
originally written for my âFamily Timeâ Column in Fountain of Life Magazine, Jan/Feb 2016
It seems we are a people who love new beginnings.
Turning over a new leaf. Wiping the slate clean. Starting over. Waking up to the dawn of a new day.
As a child, no matter how much I loved summer vacation, there was always a tinge of excitement in getting ready for the new school year: new notebooks, new pencils, just think of that a brand-new box of crayons–not a single one broken!
The beginning of the new calendar year is no different. We set new goals. New diets. New exercise regimens. New disciplines.
Itâs the new âDay One.â
Hence, my family tradition: Cleaning out the house on New Yearâs Eve.
I have to admit, it makes me giddy thinking about it–organizing and straightening and unloading what we no longer need.
And doing it together as a family makes it a party, right?
Okay, sometimes itâs a hard sell. I do try to make it fun: the whole adding-sugar-to-medicine idea. We put on music, I give snack breaks, and I donât complain when they take short pauses to play ping pong.
As long as the pauses arenât cruise vacations.
And when itâs all done, that eveningâs ringing-in-the-New-Year celebration is so much sweeter knowing we’re starting the year with a clean house.
I believe itâs a God-given love: this yearning to be a new creation, uncontaminated by the mess that we make of our lives. It shows, all the more, the Gospelââproclaimed in all creation under heaven.â [Col. 1:23]
We long to be made new!
Of course, while I can clean up my own house, I canât clean up my own life.
Oh, maybe I can for a day. Even two, if I have incredible willpower. Maybe.
But sooner or later, I fall back into my old waysâgrowing impatient with my kids, wanting my own way over my husbandâs, wasting time on unimportant thingsâunless something completely changes me.
Makes me entirely new.
And there it is! That truth of salvation: 2 Cor. 5:17ââTherefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.â
Ahh, the comfort in knowing that, even with all the messes Iâve made of my life, because of Christâs blood, God sees my lifeâs slate wiped spotlessly clean.
And one day I will step on heavenâs shores, to an eternity of perfect new days.
But what about here? Now?
Dailyâokay, really minute by minuteâHe organizes and straightens my thoughts and actions. Unloading what I donât need because itâs nothing but trash.
For, âthe truth is in Jesus,
to put off your old selfâwhich is corrupt through deceitful desires,
and to put on the new selfârenewed,
created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness.
[Eph. 4:21-24, paraphrased]
Granted, that putting off / putting on can ONLY be done with Christ. On our own, we tend to get lost and throw the baby out with the bathwater.
Hereâs the perfect picture of that:
One year, I gave my teenage kids explicit instructions on separating unnecessary toys (which we would get rid of) from the classic onesâFisher-Price, Little Tykesâi.e. those more expensive ones, which I carefully saved year after year for young visitors and future grandchildren.
I ran out to do some shopping for our New Year celebration.
When I got home, I was so encouraged to find the house spotless. Until I realized WHY it was so spotless.
They had decided that ALL my classic toys were unnecessary. Hey, why organize when you can just unload it all?
No, when we try to clean by ourselves, separate from Christ, we struggle to recognize real value and right motives.
But with Him, we are ârenewed to a true knowledge in the image of our Creator.â [Col. 3:10]
Sometimes it seems like a never-ending process.
Kind of like how my kids feel on that last day of the old year when theyâre stuck in the basement with dusty boxes and cleaning supplies.
But how sweet the celebration will be when midnight comes and we see how He has cleaned our house.
âOn that day, the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me the crown of righteousness. And not only to me, but also to all who have loved His appearing.â [2 Tim. 4:8]
We will stand before Him and find ourselves in ânew heavens and a new earth, where righteousness dwells.â (2 Peter 3:13)
Yes, thankfully, we are a people who love new beginnings, a God-given traitâgiven to lead us to God Himself.
So, âforgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, âŠpress on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.â (Phil. 3:13-14)
Here’s to New Beginnings.
Happy New Year!




5 thoughts on “In with the New”
What a refreshing reminder! You expressed it so well and now I am motivated to make some organizational changes. Thank you. God is so good and yes, He is good all the time!
Happy cleaning đ
Actually, your kids getting rid of ALL the toys on New Yearâs Eve also fits with Godâs wiping our slate clean. We canât bring anything of our own into our ânew creation.â He does it all. Concerning sin, the old is gone. Even the stuff we liked. đ
That being said, Iâm sorry you lost your classic toys! I have some of my own that Iâm hanging onto. Iâd be upset if they disappeared!
You are right, Laura. God definitely wipes our slate clean when He makes us a new creation. For that I am very grateful!
After that, though, as I grow daily in Him, sometimes I don’t understand what is valuable and what is useless. I tend to hold on to what I think is priceless–only to discover it’s fool’s gold–and miss the diamond staring me in the face. An example? Sometimes I get so tired of my tears. Why do I have to cry through every story? Why am I a two-kleenex box speaker when I tell my testimony? Tears frequently make people uncomfortable, and I’d love to be able to share my heart without the waterworks. (Those people on the movies who look so cute when they cry? Not me. My skin gets all blotchy and my nose looks like Rudolph. *sigh*) But maybe God is saying, “No, I made those tears for you. I gave you a heart of compassion that just has to overflow.”
But here I go writing another post in the comments đ Thanks for commenting. I always enjoy hearing your thoughts!
Youâre right. We often canât discern the valuable from the useless. God does, and sometimes He turns the useless into the valuable. But we might not figure it out till later. Great example with the tears.