The Cracked Acorn
The Cracked Acorn: The Door
Weekends and holidays are the prime times for advertisers to stuff flyers into the daily newspapers, adding to what I call the “pulp padding”.
You can’t escape a peek at the ones that are home suppliers. I like the nice color photos of doors of all types. Some of these beauties can stop a vacation to Disney World. If one is installed for your front door I am sure you will fall down and worship its varnished wood and stained floral glass panels.
Fingerprints will never mar its glossy sheen and you will hang a sign on its brilliant brass knob requesting everyone to come to the humble back door. A door of this quality could even go as a Mother’s Day gift, think about it!
The word door may have entered our language through an English family name, Dore, meaning the entrance to a narrow valley. We use the word every day: Close the door when you leave. She forgot to lock her car door. They live two doors up the street from us. His office is the third door down the hall on the left. A day cannot go by without the use of the word DOOR.
The Egyptians put into their tombs a false door. It was to serve as an imaginary passage for the deceased between the world of the living and the world of the dead. Lavish inscriptions were on the false door referring to the countless offerings the deceased is about to receive. Sometimes a life-sized statue of the deceased was placed before the door as if it had just stepped out of it. (Ancient Egypt From A to Z Internet Site) We can’t live without them.
They keep the cold drafts of winter outside and the cool air inside during the hot sultry days of summers, and keep the swarms of hostile insects outside. Properly fitted, a door can be locked for security purposes. Doors keep us from falling out of our cars. Closed doors can stop the spread of a home fire. Doors give us privacy & absorb outside traffic and neighborhood noises. A door can have many names: trap, stable, barn, French, garden, pet, revolving & automatic door. Whatever its name, a door serves a very distinct and useful function. Door fills several reference columns in a Zondervan Concordance and it is well worth a study of each use in God’s Word.
Revelation 3:20 NKJV “Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and dine with him, and he with Me.”
James Rowe (1865-1933) came to America from England in 1889. He settled in Albany, New York. He worked for the railroads & later for music publishers in Texas and Tennessee. He wrote the words for: I WAS SINKING DEEP IN SIN and JUST OUTSIDE THE DOOR (1912)
An old saying in the south “Katie bar the door” meant “something unstoppable is coming!,” and “Katie bar the kitchen door” suggested that you had better watch out! “Don’t give up. Normally it is the last key on the ring which opens the door.” ~Paulo Coelho.
And last: “When God closes a door, He always opens a window.”- Woodrow Kroll





