8 Apr, 2009
Be Peculiar
Volunteers help salamanders avoid roadway massacre
NEW HAVEN, Vt. – The black salamander with yellow spots sat on the roadside in the dark, ready to make a go of it. But it was not on its own. It got help from an escort — one of 45 people who volunteered on a recent night to carry salamanders, frogs and newts across the road during their annual migration to mate.
On rainy nights in early spring, roads between forests and vernal pools are hopping and crawling with activity. On some nights, hundreds of amphibians cross small stretches of asphalt to mate. But many don't make it.
From rural Vermont to urban centers like Philadelphia, human escorts, called bucket brigades in some places, help amphibians make it to their mating areas without getting squashed by cars. It's part education, part conservation, and part science.
On a recent night, University of Vermont student Kaitlin Friedman walked with other volunteers along the asphalt with flashlights and clipboards, moving wood frogs, peepers, blue-spotted, red-backed and four-toed salamanders across the road, while jotting down how many they saw. They also kept count of vehicles, and the amphibians that didn't make it, trying to identify the flattened carcasses.
"It's pretty much the one time of year where you get to see a lot of salamanders in abundance and it's just really cool," said Friedman, 20, of Long Island, New York. "Plus, you know you help them across the road, you feel like maybe you're making a small reduction in their mortality rates, maybe, just for that hour or so."
story courtesy of - The Associated Press
picture courtesy of - www.uga.edu
1st Peter 2:9 (KJV)
"But you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people; that you should show forth the praises of him who has called you out of darkness into his marvelous light."
What does today's God's Story scripture teach us about being peculiar?
Don't you admire the peculiar passion of the people in today's story? While their contribution might seem small, these people just might be helping to maintain the harmonious function of the ecosystem in their neck of the woods. Considering how much human beings often disrupt the ecosystem in which they live that's no small achievement!
While the safe migration of salamanders is a unique and peculiar passion indeed, I believe a quick inventory of the habits of those who follow Jesus will reveal similarly peculiar passions.
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Looking after widows and orphans (Jam 1)
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Feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, welcoming the stranger (Matt 25)
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Healing the sick (1 Cor 12)
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Making peace in a world of violence (Mat 5)
The way of Christ is peculiar indeed, in fact later in this chapter of scripture Peter calls Christians "exiles". The way of Jesus is so unique, so set apart (read "holy"), so peculiar, that those who live it are like exiles, people who are living in a land that is not their home. So may you embrace the peculiarity of Christ, may you live in such a way that those around you know your home is the Kingdom of God, may your life "show forth the praises of him who has called you out of darkness into his marvelous light".
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What about your life is peculiar because of your connection to Jesus?
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What peculiar passions of Jesus and other Christians do you admire?
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How might thinking of yourself as "an exile" change the way you live every day?
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Talk with your friends about today's story, ask them what they think about it.
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Ask your friends what they think is most peculiar to them about Christians.
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Invite your friends along with you as you practice your peculiar habits.
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