Probably the most astonishing sight I’ve seen lately is video of my husband hanging out with sharks.
We’re eight days on an archipelago of 330 islands that make up the country of Fiji.
Dan is scuba diving as I sit in our private yard with the “Beware: Coconuts Falling” sign on the largest palm tree, and the hammock and the blue sea beyond.
Same yard, same hammock, same sea at low tide
We’ve only been in Fiji a handful of days, but we’ve discovered some rather astonishing things.
Have you ever marveled at the beauty beneath the seas?

Or observed a blue starfish?

Have you ever kayaked through a mangrove canopy?
(Photo)
Or walked through a Fijian village and been high-fived by children crying, “Bula!” (which means, “hello” and “welcome”)?
Have you ever stood with your honey beside a heart sculpted from driftwood?
Have you experienced connection with people from a very far and different culture who laugh at the same things, who show deep kindness, and carry similar hopes and dreams for themselves and their children?

Dan was appointed “chief” of us visitors, and was the first to drink the ceremonial kava before we could walk through the village

A beautiful harmony of Fijians sang to us one evening
(photo of children dancing)
A choir of Fijian children and a traditional dance
Firewalkers preparing the hot stones after they burned all afternoon
Walking on the hot stones
I can’t help but think that if we’re awakened to the beauty and astonishment in nature and in the people around us—if we truly notice and pay attention and think about how it all got here—then we can’t help but know there’s a Creator. Because none of these things evolved on their own. These wonders of nature are the handiwork of a creative God.
Tish Harrison Warren, author and former New York Times news columnist, wrote “A Prayer for Re-Enchantment.” I love the full poem, but these are my fav lines:
Wake us to the astonishment of being loved by a God
who is both infinite and closer than our breath—
Familiar, yet never garden variety.
Common, yet never old hat.
Cosmic, yet never out of reach.
And if there’s a creative God who has made all this for our delight, then how much must He care for us?
Yes, there is suffering, and disease, and war, and human trafficking, and poverty, and dictators who wreak havoc on this broken planet. But God wasn’t the one who broke it. It’s a result of mankind turning its back on a good, good Father.
I don’t think it takes a trip to a South Pacific island to discover the handiwork of a Creator God who shaped us for relationship with Him. (That alone is the most astonishing thought, right there.)
I think being amazed simply requires new vision, training our eyes to see what mysteries the Creator has made. I think we’re called to wonder at all the wonders.
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