earth, or their motions and angles. I am celebrating the faithfulness of our Creator God.

It has been a few years since I made my last batch of cupcakes, but I remain intrigued at this astronomical line-up that occurs regularly and predictably twice a year.

Happy Equinox Day! I hope spring arrives soon where you are!

Photo from examiner.com

 

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