A couple years ago, a ministry tour took me to a corner of the country I had yet to explore. In the Pacific Northwest, some 90 miles south of Seattle, Washington, stands a treasure trove of evidence for the grandeur God’s restorative power.
The site is Mount St. Helens. And on afternoons before I spoke, I’d travel its trails, wander around its waterfalls and peer into its peaks from rocky ledges towering hundreds of feet in the air. Though the thrill of the climbs provided momentary highs, it was the depths of Mount St. Helens’ story that left a lasting impact.
The Testimony in Creation
Mount St. Helens is no ordinary mountain; it’s an active volcano that notoriously erupted in 1980. The assortment of museums along its foothills all chronicle its devastation in photographs. And it was devastating. The eruption is considered the most destructive volcanic event in U.S. history. In mere minutes, an avalanche of debris and ash flooded the existing landscape and left the region in ruins.
Once the dust settled, scientists believed it would take thousands of years for certain plant and animal life to reestablish. Yet there I was, barely 35 years later, surrounded by forests of evergreen trees that weren’t supposed to be there, trampling upon wildflowers that shouldn’t grow out of the ashy soil and watching frogs leap into newly formed ponds.
Undoubtedly, the area looks nothing like what photos depict of its glory days. The catastrophe reshaped the terrain. It carved new streams, cliffs and yes, left plenty of evidence of a tragedy in its past. But to me, what regrew from the ashes was much more beautiful than what was there before. And that’s the takeaway.
The Natural Demonstrates Spiritual
God often uses creation to demonstrate the spiritual. As I pondered how something that seemed so far gone could be so restored in such a short time, I was insistently reminded of God’s promise to Israel. In the midst of their own devastation, God encouraged His people with these illustrative words:
“[He has sent me] to preserve those who mourn in Zion, to give them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness, that they might be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that He might be glorified” (Isa. 61:3).
I can hardly think of a more comforting passage for anyone who feels irredeemable, unusable, too far gone, not good enough, destroyed or desolate. To those wounded by the horrors of abuse, the shame of promiscuity, the devastation of disaster or the insecurities of rejection, yes, to you who believe some event has left you only a fragment of who you once were, God gives this wild promise: “Out of your ashes I will bring beauty.”
The Process of the Promise
How God can make beauty out of ashes seems incomprehensible. But my exploration of Mount St. Helens afforded me the opportunity to reflect upon the process of the promise. And here are those reflections:
1. God redeems pain to repurpose. I dare not blame our afflictions on God, but He is masterful at using them to reform and repurpose our lives. The tragedy in the mountain’s past left a landscape sharply different from its earlier days, but one with a pointedly greater purpose. That is, today, it’s not only majestic, but it stands as a message about the impossible.
The same can be true for you, too. The torturous days you thought might kill you, the streams of tears that once raced down your cheeks, the seemingly unending doubts, what-ifs and worries are all a chisel in the hand of the Creator. He redeems it all to carve you into a different person with a message that can help the hurting see beyond their pitfalls and into their potentials.
2. You must decide to see the beauty. After a Facebook post about this very subject, a friend wrote to me, “When will God bring the beauty?” It’s a significant question, and I wanted to give it ample thought. Then I saw the key: It’s all about perspective. Those who focus only on the horror that happened at the mountain might still grieve over what could have been. But in light of the devastation, those who consider what should be will stand in awe of what is. For you and me, that often begins with the simple celebration, “I’m still here!”
Moreover, too many have a preconceived notion of how beauty should appear. But beauty isn’t an impeccable past or whitewashed memories. And it’s certainly not automatic. Beauty blossoms when you decide to see the ashes not as your burial grounds but as the birthplace of your resurrection.
3. The greatest beauty is in your story. The Bible affirms that God rescued each of us from our pasts for a staggering reason: “so that you may declare the goodness of Him who has called you out of darkness into His marvelous light” (1 Pet. 2:9).
When I consider the message of the mountain, it brings me to worship the God who restored what most considered ruined. When I think about the journey of my life, it evokes praise to the One who accomplishes far over and above what my weaknesses should allow. You see, the greatest beauty is in the story from which God gets all the glory.
So let this be hope for you. The tragedies of the past, the opinions of people or the pain of the present are never the final answers. What looks lost or worthless is often a canvas ripe for a masterpiece over which others will one day marvel and say, “Look what the Lord has done!” {eoa}
Kyle Winkler equips people to live in victory. His mobile app, Shut Up, Devil!, is the #1 spiritual warfare app; and his recent book, Silence Satan, has helped thousands shut down the enemy’s attacks, threats, lies and accusations. Kyle holds a Master of Divinity in biblical studies from Regent University. Get daily encouragement from Kyle on Facebook and Twitter.