Background to Ezekiel's Prophecies

by Sheri Schofield

Abrahamic Covenant

 

Abram (later called Abraham) lived in Ur. This city was located close to where the Euphrates River joins the Persian Gulf. In Genesis 12:1-3, the Bible tells us this:

   “The Lord said to Abram, ‘Leave your native country, your relatives, and your father’s family and go to the land that I will show you. I will make you into a great nation. I will bless you and make you famous, and you will be a blessing to others. I will bless those who bless you and curse those who treat you with contempt. All the families on earth will be blessed through you.’”

   The people of Ur had mostly abandoned the one true God. They worshipped the moon. God wanted Abram to move away from his environment and go to a new place. He had great plans for Abram, and they could not be fulfilled in Ur.

   The Abrahamic Covenant is a forever-covenant. God sealed it with Abram in a ceremony found in Genesis 15:17-21. God gave Abram the measurements of the land he would give him. On a map, it looks roughly like a triangle. It stretches from today’s border where Syria and Turkey meet on the Mediterranean in the north; then from where the Euphrates flows into the Persian Gulf on the east; and on the south, from the Euphrates River to the Nile River. Israel has never fully occupied that area. Today, they are bound to a very small area along the Mediterranean Sea. That will change someday when God fulfills his covenant with Abraham and his descendants through Isaac, which are the nation of Israel.

 

Ezekiel 36:6-15

   Ezekiel tells what will happen in Israel when the Israelis return from where they were scattered.

   vs. 8-15 – The mountains of Israel will produce heavy crops of fruit. The Israelis will plow the ground and plant crops. God will greatly increase the population of Israel and their animals. They will be more prosperous than ever. The other nations will no longer despise them or speak evil of them. They will worship the one true God again. No one will be able to rob them. (This has not yet been completely fulfilled yet.)

  vs. 35 says –“And when I bring you back, people will say, ‘This former wasteland is now like the Garden of Eden! The abandoned and ruined cities now have strong walls and are filled with people!’”

 

Historical Information About the Land Prior to Israel’s return

   The Arabs living in the land called Palestine were mostly the poor peasants. Their overlords who owned the land lived mainly in European cities where they could spend their great wealth. The land was neglected. It ranged from rugged mountains, to swamps filled with mosquitos, to desert land. The people were very poor.

   When Israel began returning, they drained the swamps and channeled the water for crops. They planted trees to soak up the excess water. They developed farms. Many lived in kibbutzim, small communities who all worked together for the common good. The children born there in the land were called “sabras.”

   In cultivating the land and bringing it into good use again, the people fulfilled much of Ezekiel’s prophecy in chapter 36 about their return.

   God said he would bring this about so that everyone will know that he is the Lord. The book of Ezekiel was written between 593-571 BC. It is now being fulfilled.

 

How Israel Became A Nation Again

   During World War II, the German Nazis murdered about six-million Jews in Europe. The Arabs worked with the Nazis in Palestine to try to destroy the Jews who had returned to their land. The massacre caused world-wide anger. The British occupied Israel during the war. They kept a kind of peace. After the war, they left. The Israeli people had to defend themselves against the surrounding Arabs who wanted to drive them out of the land. Though many nations believed the Jews should have their own land after the horrendous massacres of the war. But they did not help the Jews. They let them fight it out on their own. Gradually, the Jews were able to overcome those who were trying to kill them and establish their own country. In 1948, the United Nations voted to let the Jews have a portion of the land of Israel, dividing it between the Jews and Arabs in the region. When the Jewish nation was recognized by the whole world, they called their country “Israel.” They are not just the tribes of Judah & Levi (known as the Jews). There are now people from the other tribes of Israel living in the land also. This fulfills Ezekiel 37:15-20.

Ezekiel 37-38 –Valley of Dry Bones

   In this passage, Ezekiel describes the people of Israel before their return.

  “The Lord took hold of me, and I was carried away by the Spirit of the Lord to a valley filled with dry bones. He led me all among the bones that covered the valley floor. They were scattered everywhere across the ground and were completely dried out. Then he asked me, ‘Son of man, can these bones become living people again?’ ‘O Sovereign Lord,’ I replied, ‘you alone know the answer to that’” (37:1-3).

   The Lord told Ezekiel to speak over the dry bones and tell them to rise up, be covered with muscles and flesh, and to breathe again and come to life. The dry bones did so. Then God said to Ezekiel, ‘Son of man, these bones represent the people of Israel. They are saying, “We have become old, dry bones—all hope is gone. Our nation is finished’” (v.11). But God then said to tell Israel he would bring them back to the land, he would fill them with his Spirit, and they would know that he is the Lord and he has spoken. “David” will rule on the throne of Israel forever. “David” is generally understood to be a reference to the coming Messiah. The Temple in Jerusalem will be rebuilt. (vs. 24-28) Currently, the Temple site is occupied by the Dome of the Rock, a Muslim temple.

   This prophecy has been partially fulfilled. Yes, Israel has returned to their land. But not all of them have been filled with God’s Spirit yet. Not all worship God yet. They have not yet rebuilt their Temple, and Messiah has not returned.

   At this time, I have been told there are approximately 36,000 Israeli Christians in Israel. The day is coming when all will change and Israel will know the true Messiah, Jesus.

This brings us up to present-day and the prophecies which have not yet happened. I will introduce Ezekiel 38-39:

   The prophecy of Ezekiel 38 speaks of God drawing Israel’s enemies to their land. He will “put a hook in the jaw” of several enemies, led by “the prince who rules over the nations of Meshech and Tubal” and his allies. Bible scholars believe Meshech and Tubal are the ares settled by two sons of Japheth, one of Noah’s sons. The area where they settled is generally in the region of Russia/Ukraine/Georgia. God will draw them and their armies to Israel to destroy them and their allies, for they are all enemies of Israel.

   This battle has not yet happened. Next week I will expand on it as we look at Ezekiel 38-39.

For further reading:   A good fiction book based on the early days of the Jews’ return to Israel is Leon Uris’ book, “Exodus.” Uris interviewed over 1,500 people to gather all the facts of the return and the events surrounding it. A movie starring Paul Newman and Eva Marie Saint was made in the 60s based on this book. It also was called “Exodus.” The book is a remarkable account of what happened during the years of the Jews’ return to the land and when Israel became a nation again.

An Ancient Prophecy Being Fulfilled Today

An Ancient Prophecy Being Fulfilled Today

By Sheri Schofield

 The events happening in Israel today are amazing. While there is tragedy, there is also great hope promised to Israel by the prophet Ezekiel. Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, is very familiar with this prophecy, as are many others who still believe in God.

Ezekiel prophesied that God would scatter Israel throughout the nations because of their disobedience to him. In Ezekiel’s day, the people of Israel were not obeying God, and there was much wickedness. Murders and idol worship were common. (See Ezekiel 36:13-19) Though Ezekiel didn’t know how the details would play out, God saw their future rejection of Jesus, the Messiah. He would scatter the nation because of that.

 At Jesus’s trial before Pilate, the Jews were crying out, “Crucify him! Crucify him!” They wanted Jesus tortured and nailed to the cross, the most painful death available at the time. It would not only kill him, but it would humiliate him and send a message to his disciples that the same could be done to them if they continued following Jesus.

 Pilate, reluctant to crucify Jesus, whom he saw as innocent, did not want Jesus’s blood on his hands. He sent for a bowl of water and symbolically washed his hands. He said, “I am innocent of the blood of this just Person. You see to it.” 

And all the people answered and said, ‘His blood be on us and on our children’” Matthew 27:24, 25 (NKJV).

 A few years later, the Roman emperor Vespasian sent his son Titus to conquer Jerusalem. On September 8, 70 A.D., Jerusalem fell. The inhabitants of the city were butchered in one of the most brutal destructions of the Roman Empire. The Temple was burned and torn apart. The remaining Jewish people living in the area fled in many directions. The northern Israeli tribes had already been scattered. This fulfilled the first part of the prophecy God gave Ezekiel:

 God spoke through Ezekiel saying, “…I poured out my fury on them. I scattered them to many lands to punish them for the evil way they had lived” Ezekiel 36:18, 19 (NLT).

