Showing posts with label #hawk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #hawk. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Animals as Thieves

 


[1]

Genesis 1:21 Holman Christian Standard Bible (HCSB)

21 So God created the large sea-creatures[a] and every living creature that moves and swarms in the water, according to their kinds. He also created every winged bird according to its kind. And God saw that it was good.

 

A favorite tourist spot of mine on earth is the Ngorongoro Crater on the edge of the Great Rift Valley of Africa. I have only visited there about three times, stretched over 35 years, and I wish I could visit it far more often. The most recent visit was in 2003 when we attended the celebration of 100 years of Adventism in Tanzania.

We stopped at the Visitor Center on the ridge of the crater and picked up a guide to accompany us down into the crater. He spoke excellent English and was very knowledgeable. At one point this giant volcano was probably the highest point in Africa. Then in a mighty heave, the volcano blew the entire top of the mountain off leaving a crater about 2000 feet (600 m) deep and 14 miles (22 km) in diameter. Over the years since the explosion, Many of the African plains animals have made the tortuous decent into the crater. They have apparently decided that things were better in the crater than on the outside so they set up housekeeping there. The usual predators and prey keep the crater population at equilibrium. To the visitor this presents a veritable zoo spread over 400,000 acres (150 000 ha).

Because all of the animals are wild the visitor is required to remain in the vehicle, except for particular spots in the crater where picnic and other conveniences are provided. At one point where we stopped, our guide urged us to make sure to not let monkeys into the car when we got out. If they do get in your car, they immediately claim possession of it and will fight to keep you out of it. Black-faced vervet monkeys were all over the place. One jumped up onto our car and did its best to tear off the windshield wipers. Since we were much bigger than they were, they didn’t try to attack us as we walked to the restrooms.

Another spot, devoid of trees and monkeys, had picnic tables. We got out to stretch our legs. A young Swiss couple walked ahead of us towards the picnic tables. Suddenly Sylvia and I felt a light brushing of feathers in our hair as a great hawk skimmed at high speed our heads. It continued its power dive down in front of us. As we watched in shock the hawk turned sideways, wings outstretched and shot directly between the lovers ahead of us. The woman was carrying a sack lunch in her hand between them. It grabbed the lunch in its talons as it zipped between them and back into the sky. The poor woman was shocked almost to the point of a heart attack. Of course, she had sensed nothing of the bird’s attack until it was over. Neither one of the people had been injured, but they left the crater still hungry. There are no snack shops in the crater. Where else on earth can you drive among wild elephants, lions, monkeys and giraffes, and survive an avian-Mafia attack, all in one afternoon?

In the promised Earth-Made-New could a similar event occur? By God’s grace, I intend to find out! Will you join me?

 

 



[1] https://www.beautyofbirds.com/africanhawkeagles.html

Thursday, October 7, 2021

Omnipresence

 


[1]

Isaiah 46:10
Good News Translation
From the beginning I predicted the outcome;
    long ago I foretold what would happen.
I said that my plans would never fail,
    that I would do everything I intended to do.

 

In Isaiah chapters 44 and 45, God named Cyrus as the man who would restore and rebuild the Jewish temple. In the very next verse, He spoke of a hawk (“ravenous bird” in KJV) who would accomplish what He had planned.

Indeed, in his first year, Cyrus issued a decree that all the Jews were free to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the temple. He actually returned the various vessels that had been taken from the former temple by Nebuchadnezzar and provided extra funds to rebuild the temple. It is a great tragedy that most of God’s people chose to not return to their ancestral homes. Christ later told a parable in which a king instructed his ten servants to “occupy until I come.” (Luke 19:13) The exiles were doing exactly that, as Jeremiah had instructed, “Build houses and settle down. Plant gardens and eat what you grow in them.” (Jeremiah 29:5) They had become prosperous as God promised in verse 7. Many of God’s people were doing so well in exile that they didn’t want to leave. Others had jobs they felt they couldn’t afford to leave. Ezra lists 42,360 people who returned with him as he led the group back to Jerusalem. Compare that to the time of the Exodus when the number of men considered able to fight was 603,550 who left Egypt; that is probably well over 2 million people counting women and children. Those who remained behind in exile eventually assimilated into the heathen they lived amongst.

Descendants of those 42,360 people became the nucleus of the population in Judea and Galilee who were alive when Christ came some 500 years later. God had provided them the privilege to be able to welcome His Son. But again, the people, instead of welcoming Him, crucified Him.

When Christ comes again, how many of us will actually look up and say “God bless Him who comes in the name of the Lord” (Luke 13:35 GNT)?

 



[1] https://www.montananaturalist.org/blog-post/montanas-the-final-destination-for-rough-legged-hawks-flying-south/