THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
Christmas and New Year's Eve are
past, the
vistas of 2007 have passed into history, and we stand on the threshold
of a
brand new year.
Perhaps you, as I, often think:
"If
only I had the foresight to know what this year holds of good or ill!"
But
at the same time we should know that not possessing such foreknowledge
is a
blessing, indeed. Christ himself, the greatest sage of all time, said:
"Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." (Matthew 6:34b). We
can usually handle each day as it comes, surprising though it may be.
It is
when we try to probe larger segments of time that we become overwhelmed
and
thwarted from life's purposes.
With these philosophical
thoughts, may you
and I face the year 2008 with confidence, grateful to be alive, to be
aware and
eager to see what the year brings forth.
Speaking of the New Year,
celebrations of
the old year's passage and another's beginning have been recorded in
secular
and religious history for at least 4,000 years. The Spring Equinox
marked the
Babylonian New Year. For the Assyrians, Egyptians, Phoenicians and
Persians,
the Fall Equinox began the New Year. The ancient Greeks lauded the
Winter
Solstice as the dawn of the New Year. When the Julian (Roman calendar)
was
introduced, January 1 started in 153 B. C. Now, 2,161 years later, we
still
observe January 1 as the beginning of our New Year. Stretching ahead of
us for
2008 are the days of this Leap Year, which gives us an added day in
February.
What can we expect in 2008, if
the days of
finite time extend throughout its length?
Another presidential election
will have
come and gone. We will hear promises from presidential hopefuls, weigh
them on
scales of political justice (if there is, indeed, such a standard for
judgment), and as free Americans we will make a choice for the next
president
of the
Will we be acutely aware
throughout 2008
that many issues face
Will we be more aware of
critical issues
that face our environment, like global warming and scarcity of
resources of
water, food and fuel? Or shall we go our incognizant way thinking that
somehow
the problems will resolve themselves without much change in our
lifestyles and
habits?
The past 100 years have brought
innumerable
firsts. When our grandparents or great grandparents greeted the New
Year in
1908, the first great lighted ball dropped in
Two hundred years ago, on
As 2008 dawns, we have what
common sense
tells us of foresight, although no crystal ball is available to show us
the
turn of events in this new year. Hindsight is a better indicator of
pitfalls to
avoid and good deeds to emulate. May we apply what we know of good will
to the
days of 2008 and live them out as happily and productively as we are
able.
c2008 by
Ethelene Dyer
Jones; published Jan. 3, 2008 in The Union Sentinel, Blairsville,
GA.
Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Updated May 21, 2018
Back To Union County, GAGenWeb
Site