 But God didn’t leave Israel without hope. He told of a return to the land:

 “But when they were scattered among the nations, they brought shame on my holy name. For the nations said, ‘These are the people of the Lord, but he couldn’t keep them safe in his own land!’ Then I was concerned for my holy name, on which my people brought shame among the nations. Therefore, give the people of Israel this message from the Sovereign Lord: I am bringing you back, but not because you deserve it. I am doing it to protect my holy name, on which you brought shame while you were scattered among the nations…I will gather you up from all the nations and bring you home again to your land. Then I will sprinkle water on you, and you will be clean….I will give you a new heart, and I will put a new spirit in you….” Ezekiel 36:20-26 (NLT).

Israel began returning to the land of their ancestors before the first World War. Their return to Israel became a mighty flood during and after World War II, when the Nazi Germans and their allies tried to destroy all the Jews.

 The Balfour Declaration was issued by the British government during World War I, supporting the idea of a Jewish homeland being re-established in Israel. The Jews responded to that declaration. At the time, the land was called Palestine, a name given to the region by the Romans. It is a variation of the name Philistine, the people who inhabited the land before God, through Moses, brought Israel from slavery in Egypt back to their original homeland. The Romans later called the land Palestine in an attempt to erase all connection between the Jews and the land.

 When the Jews returned, they had to fight the Arab inhabitants to stay alive, for the Arabs refused to let them live in peace. During World War II, a large number of the Arabs fought against Israel for the Nazis as well as for their own purposes. In 1948, the world agreed that the Jews should have a homeland because of the horrible destruction the Jews had faced during World War II. The United Nations voted on it, and the world chose to recognize the Jewish homeland. The Jews called their nation “Israel.” The Arabs who wished to live in peace, were accepted by the Israelis. They live in the area today. Those who would not live in peace were expelled.

 This massive return to the land of Israel fulfilled the prophecy of Ezekiel 36:16-38.

 Those who do not wish to live in peace are still at war with Israel. This includes those living in Gaza. The nations around Israel have never let the Jews live in peace. The latest war against Israel was started by Hamas out of Gaza on October 7, 2023. Iran, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza, and the Houthis in Yemen (all Muslim nations) have been bombing Israel tirelessly since that day.

 The prophecy of Ezekiel 36 is seen by many as a sign of Jesus’ return because of the next few chapters of Ezekiel, which I will talk about in my next blog. Ezekiel 37 covers more details of the prophecy in chapter 36. Chapters 38-39 take us into the future events expected to happen in Israel.

 

Israel & the Middle East

Hi Friends. A friend from overseas asked me to answer some questions about Israel yesterday. “Why is the Middle East always in turmoil? And will Israel ever have peace?” This friend asked me to do some Bible teaching as well. Although I have enjoyed writing short stories, I think this request is more important, especially as a second friend asked to join the lessons.

   So today I am going to begin teaching simple answers to questions like these. You will be seeing a new banner on this page as soon as my computer tech can set it up. The new banner will be this: Unlocking Ancient Words & Wisdom with Sheri Schofield.

   I’ve studied this theology in college at Prairie Bible Institute (Now Prairie College) and BIOLA University and have been teaching and writing about the Bible for over forty years. I hope I can answer questions you may have as well. On the menu bar, there is a Contact feature. If you have questions, please post them there. Thanks!

 

Sheri Schofield

 

Israel & the Middle East

 

So why is the Middle East always in turmoil? And will Israel ever have peace?

 

The answer to this question goes all the way back to Genesis 3, when Adam and Eve, the first people God created, disobeyed God. The penalty was separation from their relationship with God, and their bodies would someday die. But God promised he would someday provide a way for humans to break the power of death and separation. He told Satan, who had taken on the body of a serpent, “I will put enmity between you and the woman and between your offspring and hers; he (the woman’s offspring) will crush your head, and you will strike his heel,” Genesis 3:15 (New International Version).

