Dear Trailhead family,
Eons ago when I was about to turn thirty, I decided I wanted to climb a Colorado fourteener for my birthday.
Colorado is blessed with more than 50 mountain peaks reaching over 14,000 feet above sea level and a few of those mountains are accessible to people who lack technical climbing skills. People like me.
Since I had never climbed anything so formidable, I did a lot of research. Armed with blogs and books and maps, Cassie and I traveled to Colorado, fueled up on pizza the night before our climb, got up insanely early, and drove to the trailhead.
That’s when we really started learning about climbing fourteeners. Especially climbing fourteeners in late spring.
The first surprise of the day was how much snow we encountered on our drive to the trailhead. So much snow that it became clear that if we continued to drive up, we might never drive down. So we parked well short of the trailhead and began our climb.
The next surprise was just how high fourteen thousand feet is and how difficult it is to breathe at that altitude. The climb was less than five miles one way, but starting at 11,000 feet meant we were breathing hard the whole time.
But we made it to the top.
And it was spectacular.
Sunny skies reflected off the snow-covered mountains spreading off in every direction. Cassie sang happy birthday to me and we ate our leftover pizza in an oxygen-deprived state of bliss.
And why shouldn’t we be happy?
We were at the top; as everyone knows, going down is easier.
Except it wasn't.
The snow, with a nice crust that supported our weight on the way up in the cold, was now softened by the sun and was no longer willing to hold us up.
For the majority of the trek back down, we sank to our knees or deeper with each step.
We were no longer having fun.
Late that afternoon we made it back to the vehicle, back down the mountain road, and back to civilization.
We were sunburned, dehydrated, sick from the altitude, terribly sore, and grumpy.
We both agreed that there are better ways to celebrate a birthday.
But I was hooked.
Over the next five years, I climbed as many fourteeners as I could, including returning to the original climb a few times to try it with better gear and better conditions.
And each climb had a special moment for me: the first sliver of the sun rising over the horizon, throwing its color and light up and out in every direction.
To avoid the crowded trails I’d typically start my climb several hours before sunrise and the scope of my view for those first miles was whatever my headlamp could illuminate.
But once the eastern sky began to turn from black to gray and from gray to yellowish-orange, I’d get my first view of my surroundings and the mountain I was climbing. The sunrise always necessitated a short break to soak in the view and savor the beauty.
However, a few times, my route had me climbing towards the sun as it rose. And my view, rather than being awe-inspiring and postcard-worthy, was more like looking into, well, the sun. Blinded by the light.
Whereas before the sun rose I was blissfully skipping along (who am I kidding? It was more like slowly putting one foot in front of the other), I was now tripping on rocks and having a hard time decerning where the path even was. All because of the light.
Headlamp no longer needed, I was now pulling my hat bill low, holding an arm high to shield my eyes, squinting to make out just what exactly the light was illuminating.
Which reminds me of that ornery old prophet Isaiah, when he wrote,
“The people walking in darkness
have seen a great light;
on those living in the land of deep darkness
a light has dawned.”
I love that verse. This Light was an answer to prayer. The answer to the prayer.
The Light would be God among us, with us, one of us.
And yet, some six hundred years later, when the Light dawned, I wonder if it wasn’t just a little blinding.
I picture those first-century Israelites doing a lot of pulling their hat brims low, arms held high to shield their eyes, squinting to make out just what exactly the light was illuminating.
A baby who is… God?
A baby who is God who grows up to… die?
A baby who is God who grows up to die… for what?
The people walking in darkness were looking for something else. Something a lot more like… Rome.
Since Rome was the problem, the solution should look like Rome, only more powerful.
But Jesus didn’t come to be a bigger Rome or a better Rome.
Rome already had its gods; the powerful always have more than enough gods.
Jesus came for those who had lost faith in their gods and were humbly looking for something real.
And that's where the blinding part comes in.
I suspect that until we stop fighting the brilliance of the Light, until we stop shielding our eyes and glancing away to protect our vision, we never experience the miracle of the Savior.
The Light is blinding.
But maybe, it blinds us to what is false and fake, and then, only when we are properly blind, do we see what is real.
"When Jesus spoke again to the people, he said, 'I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.'"
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant