In the early 1900s, Fort
Bragg, California, residents threw their household garbage over a cliff
to a deserted beach below. For decades people dumped all kinds of refuse
there into the ocean, old cars, metal, furniture and mostly household
garbage, which included innumerable glass containers.
In the
1940's the area became known as "The Dump," and fires were often lit to
burn down the growing trash piles. Finally in 1967, the city leaders
wisely closed the area to dumping. Various cleanup programs were
undertaken to try to clean up the damage, but without much success.
Over the next thirty years the pounding waves cleansed the beach,
breaking down and washing most everything away, everything except the
glass and pottery. The ceaseless waves disintegrated the trash but broke
up and smoothed the broken glass - tons of it - moving it back and
forth along the shore. The broken glass shards remained along the sea
shore by the millions, polished by the ceaseless waves until an amazing
new beach was formed. The locals noticed this and renamed the area
"Glass Beach."
Its sea glass is the product of a long and brutal
process. Fragments are tumbled in the water, twenty-four hours a day,
bumping and grinding against each other, breaking and fashioning
surfaces into a frosty and glistening appearance. As the ocean tumbles
the pieces against each other, sand and pebbles join to smooth the rough
edges until the sea glass resembles precious gems.
In 1998, the
owner of the property suggested that Glass Beach should belong to the
public, so in 2002 it became part of MacKerricher State Park. Glass
Beach quickly attracted large numbers of tourists. The tinkling sounds
of the glass pebbles tumbling together by gentle waves makes a visit
there memorable.
Visiting Glass Beach today is unique. Whereas
decades ago people dumped their refuse on the shore, now they try to
take home glass pieces as souvenirs. How ironic that where it was once
illegal to dispose of trash, trash now turned into treasure, today it is
illegal to remove even a piece of it.
Maybe at some time you
have felt like trash, left behind, dumped overboard or abandoned as
worthless. Hopefully the bumps and bruises of life have shaped you well
and made you realize you are more valuable. Life may try to dump and
grind us, but God considers us His treasures. He believes we so precious
that He gave the life of His only Son that we might be with Him
forever.
Because of Jesus, we are all God's precious gems!
1 comment:
Pastor Bob, great story all by itself, and a great metaphor for hanging in there. Thank you for a great piece, once again.
Allan
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