 

This seemed to be a mystery. But it was a clue to how God would someday restore humanity’s relationship with him.

 

The next clue was given to Abraham, whose name was Abram until God changed it: “On that day the Lord made a covenant with Abram and said, ‘To your descendants I give this land, from the Wadi of Egypt to the great river, the Euphrates…” Genesis 15:18.

 

Later, God gave Abraham a promise known as the Abrahamic Covenant. “I swear by myself, declares the Lord, that because you have done this and have not withheld your son, your only son, I will surely bless you and make your descendants as numerous as the stars in the sky and as the sand on the seashore. Your descendants will take possession of the cities of their enemies, and through your offspring, all the nations of the world will be blessed, because you have obeyed me” Genesis 22:16-18 (NIV).

 

God declared that because Abraham had been willing to sacrifice his son, Isaac, to the Lord, God would greatly bless Abraham, all his descendants and all nations on earth.

 

This set of verses gives enough clues that Satan knew the coming Savior would be a descendant of Abraham through Isaac. Through this line from Abraham, God would rescue humanity from Satan’s rule. Therefore, Satan turned his fierce wrath on Isaac’s descendants: the Israeli people.

 

The Islamic nations, which descended from Abraham through Hagar and Ishmael, have changed the story recorded in the Holy Bible. They have insisted that Abraham offered Ishmael, not Isaac, to God. They claim Ismael was to inherit the land and a messiah would come from Ishmael’s line. They speak of the Twelfth Imam coming to rule the earth, not Jesus, the true Messiah.

 

And there lies the heart of the problem. Both the Arabs and the Jews claim to be God’s chosen people. Both claim they were to inherit the land. Both claim a messiah coming from their own people.

 

For this reason, this deep jealousy and hatred, the Arab/Islamic nations want to destroy the Israeli people. The closer we come to the return of Jesus to earth as King of kings and Lord of lords, the more violent the fight becomes. Satan is determined to destroy Israel.

 

This conflict is at the heart of the Middle East conflict.

 

Will Israel ever have peace? Yes! When Jesus returns to earth and establishes his kingdom and sits on the throne in Jerusalem. The day is coming soon!

 

“Therefore, this is what the Sovereign Lord says: I will now restore the fortunes of Jacob and will have compassion on all the people of Israel, and I will be zealous for my holy name. They will forget their shame and all the unfaithfulness they showed toward me when they lived in safety in their land with no one to make them afraid. When I have brought them back from the nations and have gathered them from the countries of their enemies, I will be proved holy through them in the sight of many nations. Then they will know that I am the Lord their God, for though I sent them into exile among the nations, I will gather them to their own land, not leaving any behind. I will no longer hide my face from them, for I will pour out my Spirit on the people of Israel, declares the Sovereign Lord” Ezekiel 39:25-29 (NIV).

 

Home in the Wilderness, Part 4

Hi friends! Today I am posting the last part of A Home in the Wilderness, which is based partly on a great storm in Wyoming’s history which changed the way the US government dealt with natural disasters. Wyoming is located in the region known as “The Far West.” Its roots are in homesteading, ranching, and rodeos. This is cowboy country.

I lived in Montana for almost 30 years, and have spent the last two years here in Wyoming —in the Far West region. My first winter in Montana was the hardest. We went to Montana straight from Georgia, and before that from Panama, located in the tropics. We faced record cold that year (down to -25 degrees) with wind and deep snows. We wore ski suits over our clothes most of the first winter, and the natives thought it was funny! They were used to the cold. The storm described in this story had temperatures of -10 degrees with constant winds which blew 30-80 miles per hour, making it even more dangerous. I hope you will enjoy reading how my characters dealt with the crisis.

 

A Home in the Wilderness

 

Part 4

 

By Sheri Schofield

 

 

   We waited for a lull in the storm, but it didn’t come until the storm had blown mountains of fine, granular snow for three days. Everyday Jerome, Steve and my boys tied bandanas over their noses to guard against the snow’s icy granules and bundled up in their warmest clothes to go check on the livestock, holding onto the rope. They shoveled a path between buildings and tossed the snow away from them as best they could, though the wind continually blew more snow to fill the pathway. Steve took a longer rope from the barn and tied it to the house and to the wagon by the barn, this one with no knotted link in it which might become untied in the wind.

