TURNAGAIN ARM...
(By:
Mary Adams)
But this same place was the scene of a great
disappointment over two hundred years ago. The famous explorer,
Captain James Cook had led two ships all the way from England down to New
Zealand, up to the islands of Tahiti, and northward to the Bering sea and
was now trying desperately to penetrate the coastline of Alaska in search of
a passageway that would link the Pacific and Atlantic oceans...a short route
to the riches of the far east that would bypass the two capes, Horn and
Good Hope. The prize for finding it was an enormous 20,000
British pounds...at that time, an absolute fortune.
They had left England with two ships, the
Resolution and the Discovery in 1776, but too late in the season
(December) and spent the winter in New Zealand. Other delays caused
them to arrive only on the 12th of May, 1778 at a promising sound, which
Cook named Prince William after the King's third son, later King William IV.
Here repairs were made, and on the 1st of June the two ships entered what is
now known as Turnagain Arm. As they glided up the body of water, they were
met with Eskimos wanting fur trade...but it was soon evident that
there was no outlet. Wind and fog mired them for days, and Cook was
forced to return again the same way he had come, hence the name "Turnagain".
There would be no Northwest passage, and Cook himself would never see
England again...he was later attacked and killed by natives in the Hawaiian
islands.
But one of those men on the Resolution was a
marine corporal named John Leyard. He was an American, from
Connecticut. After those years of wandering aimlessly with Cook up the
western coastlines of North America, it occurred to him that he could have
simply walked across America and be
home. Motivated by this vision and how
he might establish a fur trading route by land rather than by sea,
John returned to England with what was left of Cook's crew and tried to
secure backing for an expedition. His plan was to literally walk from
England through Russia, thence to Nootka Sound, where he would set up a
trading company, and then walk across unexplored North America to Virginia.
Unable to get help from the British, he went to Thomas Jefferson, then ambassador
to Paris. Jefferson was enthusiastic with this young
adventurer and his idea, and so John Ledyard set out from England and
walked an incredible 3,000 miles across Russia in the middle of winter
until Catherine the Great heard of this scheme and arrested him in Siberia,
ending the idea. Another dream vanished. Another Turnagain.
Did it stop him? Did he become mired in the
disappointment? No. He reached inside for the next vision...to
lead an expedition to explore the interior of Africa! And the only
thing that brought that to a halt was his untimely death. He had not
yet reached the age of 40. We may look at all of this as futility...yet
it was Ledyard's vision that germinated a seed in the mind of Thomas
Jefferson who, twenty years later, organized the famous
Lewis and Clark expedition and opened up the famous Northwest Passage
that lured men across America and established a nation "from sea to shining
sea".
For the men on those two ships, it must have
been so difficult to know that after three years away from home and family,
enduring the hazards of living aboard a small wooden vessel on high seas in
cramped quarters, depriving themselves of a normal life, it had been for
naught. But the point
is...they turned about and headed back out to sea and
home....yet some of them, like Ledyard, simply looked for another
way...undaunted by failure.
You and I can do that. We
can label our dreams as mere fantasies or illusions....a rainbow
we chased that disappeared so quickly. We can decide to die with our
dreams... stuck in the mud awaiting our end, unwilling to
take life as it comes, good or bad...or we can pick up the pieces of
our shattered hopes and begin planning for our
tomorrows.
God
promises to lead and guide His people...to be a Light in their
pathway. Yet we must not forget that some of us
are mere links to put together His greater plans
that not only involve our lives, but the lives of others too.
But He will always accomplish them through
those who hoist their sails into the winds and avoid becoming stuck in the
"miry clay".
Are you
sitting today, stuck in the mudflats, unable to let go of your
disappointments and failures? God has a special tool to release you
from its grip....it is called "hope". Ironically, the whole idea of
Captain Cook's journey was to find a way to avoid a Cape called Hope, for it
was treacherous and difficult and forced the ships to take a long way around
to get where they wanted to go.
Isn't it
true we usually look for the shortcuts and the easy road? Yet it is also in the mind of God to sometimes let
us go the long way around and endure inconvenience, hardship, and
disappointment. Why? Because He also
has a passageway for us to find, and without such trials, we would
never go searching for a better way in the first
place.
Only hope
and determination will keep us looking until we find it.
For the
prize and the riches are worth it all.....
In my beloved state of
Alaska, there is a scenic drive just south of Anchorage which is said to be
the most beautiful in the entire United States. Each time I go
there, I am in awe, for it is spectacular in its beauty. Beluga whales
can be seen at times, along with an occasional bore tide. Mountain
sheep, moose, and eagles abound amid snow-capped mountains...glaciers push
their way downward to the sea. It is no wonder that thousands of
tourists stop to take their pictures and pause to allow their human senses
to adjust to such beauty.
I think about the many times I
have chased elusive dreams and found them lying at my feet
broken apart in disappointment and failure. It can be
heartbreaking. As you
look again at this lovely Cook Inlet (so-named for Captain James Cook), the
awesome beauty of mountains, glaciers, and forests belies what is under the
water...glacial silt that has formed a floor of clay-like mud that is a
killer! What looks so firm and solid could literally trap your
feet to where you cannot move. And when the swift tide moves in, a
sure and certain death awaits the terrified adventurer who might have walked out onto "the
mud flats".
DEAR READER: Thank you for taking the time to read this. If it has ministered
hope, encouragement or insight to you in any way, would you please take the time
to send Mary Adams a quick E-mail at meamin@mtaonline.net
and share the blessing with her? She would love to hear from you!
Also, if you would like to be reconciled to God today, please click
here to learn how you can do that.
If this testimony has touched you in some special
way, would you please share it with us? Email us at:
ptoffice@precious-testimonies.com