Mushroom moments
My daughter and I are gawking at a mushroom that is small, shiny and gaudy purple. In all my years of traipsing
through the Pennsylvania woods, I’ve never seen anything like it.
But it was just the
start of our mushroom adventure (Latin name: fungus wondermentum). My four kids had planned a weekend away as an
early birthday present and this morning we are on a reasonably short hike
through sodden woods. My three sons are
ahead on the trail, discussing movies louder than is my style in nature.
So Grace and I have hung back. The mushrooms have given us something to
watch for.
The purple one, called
a Sticky Violet Cortinarius, seems too bright and glossy to be real.
Shortly after, we find
one with delicate and pale fingers that is aptly named Coral fungi.
Yellow Jelly Babies (I
kid you not) seem like a kind of Gummy Bear confection.
These common
trunk-frills are bracket fungi, I’m thinking.
There are others we
can’t identify, like these I will call Lemon Drops.
Perhaps they grow into
this funnel-top.
We even find some that
turn out not to be mushrooms at all, but Indian Pipes: plants that lack chlorophyll.
Grace and I show each other our photographs as
we take them. I compiment her on her composition skills
(the above photo is hers). But I don’t
stop there. Having studied Psalm 145
earlier today, verse 4 is humming in my heart:
One generation shall commend your works to
another,
and
shall declare your mighty acts.
So I tell her that
noticing God’s creation is just the first step to potential worship. It’s an increasingly difficult first step in
our age of distractedness, so it’s no small thing she has it ingrained. Framing that beauty in a photo then enhances
the wonder, adding a bit of meditation.
It’s easy, at that point, to make a connection in one’s mind to the
Creator. But praise requires an
acknowledgement, a thankfulness expressed.
I suggest she take it one step further. Make it relational. Don’t simply see
moments of marvel as random scatterings of a distant Creator. Realize that your
loving Father put that little glimpse of glory in your path and prompted you to
notice it.
It is a gift. And an invitation to a sweet moment of fellowship
with him.
Then, the smallest of
surprises – even a gaudy purple mushroom – can become an exchange between a
loving father and an awestruck child.
Father God, I am reminded again
of the abundance of your giving. Even
something as lowly as a fungus can come in enough colors and shapes fill to us with
wonder. You didn’t have to do that. But you did because you delight in giving us
myriad moments to connect with you.
Teach us to not only see them, but to let them grow into praise.
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