   “I believe you have a willow tree next to the house, don’t you?” Jerome asked on the second day.

   “Yes, it’s a willow. Why?”

   “Steve and I won’t be able to return to my ranch when the snow stops unless we have snowshoes. I’m going to cut some willow wands and start making them. Do you have any leather scraps around?”

   “I have a cow hide in the barn.”

   “May I use it?”

   “Certainly.”

   Jerome bundled up and opened the side door leading into the back roofed area where we kept the firewood. He grabbed the ax next to the door and disappeared into the swirling snow. I heard a few whacks of the ax. A few minutes later I heard him return.

   Shaking the snow from his jacket and stamping snow from his boots, he opened the side door and stepped back inside. Walking over to the wood stove, he pushed the wands behind it where they would warm up.

   Later that evening, Jerome tested the willow wands for flexibility. “They’ll do,” he said. “Steve, you and I can work on these tomorrow.”

   “Yes sir.”

   After breakfast the next morning, the two men began shaping the willow wands into ovals, tied closed with leather. They cut leather strips from the cow hide and began weaving them tightly back and forth across the oval, then up and down. The snowshoes gradually took shape. Surely, these would help the men return to Jerome’s ranch. But would they be able to survive the terrible hike through the snow?

   The sun finally came out the next day. The worst of the storm had passed, I thought. But the winds were still blowing fiercely with blinding clouds of tiny ice crystals, though near the cliff, there was some visibility.

   After breakfast, Jerome walked over to the radio for news. The storm had indeed stopped. But it was only a temporary reprieve, and the wind was fluctuating between thirty and eighty miles per hour, depending on the location. More snow was on its way later in the day.

   “Helen, Steve and I need to get back to my ranch and make sure everything is okay.”

   “Are you sure, Jerome? You can stay here until the storms pass. It’s dangerous out there!”

   “We cannot give in to fear, Helen. We have work to do—people and animals depend on us. I’ll leave our horses here for the time being. They could never make it through the drifts out there. Some of them are five feet deep. But I’ve got to get home. Just pray for me. With the phone lines out, we’ll need a way to let you know when we reach my ranch. I’ll fire two shots in the air close together when we reach home. Hopefully, you will hear them.”

   He turned to Steve. “Let’s go, Steve.”

   “Okay, boss.”

   Hunching into his coat, Jerome started to button it up.

   “Wait,” I said. Going into my bedroom, I fetched a new scarf I’d just knitted. “You’ll need to stay warm.” I wrapped the scarf around his neck and looked up into his eyes.

   “Thank you, Helen.” His eyes searched mine for a moment before he finished buttoning up his coat. He pulled his hat on and drew the scarf up over it to tie it down, then wrapped the rest of the knitted warmth around his neck. He pulled on his leather gloves, headed toward the door, knelt to fasten on the snowshoes and picked up his shotgun.

   “Wait!” Liza said. “Steve needs a scarf, too. Elijah, don’t you have an extra one?”

   “Yes.” He disappeared into the bedroom and returned with the spare. “Will this do?”

   “It will do just fine, Lije. Thanks.” Steve tied his hat down with it just as Jerome had done.

   Jerome slipped out into the wind with Steve, pulling the door closed behind him.

   “Be careful!” I called just before the door shut.

   Luke threw an interested glance my way. I caught a slight smile on his face as he turned to help Liza, who had paused in her work at the window to watch the men leave.

   “Boys, you’ll have to shovel the snow off the roof so it doesn’t collapse. Liza and I will tackle the chicken coop roof when you’re done. If your fingers and toes start getting cold, come inside at once. I don’t want you to get frostbite.”

   “Okay, Mom.”

   Donning their coats, boots, mittens and knit caps, they stepped outside to the woodshed and hauled the ladder around to the back of the house, out of the wind.

