I laced up my tan hiking boots, coated my pale skin with bug repellant, and loaded my backpack
with just the essentials: water, Bible, pen, and journal. I tucked the trail map in my pocket and
closed the door to my mountain dorm.
I was off.
Off on another adventure. Just me and God.I avoided trails that the tourists traveled most and set off in the opposite direction. I breathed in
the oxygen-rich mountain air, crisp and refreshing even in the heat of summer. I liked the way
my boots padded in comforting thuds on the hard-packed dirt; I was thankful that this essential
footwear was now actually comfortable to wear, the blister stage of breaking in now a pink-skin
memory of the past.
My ears were tuned to the tiny songbirds who perched on the spindly branches of the red manzanita.
My nose was tuned to the melodic fragrance of woody Sequoias mingled with sweet wild flowers
and musky earth.
And my heart was tuned to hearing God’s voice through it all.
How Majestic Is Your Name
My eyes continually scanned the landscape ahead for the prize of every hike: a huge off-trail
boulder with a scenic view. Once I found it I veered off course and scampered up the hill,
unmindful of the undergrowth, eager to get to my perch. I assessed my resting place to
find the perfect groove or nook with the right curve to cradle my trail-worn body.
Then I settled in. Mind reeling with memories from my day, my week, overlayed like a
cinematic effect on top of the panoramic picture before me. The voice-over played,
ringing these words in my heart:
“O Lord, our Lord, how majestic is your name in all the earth!” -Psalm 8:1
* * *
Looking back years later, I’m now partly appalled that I was regularly hiking and even
camping overnight alone in wilderness I didn’t know well. I do not endorse solo
excursions by 19 year old females.
Yet even so, I honestly wouldn’t trade those solitary summer hours for the world.
I spent three months working and ministering in Kings Canyon National Park right
after my freshman year in college. It was a summer of learning.
Learning how to do everything as unto the Lord during long shifts as a thankless
“bus boy” at the mountain village diner.
Learning how to work with teammates so unlike me as we pooled our minimal
experience and resources to put on Sunday worship services for park visitors.
Learning how to speak truth while showing God’s love to the dozens of other
college students who came to spend their mountain summer getting wasted.
But more than anything, it was the summer I started learning to awaken to
God’s wonder through creation.
For since the creation of the world, God’s invisible qualities—his eternal
power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from
what had been made, so that men are without excuse. -Romans 1:20
The difficulties of that summer paled in comparison to the vividness with which I
experienced God.
I felt Him in the lush green valleys and rugged peaks. I saw Him in the
spotted fawns and blue-chested birds. I sensed Him in the deep-rigged
bark of the massive sequoias, sensed the majesty and power of the
200 foot giants’ Creator. Perceived Him in the sinking sun and
changing sky.
At every turn I heard His whispers.
sunset valley Awaken to WonderOften I would come back from those nature treks sun burned and
bug bitten (because that repellant never really worked.) My tummy
was usually grumbling and my pallet parched from not enough water.
But none of it mattered.
Because I was Awake to Wonder.
When was the first time you felt God most clearly in creation?
Where is your favorite place in nature to connect with the Creator?