Good morning,
We are still in Arizona, but we are sight seeing on our way home. We ask that you keep us in your prayers as we travel these next few days.
Our season at Suncape RV Resort was a great experience can't wait to share with many of you in person how God used us and how this great park blessed us. I didn't feel good (physically) most of the time there, but God in all his glory strengthened me. Many times He used one of you when you called or sent an email to encourage me. I was able to continue God's work. This reminds me of a story. I know, that shocks you. It follows below.
Thanks for your prayers, emails, phone calls and your financial support.
Have a great day,
love you,
pass it on,
Don
How Much Music Can You Make?
How Much Music Can You Make?
Imagine this. A concert violinist is performing a difficult piece in front of a large audience.
Suddenly there is a loud snap that reverberates throughout the auditorium.
The audience immediately knows that a string has broken and fully expects the concert to be suspended until another string, or instrument, is brought to the musician.
But instead, the violinist composes herself, closes her eyes and then signals the conductor to begin again.
The orchestra resumes where they had left off and now the musician plays the music on three strings.
In her mind she works out new fingering to compensate for the missing string.
A work that few people can play well on four strings, the violinist with the broken string plays on three.
When she finishes, an awesome silence hangs in the room. And then as one, the crowd rises to their feet and cheers wildly.
The violinist smiles and wipes perspiration from her brow. When silence returns to the great room, she explains why she continued to play in spite of a broken string.
"You know," she says, still breathless, "sometimes it is the artist's task to find out how much music you can still make with what you have left."
We know what she means, don't we? Maybe we've lived most of our lives and we have only a little time left.
Can we still make music?
Maybe disease has robbed us of our capacity to work.
Can we still make music?
Perhaps a financial loss has left us impoverished.
Can we still make music?
Or maybe a meaningful relationship has ended and we feel alone in the world.
Can we still make music?
There will come a time when we all experience loss. Like the violinist, will we find the courage to discover just how much music we can still make with what we have left?
How much good we can still do?
How much joy we can still share?
For I'm convinced that the world, more than ever, needs the music only you can make.
And if it takes extra courage to make the music, many will applaud your effort.
For some people have lost more than others, and these brave souls inspire the rest of us to greater heights.
Just how much music can you make with what you have left?
Let the Music Begin.....
With thanks to KH Marolia