   I put my own hooded coat on. They would need rope. They’d put the extra ropes in the woodshed. I chose two and went out to the ladder. Luke was already on the roof, but Elijah had started up.

   “Lije,” I shouted into the wind. “Take these ropes up with you. Tie yourselves to the chimney so you don’t fall.”

   It took a while to clear the main house roof, with several breaks to warm their hands and feet. Liza and I had less of a job to do, since the chicken coop roof was smaller. We finished quickly and headed back into the house. Just as  we reached the door, we heard three spaced rifle shots in the distance. Jerome had made it safely home.

   The boys rested about half an hour. Luke finally stood and reached for his coat again. “Lije, let’s head for the cave and see if the cattle are there.”

   I caught my breath in protest, but Luke spoke up. “Mom, it has to be done.” He donned his snowshoes, grabbed his coat, scarf, and knit cap and followed Steve outside.

   A half-hour later, my boys returned.

   “The stock made it to the cave. We cut the ropes on the haybales and spread some of the hay out for them. If they stay together in there, they should make it through the storm. If we can’t get back, they can get at the bales,” Luke reported.

   I turned the battery-operated radio on to learn what was happening around us. The state and federal governments in our region announced an emergency program called Operation Snowbound. Whenever the snow stopped, we were to make big signs in the snow indicating what we needed. Wyoming sent the 187thFighter Squadron to scout the signs, marking the needs on a map. Then the troops went out into the snow with snowshoes on this, the third day of the storm, towing toboggans loaded with food for people in need.

   The Civil Air Patrol and pilots living in the area flew food, medical supplies, and doctors to ranches around the state. They flew sick people and others with frozen limbs out to hospitals. It was a comfort to know we weren’t alone in the storm. Our government was focused on our difficulties.

   President Truman declared Wyoming, Nebraska and South Dakota disaster areas, opening the door to federal money for survival and recovery.

   A few days after the storm began, there was another break in it. I was kneading bread when someone pounded on our door.

   “Helen! It’s me. Jerome.”

   Liza rushed to open the door. “Come in.”

   Steve was right behind Jerome, a toboggan in tow.

   “We want to make sure you have enough food. We ate some of your supplies.”

   “Thank you, Jerome. But you didn’t need to do that. We were glad to have you here.”

   “Nevertheless, we’ve brought extra food.”

   Together, my sons and Steve brought the food into the house. Steve propped the toboggan against the outside wall and came in with them.

   “How is your herd?” I asked, covering the bread dough and setting it in a warm place to rise.

   “Jerome shook his head. “Nine of the cattle made it to the cliff shelter over at my place. I’m afraid the rest were caught in the storm.” He shook his head looking grim. I’m about washed out, I’m afraid.”

   “I’m so sorry.”

   “How about your stock?”

   “They made it to the shelter. If we can outlast this storm, I’m hoping they’ll be okay.”

   “Good.” He sighed. “I feel like Job. He said, ‘The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh away.’ But I’m not yet to the point where I can say, ‘Blessed be the name of the Lord.’ That’s going to take some serious prayer time.”

   Liza brought a plate of cookies over to the table and some cups.

   Together we sat at the table.

   “I’m so grateful you came over to help us,” I said, looking into Jerome’s face.

   “Me too,” Liza added.

   “I’m thankful we have a warm house in the storm,” Luke said.

   “And thankful for friends who helped us build it,” Elijah added.

   Jerome smiled for the first time. “I’m thankful God has kept us all safe during this storm.”

   Steve reached for Liza’s hand under the table and looked into her eyes. “And I’m grateful that Liza has agreed to marry me this spring.”

   Liza turned scarlet, her blue eyes turned down, a happy smile on her face.

   “Whoa!” Luke shouted, laughter in his eyes. “You sure know how to toss dynamite into conversations, Steve!” He sat back in his chair and laughed.

   My jaw dropped, but I pulled myself together. “What a delightful surprise!”

   Elijah and Jerome were both laughing.

   “I meant to ask you first, Mrs. Curtis,” Steve said. “But with everyone around, I couldn’t find a moment alone.”

