Today's Scripture Reading (October 24, 2022): 2 Chronicles 7
The natives called it “The Mountain that Moves.” The English
called it “Turtle Mountain,” a peak located in the Rocky Mountain Range in
Alberta, Canada, just north of the border the United States shares with its
northern neighbor. The mountain was a source of coal, and mining operations
began in 1901. The mining operations resulted in a town called “Frank,” named
after American entrepreneur Henry Frank, who had developed the first of many
coal mines in the area. The Town of Frank grew quickly along with the coal mine
at Turtle Mountain.
But at 4:10 a.m. on April 29, 1903, “The Mountain that Moves”
moved. A piece of rock broke off the top of the mountain. The piece that measured
a kilometer by just short of half a kilometer came crashing toward the Town of Frank
at a very unturtle-like pace. Estimates place the speed of the rock at just
over 110 km/hour or 70 miles/hour. While rumor has it that the town of Frank
perished in the collision, in reality, only the eastern outskirts of the town
were buried by the slide. The Frank slide in 1903 killed 70 to 90 people, and most
of the dead are still buried beneath the rubble. Seventeen miners were working
the night shift in the mine at the time of the slide. Amazingly, they were able
to dig themselves out through a vein of coal that ran to the surface and were
counted among the survivors of the slide.
But the haunting native name for the mountain remains one of the
clues to why the mountain's peak came down in the first place. Even during the
years of the mining operation, rocks falling down the mountain were not
uncommon. Today we recognize that Turtle Mountain is inherently unstable, and
any break in the mountain, like placing a mine into its fragile side, was
likely to cause a catastrophic event. The slide resulted in two peaks on Turtle
Mountain – a north and south peak (the slide came from the area in between).
Experts caution that the south peak of the mountain will eventually fall. The
collapse may not be imminent, but there is no doubt that “The Mountain that Moves”
will move again, and the south peak will come down.
Moses had argued with God in his day that God should not move
against this seemingly undependable group of people known as Israel to protect
God’s reputation (Exodus 32). And so, God relented from his anger. But it is
almost as if God remembered that conversation as he spoke to Solomon. God
reminds him that he is “The Mountain that Moves.” He would protect Israel as
long as they obeyed him. But if they disobeyed, he would reduce this temple
built to house His Name to rubble, and the people of the world would not point
at God's unfaithfulness but rather the nation's disobedience. Even after the
destruction of the Temple, God’s reputation would remain unscathed.
Less than 500 years after this moment between God and Solomon,
the Temple came down. The people were unfaithful and undeserving of God. As a
result, God, who is “The Mountain that Moves,” moved. He brought a man named
Nebuchadnezzar and a fledgling Empire to the Temple and reduced it to rubble.
They did it so effectively that nothing was left; not enough evidence is left
today to prove that it had ever existed.
All because the mountain moved.
Tomorrow’s Scripture Reading:
Psalm 135
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