Your Heat Treat Today team will be celebrating the holidays with our families, and our offices will be closed from December 21 to January 1. Look for your next Heat Treat Daily e-newsletter on January 2nd! Until then, we hope this message encourages you and directs you to the true source of hope during this season.
Room with Him
In the next few days, it’ll be easy to get overwhelmed with all the activities, the gatherings, the lights and colors, crinkly wrapping paper and Christmas songs . . . and the movies. Who doesn’t settle down at least once during the season to watch a favorite Christmas movie? Some folks prefer the classics like White Christmas or It’s a Wonderful Life. Others love the new seasonal specials, like Home Alone or Elf. Maybe it’s Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer that reigns in your house. My family’s favorite is The Muppet Christmas Carol.
In most Christmas movies, there’s always a special scene that moves viewers, reinforcing the themes of Christmas: hope, love, hospitality, faith, generosity, thankfulness. One scene from Rudolph moves me more than most, but I bet it’s not the one you’re thinking of.
Do you remember the residents of the Island of Misfit Toys? Dolly, and Charlie-in-the-box, and the boomerang who wouldn’t come back — toys that weren’t wanted because they didn’t do what was expected of them, or they were a little different in their design. Exiled to the Island of Misfit Toys, they waited and hoped for a chance to be enjoyed, appreciated and loved. However, the island was so far off course that they were forgotten year after year, and they were never given the opportunity to brighten a child’s Christmas morning.
Disappointments, slights, brokenness are felt, even at this time of year. Dolly’s words resonate with us when she says, “I just don’t feel like I have any more hope left in me.” Our hearts are troubled, and our coordinates don’t register on the radar. We might feel lost and forgotten along with the misfit toys.
This season is about more than parties, gifts, and decorations, as we all know. Jesus, the Son of God, became man, taking the form of a baby and living as the God-man, the perfect redemption for the lost, the broken, the misfits.
It is striking that at the end of his ministry, as he was wrapping up his time with his disciples before he went to the cross, Jesus assured them, “In my Father’s house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also.” (John 14:2-3) Jesus wandered about without a place to lay his head, yet he is quick to promise his troubled people not merely shelter, any shelter, but a room in the Father’s house.
Although the Savior came to no room at his birthplace, he has gone on to prepare rooms for us, and it’s not just a room, that is, a designated space with measurements and coordinates. He will be there also. And not just a room with him there — that would be awesome enough, but he also prepares for us, his followers, to be with him, to abide with him, to reside in him. He is what makes up the features, the atmosphere, the feng shui of the room. He is home. He is the where of kicking off our shoes and settling down with a cuppa joe. He is comfort food, a soft blanket, and a wagging tail at the door. This is what Christians mean when we say Jesus is our Sabbath.
A popular saying at this time of year is “Make room in your heart for Jesus.” Notwithstanding we can’t make the room, but he must, the truer saying is that “Jesus has made room for us.”
Hear his tender words of encouragement, which come after his prediction that Simon Peter will fail and deny him, just as we do in unbelief and discontentment: “Let not your hearts be troubled.” What follows next is his exhortation: “You believe in God? Believe also in me.” (John 14:1)
He doesn’t leave us to our own devices or our own means of finding our way to him. He comes to dwell with us; he becomes our dwelling place. And now, he is preparing an eternal dwelling place for his people. That’s the hope he gives the disciples as their steps falter under the burden of their troubled hearts, “that where I am you may be also.”
Know Jesus, and we can be assured we won’t be left on this island of misfit toys forever. We have a home.
And that makes for a merry Christmas message!
Here at Heat Treat Today, we are looking to 2025 with much anticipation and hope for more opportunities to work together and challenge ourselves and others with new ideas in the North American heat treat industry. Thank you for the opportunities every day to serve and encourage you in our heat treat corner of the world.
From the entire Heat Treat Today team, we wish you a very joyous and restful Christmas celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ!
by Laura Miller