   “I’m happy for you, Steve,” I said. “I know Liza loves you very much.”

   “Yes. I do,” she said softly, looking into Steve’s face.

   “Well, I guess that means we’ll have to start planning a wedding. That should keep us busy this winter,” I said.

   Snowstorms came and went, piling drifts ten to twenty feet deep around the valley. Throughout January, February and into March, government relief agencies and troops tried to reach people, whose homes were sometimes buried in snowdrifts.

   Helicopters dropped bundles of hay on fields where wildlife or cattle could be seen and near barns. We were grateful for the help. In our home, though, we had food for ourselves and feed for the livestock. Jerome and Steve came over at each lull in the continuing storms to check on us. We all looked forward to their visits.

   Tractors and snowplows tried to clear the roads, only to have the snow blow into the plowed areas. In the end, the snow was so heavy, they had to use dynamite on many of the snowdrifts to break it up and clear the roads. Some of the snowdrifts were twenty-five feet deep. The storm lasted forty-eight days, with temperatures hovering below zero. Through it all, Jerome and Steve came over to check on us every time the snow let up for a few hours. We all grew close as friendships blossomed.

   By the time the storms were over, it was March. The radio reported that seventy-six people in the region had died in the storm, some frozen in their cars, some caught out in the open when the storm hit. Many ranchers had lost their entire herds. Wildlife lay dead in the forests and fields, frozen in the snow. It would take years to recover. The states of Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska and Colorado filed for emergency help from the government.

   Jerome told me later, “This blizzard was the first time I’ve ever heard of the government getting so involved in this type of emergency. I think this event will change the way our politicians view natural disasters.”

   He was right. President Truman organized a federal disaster plan called the Federal Civil Defense Administration. Twenty years later, President Carter established the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

   Gradually, the weather warmed. The snow began to melt. Creeks overflowed. But we had made it safely through the worst storm we’d ever experienced.

   One day when the wildflowers began to bloom in the fields, Jerome came over alone.

   “Helen, could I talk you into going for a walk with me?”
   I looked into his eyes. “Yes, I would like that very much, Jerome.”

   We walked along the bottom of the cliff until Jerome showed me a path to the top. “Let’s go up. I want to show you something.”

   Jerome walked ahead of me, helping me up the steep path. When we came out on top of the cliff, I looked around in wonder. There before us stretched a large meadow filled with wildflowers. Blue camas, golden glacier lilies, white May flowers, and pink wild roses.

   “Oh, Jerome!” I breathed. “It’s beautiful!”

   “I’ve always loved this meadow,” he said with satisfaction. “I never had the heart to use it for pasture, which would have meant destroying the flowers. But I’ve thought of building a small log cabin up here. It would be a nice place of retreat once in a whileeee.”

   “Yes, it would.”                                                                                                    .

   As we stood together in the upper meadow, a soft, spring breeze blowing, he reached for my hand.

   “Helen, all through this dreadful winter, I’ve found joy in spending time with you. That has offset the tragedy of losing so many of my cattle. I am so grateful God brought you and your children here when He did. You have made a huge difference to me.” He sighed. “I’m going to have to work hard to build my herd up again, and in time, I’ll do it. I’ve had to let everyone go except for Steve. He’s looking for work in town, but for now, he’s staying.” He paused and looked around the meadow. “I don’t have much to offer you right now, but I have come to love you. I was wondering if you would consider marrying me?”

   “Yes.” I leaned against him. “You’ve proven to be my best friend during the storm, and I have come to love you, too.”

   His arm came around me and I felt his lips touch my hair. “I guess there will be two weddings this year,” he said.

   And there were.

 

For further reading:

Historical information about this blizzard can be found at the following sites:

The Notorious Blizzard of 1949—WyoHistory.org https://www.wyohistory.org>encyclopedia>notoriousblizzard1949

75 Years Ago, The Blizzard of 1949 Crippled Wyoming https://www.cowboystatedaily.com>2024>02>11

The Worst Blizzard in Wyoming Was The Huge 1949 Winter Storm https://www.onlyinyourstate.com>statepride>wyoming>blizzard1949wy