The temperature had reached 108 degrees F. that afternoon of
June 28, so I watched smoke clouds on the horizon with concern. We live in an arid area, prone to wildfires.
I hoped firefighters could knock it down quickly. They couldn’t. Erratic winds pushed a firestorm several
miles over parched lands, into the edge of my town. By early evening,, the radio was broadcasting
emergency evacuation alerts affecting thousands. Seeing the encroaching orange
glow, I quickly filled two boxes with “must-keep” documents and address
books. I slipped in my Bible. Should I
take my violin? It was my father’s. I decided not to. I handed my husband an overnight bag for a
few changes of clothes and filled another for myself. Would we have to flee in minutes? The border
for “Level 2 evacuation” (“be ready to leave on a moment’s notice”) was about
one-fourth mile away. Would it soon
change to Level 3 (“get out immediately”) and include us? I looked around our small, cozy home of 34
years. We decided to wait and listen to
radio-announced evacuations.
By morning, we were still in our home. But from the end of
our block we could see blackened
hillsides less than half a mile away. We’d later learn that 28 homes were destroyed. We knew some of their owners, two of them retired teachers who'd taught our now-adult children. A
mile away the other direction, flying embers had ignited industrial buildings
related to the valley’s fruit processing industry. Acrid smoke boiled for a
day.
Living through a “natural disaster” (and emerging unscathed
except for the physical letdown when it’s over) made me think again about the
big questions of suffering. This nugget
from the Old Testament prophetic book called “Lamentations” (so appropriately
named) came to mind: “It is of the Lord’s mercies that we are not consumed,
because his compassions fail not. They
are new every morning: great is his faithfulness” (Lamentations 3:22). The author of this book
(possibly Jeremiah) had watched enemies press in on his native land. Eventually they’d come to the bloody “last
call” of foreign invasion. Did God know? Didn’t He care? Of course He does. His compassions fail not.
The morning after the firestorm, a rainstorm helped wash
away the smoke-laden valley air. As I
watched the ten-minute downpour, I remembered, “New every morning.” It doesn’t say, “Everything is made okay
every morning.” It says God’s compassions are new every morning. They’re ours
to claim as we walk through the ashes of life, holding His hand.
Having lived through a near-evacuation from fire once myself, I got chills reading this. :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for taking the time to visit my blog and encourage me as "another who's gone through this." We're hoping tonight's July 4th fireworks (public one okay, private ones banned) will be safe and sane.
DeleteOh, Jeanne, I've never been threatened in that way, I felt the tension. Great writing and equally great message. There's no guarantees of what the world calls "good," but God is still always good and his mercies new every morning. I'm so glad you're safe and can inspire us to trust God regardless of any kind of firestorm in our lives. Love you!
ReplyDeleteKathy, thank you for writing and offering encouragement. I appreciate you!
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