Many Lessons to Be Learned From Nature, August 17
Let them praise the name of the Lord, for He commanded and they were
created. He has also established them forever and ever; He has made a
decree which shall not pass away.
Psalm 148:5, 6
, NKJV.
How beautiful the psalmist’s description of God’s care for the creatures of the
woods: “The high hills are a refuge for the wild goats; and the rocks for the conies”
(
Psalm 104:18
). He sends the springs to run among the hills, where the birds have
their habitation and “sing among the branches” (
Verse 12
). All the creatures of the
woods and hills are a part of His great household. He opens His hand, and satisfies
“the desire of every living thing” (
Psalm 145:16
).
The eagle of the Alps is sometimes beaten down by the tempest into the narrow
defiles of the mountains. Storm clouds shut in this mighty bird of the forest, their
dark masses separating her from the sunny heights where she has made her home.
Her efforts to escape seem fruitless. She dashes to and fro, beating the air with her
strong wings, and waking the mountain echoes with her cries. At length, with a
note of triumph, she darts upward, and, piercing the clouds, is once more in the
clear sunlight, with the darkness and tempest far beneath.
So we may be surrounded with difficulties, discouragement, and darkness.
Falsehood, calamity, injustice, shut us in. There are clouds that we cannot dispel.
We battle with circumstances in vain. There is one, and but one, way of escape.
The mists and fogs cling to the earth; beyond the clouds God’s light is shining. Into
the sunlight of His presence we may rise on the wings of faith.
Many are the lessons that may thus be learned. Self-reliance, from the tree
that, growing alone on plain or mountainside, strikes down its roots deep into the
earth, and in its rugged strength defies the tempest. The power of early influence,
from the gnarled, shapeless trunk, bent as a sapling, to which no earthly power can
afterward restore its lost symmetry. The secret of a holy life from the water lily,
that, on the bosom of some slimy pool, surrounded by weeds and rubbish, strikes
down its channeled stem to the pure sands beneath, and, drawing thence its life,
lifts up its fragrant blossoms to the light in spotless purity.—
Education, 118, 119
.
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