Saturday, February 20, 2021

Giant Golden Arrows (a Steve Orr Lent reflection)


They’re still out there, you know ... those giant arrows. You can still see them, even though they are quite old.

They were first placed on the Earth in the 1920's ... ... ... by humans. They were the most visible part of the Transcontinental Airway System, designed to aid Air-mail pilots as they traveled across the United States. Lacking the level of technology we enjoy, today, these pilots could easily get lost. At the time, it was a perfectly reasonable navigation aid. 


The arrows, each over 68 feet long, were painted a bright golden yellow. At the center of each was a tall tower with a rotating beacon boasting a million-candlepower light. So, even though it was possible to see them from the ground, they were designed to be seen, and were best seen, from the air.


At their peak, there were over 1,500 of these "ground beacons" stretching from New York to San Francisco; one every ten miles or so. Day or night, pilots could find their way across the country and back. Their makers intended these arrows to serve as a kind of covenant between themselves and those who had to depend on the arrows for essential, maybe even vital, information. 


Today, though, they seem a little simple. 


Kind of like the rainbow in this week’s Genesis passage.


After a rain, we see a rainbow arcing across a portion of the sky and feel a little jump of elation, an appreciation of its beauty. Few of us stop to reflect on an essential truth: rainbows are anything but simple. 


Without the rain, no amount of sunlight striking our atmosphere could produce a rainbow. For a rainbow to appear high up in the sky, there has to be a brilliant light source and there has to be millions upon millions of rain drops to reflect/refract that light.


To Noah and his family, the appearance of a rainbow was brand new. Before the Flood, it had never rained. Whatever God used to change our atmospheric composition to bring about that first rain, it remained in place after the flood. And it produced, for the first time, the conditions necessary for a rainbow. 


Technically, you can see a rainbow from the air, but it doesn't look quite the same; it can even appear as a circle from certain angles. Where you need to be to see the phenomenon as a bow is on the ground, with rain before you and the sun behind you. 


God placed His bow "in the clouds" so that, for all generations, we could be assured that God would never again destroy all flesh by a flood.


The rainbow is just one of the covenants God has set between Himself and us ... signs we can see as we travel this spiritual journey, pointing the way so we aren’t lost. 


Whether it's bows or arrows, the intent is the same. If you want a successful journey, look for the signs along the way.


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PHOTO (& drawing): Steve Orr


Where to find the arrows: 

http://www.dreamsmithphotos.com/arrow/arrows.html


If you want to read more on the giant concrete arrows, some of which can still be seen, try:  http://www.citylab.com/work/2015/02/why-is-america-dotted-with-giant-concrete-arrows/385472/?utmsource=GristFB&utm_content=buffere1847&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer


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Hopefully, we can all Zoom to Lectionary Breakfast, Friday morning. We are going to start about 8:00 and go until about 9:00. We hope you can join us!  


Blessings,

Steve


Contact me for the Zoom link.

NOTE: Zoom allows you to mute the camera if you don’t wish to be seen and to mute the microphone if you don’t wish to speak. 

SCRIPTURES FOR THE COMING WEEK 
Find them here: 

Genesis 9:8-17
Psalm 25:1-10
1 Peter 3:18-22
Mark 1:9-15

First Sunday in Lent (February 21, 2021)


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