According
to researchers from the University of Bristol, the European rock ant may be better
than we are at staying on top of the housing market. The researchers found that
the ant colonies use scout ants to continually monitor their colonies’ living
conditions. Using social skills complex enough to stun the scientists, the rock
ants work together to find the right living space, darkness, and security
needed to give the queen mother and her larvae the best available housing.
In
the days of Moses, the families of Israel were looking for a new home. The
slave yards of Egypt had been brutal. The wilderness of Sinai was no place to
settle down. But there was a problem. According to Israelite scouts, the
homeland to which God was leading them was already occupied—by walled cities
and giants who made the scouts feel like grasshoppers in their own eyes (Num.
13:28,33).
Sometimes
it may be helpful to compare ourselves to insects. House-hunting rock ants
instinctively follow the ways of their Creator. But we often let our fears keep
us from following and trusting God. When we rest in the assurance of His
presence and love, we can say, “Lord, You have been our dwelling place in all
generations.”
Finding
ourselves at home in God is a good place to be. (ODB)