TeacherAide
A weekly teaching aide for student developers

The First Epic

SESSION 10


ILLUSTRATING THE POINT

Kindness Returned with Kindness

Lewis and Clark's famous expedition to the Pacific Northwest in 1804 almost came to an untimely and deadly end. Half starved and almost frozen, the men staggered out of Idaho's snowy Bitterroot Mountains and into the camp of the Nez Perce Indians. Dayton Duncan and Ken Burns tell the story in Lewis and Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery:

Lewis and Clark were the first white men ever to reach their homeland. In the absence of more prominent leaders, who were out on a war party, a chief named Twisted Hair had to decide what to do with the weak but wealthy strangers suddenly in their midst. According to the tribe's oral tradition, some of the Nez Perce proposed killing the white men and confiscating their boxes of manufactured goods and weapons. The expedition's rifles and ammunition, in particular, would have instantly made the Nez Perce the region's richest and most powerful tribe.

But, an Indian woman came to the Corps of Discovery's aid. As a young girl, she had been captured by an enemy tribe on the plains, who in turn sold her to another tribe farther to the east. Eventually she had been befriended and treated kindly by white people in Canada before escaping and making her way back to her own people. They called her Watkuweis-'Returned from a Faraway Country'-and for years she had told them stories about the fair-skinned people who lived toward the rising sun. She was aged and dying by the time the explorers arrived.

When she learned about possible plans to destroy the expedition, tribal tradition says, she intervened. "These are the people who helped me,"' she said. "Do them no hurt."

A stranger's simple act of kindness; years before; saved the lives of an entire expedition. A little kindness can have amazing and unexpected results.

Marshall Shelley, editor of Leadership Journal

THE MORE YOU KNOW

Population statistics indicate that nearly 3 billion people may have lived on the earth at the time of Noah’s Flood. This means that 3 billion were killed by God’s judgment at the Flood.

A foundational observation of this Genesis account is that fossils came into existence at the time of Noah’s Flood; Genesis 6-9 recorded an universal catastrophe.

An article in the New York Herald Tribune-

The company library of the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company in New York City has one of the most complete sets of records of marine disasters outside of England. The completeness is so legendary that someone once asked Atlantic if it had a record of Noah’s Ark. In due time the inquirer received this information:

“Built 2448 B.C. Gopher wood, pitched within and without. Length- 300 cubits; width- 50 cubits; height- 30 cubits. Three decks. Cattle carrier. Owner: Noah and Sons. Last reported stranded on Mount Ararat.”

 

THOUGHT I HEARD YOU SAY

“By perseverance the snail reached the Ark.”- Charles Spurgeon

  “O Lord, make the bad people good and the good people nice.”- Prayer of a young girl

“The lowest and worst have a claim to our courtesy.”- John Wesley

“Love is never lost. If not reciprocated, it will flow back and soften and purify the heart.”- Washington Irving                                                                             

“One cannot save and then pitchfork souls into heaven…Souls are more or less securely fastened to bodies…and as you cannot get the souls out and deal with separately, you have to take them both together.”- Amy Carmichael