Taming the Wild
February 8, 2008
By Ken Horn
A few years ago two long sections of walking trail were
connected on the outskirts of Springfield, Mo., where my wife, Peggy, and I
live. We often walk there. When the trail opened, brush was cleared away from
what had been a secluded, almost inaccessible pond of considerable size. It
became a beautiful urban lake, much of it accessible, though sometimes choked
with pondweed.
A week after the opening I made a brief foray to the
lakeshore with rod in hand. I took a fish on a spinner and dropped it back into
the water. As I crouched and rinsed my hands, I saw a dark, undulating ribbon
curl past, nearly touching me. The encounter happened so suddenly that the
“ribbon” was gone before I could jump back. I had put my hands in the pond
precisely where a water moccasin had lurked, coiled against the undercut of the
bank.
Had I slid my hand into the water an inch to the right, I might
have touched the snake, and it might have reacted with a venomous strike. And
this at a place frequented by families, where children play along the water’s
edge.
I had seen moccasins (also called cottonmouths) many times
before, but always in remote places. Now, in very short order, a wild place had
become a public place.
It was clear the wild place had not yet been completely
tamed. It is good to remember that dominion over the earth has not yet been
returned completely to man. And nature, though clearly endowed with the
Creator’s artistry, also bears the marks of the curse.
All of nature’s beauty is attributable to God. We should
appreciate it and look for opportunities to experience it. But we should also
remember that we are not yet in the days when “the wolf will live with the
lamb, the leopard will lie down with the goat, the calf and the lion and the
yearling together; and a little child will lead them” (Isaiah 11:6, NIV).
What a day that will be.
— Ken Horn is the editor of Today's Pentecostal Evangel.