On a recent journey from the mountains to the sea and back home again, many things stand out. Watching the landscape unfold through the window of an automobile is like opening a great big coffee table book full of wonderful pictures. Nothing is like the way mountains rise up to touch the white fluffy clouds and neither is there anything quite like the place where sand, rolling waters, and horizon all seem to be a part of each other. There were mom and pop eateries, shops full of stuff not really needed, and so many people with stories to tell.
Even though all these things are very memorable, a tree on the edge of the Flint River in Bainbridge, Ga. receives the award for the being most outstanding. I first saw it in the early morning sun from the deck of a motel that provided a place for breakfast. I do not know the species of the tree except to say it was a survivor. It was the only tree standing in the area and its trunk sent huge gnarled twisted limbs into the sky. Everything about it spoke of being of the ancient of days. It was a tree that had survived flood and storm. When I first saw it, I thought of the first Psalm. "They (the righteous) are like trees planted by streams of water, which yield their fruit in its season, and their leaves do not wither, in all that they do, they prosper." (Psalm 1:4).
Perhaps, part of the appeal was that it looked like a kinsman. So many of us bear the scars and other evidences of making it through the storms and floods that have often seemed overwhelming, but somehow by the grace of God, we still stand as survivors. Certainly another part of the attraction of the tree was the way it found its home by the river. So many of us have planted our lives in the stream of living waters. It has become our home, the place of our roots and life. Our home is by that stream which "flow from the throne of God and of the Lamb..." (Revelation 22:1). Seeing that tree by the river was like being home and all I wanted to do was sit with gratitude flowing from within.