25 Years Ago Today

Twenty-five years ago, May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens erupted in one of the greatest natural disasters of modern times. The top of the mountain was blown into the atmosphere and became a dark plume of pulverized rock 11 miles high. At the same time, avalanches of rock, mud, and ice swept down the mountain—destroying everything in their path, clogging rivers, and stopping ships.

During the past quarter of a century, the US government has spent over $1 billion on Mount St. Helens’ recovery and long-term improvements of the area. Much of the engineering and construction work done by the US Army Corps of Engineers is unseen because “it takes the form of floods that will not happen, homes and communities that will not be destroyed, [and] river traffic that will flow smoothly.”

In this process of recovery, I see a picture of God’s forgiveness and healing for the disastrous results of our disobedience. When God allowed His people to be taken captive by the Chaldeans, He promised: “I will heal them and reveal to them the abundance of peace and truth” (Jeremiah 33:6).

True spiritual recovery often takes time. But as we allow the Lord to clean up our lives, He can safeguard us against future failures. —David McCasland

Events may sometimes touch our lives
With change and dire destruction,
But God by grace can heal, restore,
And bring us reconstruction. —Hess

Via Our Daily Bread

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  • http://www.robertkbrown.com/ RKB

    Funny. I posted about this today, too. When friends ask what they should visit when they travel to the Seattle area, I always tell them to find the time to drive down to St. Helens. Melissa and haven’t been back in years, but the hike we took about ten years ago was both memorable and amazing. I was eleven when it blew, and I still remember driving through the ash to visit my grandparents in the days that followed. But being able to witness first-hand not only the scale of the devastation, but of the recovery as well, in places an entirely different ecosystem than what was there before the eruption — pretty cool stuff.

  • http://www.robertkbrown.com/ RKB

    Funny. I posted about this today, too. When friends ask what they should visit when they travel to the Seattle area, I always tell them to find the time to drive down to St. Helens. Melissa and haven’t been back in years, but the hike we took about ten years ago was both memorable and amazing. I was eleven when it blew, and I still remember driving through the ash to visit my grandparents in the days that followed. But being able to witness first-hand not only the scale of the devastation, but of the recovery as well, in places an entirely different ecosystem than what was there before the eruption — pretty cool stuff.