Twenty-year-old Lygon Stevens, an experienced mountaineer, had reached the summits of Mt. McKinley, Mt. Rainier, four Andean peaks in Ecuador, and 39 of Colorados highest mountains. I climb because I love the mountains, she said, and I meet God there. In January 2008, Lygon died in an avalanche while climbing Little Bear Peak in southern Colorado with her brother Nicklis, who survived.
When her parents discovered her journals, they were deeply moved by the intimacy of her walk with Christ. Always a shining light for Him, her mother said, Lygon experienced a depth and honesty in her relationship with the Lord, which even seasoned veterans of faith long to have.
In Lygons final journal entry, written from her tent 3 days before the avalanche, she said: God is good, and He has a plan for our lives that is greater and more blessed than the lives we pick out for ourselves, and I am so thankful about that. Thank You, Lord, for bringing me this far and to this place. I leave the restmy futurein those same hands and say thank You.
Lygon echoed these words from the psalmist: My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth (Ps. 121:2).
INSIGHT
: Three times in this short chapter the Lord is referred to as our keeper (vv.3,4,5). This idea is of great comfort to the believer because it presents God as one who is not passive but active in our lives. To keep something is to actively guard and protect it. This idea is underscored by the fact that as our keeper, God does not sleep or slumber (vv.3-4) and watches over us day and night (v.6). How wonderful to know that the God who holds our lives is not disinterested but is constantly watching over us.
Thank You.
You were ready and waiting. LOL!
Good evening, Mayor, and thank you for today’s sustenance for body and soul.