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Young Men, the Wild Places Are for You

Dave...

Active Member

Young Men, the Wild Places Are for You​

August 6, 2025 | Fletch Matlack


Young men, God has designed wild places to unlock spiritual truths in your heart. Wilderness experiences are a visceral means of drawing you nearer to Christ—a needed antidote to the numbness of our comfortable, digitally driven lives.

By wild places, I don’t mean the community park. I mean a place where cell service is unlikely, where the only creature comforts are the ones you’ve carried with you. In short, wild places are, well, wild. If you’re ill-equipped, they can turn dangerous quickly.

Of course, God has created the wilds for man and woman, young and old. But after 20-plus years of guiding people, I can confidently say God has specially tuned the hearts of young men to hear spiritual truths in wild places. Here are four examples.

1. Beauty Leads to Worship​

The wild world is filled with beauty that Instagram cannot capture. When you’re standing in creation, far from home, subject to your environment, every sense is engaged. It’s a beauty you don’t just observe but feel. It’s enrapturing: pine trees sighing with a rush of wind, a solitary loon calling across a dusky lake, alpine balsams pillowed in snow, a sky so dark the Milky Way spills across the horizon.

To experience these wonders, and a million others like them, is to recognize you’ve stepped into glory. As C. S. Lewis writes, “Nature never taught me that there exists a God of glory and of infinite majesty. I had to learn that in other ways. But nature gave the word glory a meaning for me. I still do not know where else I could have found one.”

I’ve stood with young men on mountaintops, or beside riverbanks, and worship suddenly erupts. It’s not that we begin singing (though this has happened), but we break into spontaneous expressions of gratitude for Christ, who made all things and holds them together (Col. 1:16–17). We speak words of Scripture, like Psalm 19, almost instinctively. God has designed wild places to point your heart to Christ’s beauty and glory. Worship is the only natural response.

2. Simplicity Leads to Prayerfulness​

When you travel to wild places, the stresses of normal life are left behind—if only for a moment. Life becomes simple. Everything you need is in your backpack or canoe. Your work is to keep moving, to control your breathing. Set up camp, break it down again. Make a fire, cook your food, make sure bears and stray embers bring no ruination. Life in the wild is intense; mistakes can quickly lead to misfortune. But this simple intensity strips away distractions. You become single-minded, focused.

Young men, simplicity is a revelation for your soul. When life is reduced to a simple set of objectives, with no screens to distract, it becomes much easier to meditate on the things of God. Thinking becomes praying, and praying becomes easier. The simplicity of the wild and the worshipfulness it produces amplify a prayerful state. Perhaps this is why Jesus frequently sought out wild places to pray (e.g., Luke 4:42, 5:16; Matt. 14:23).

3. Adversity Leads to Fortitude​

If you’ve reached a wild place, you’ve experienced difficulty: burning muscles, lungs desperate for air, downpours threatening to drown your tent, mosquitoes resistant to chemical warfare, uncooperative stomachs, uncertainty about whether you can make it through. Wild places cannot be accessed without some form of adversity. But the reality of the wild is that, one way or another, you must push through—even if it’s to bail.

I’ve seen it play out with dozens of young men: When suffering comes, Scripture becomes the driving thought. I remember: in my weakness, he is strong (2 Cor. 12:10); we ought to count trials as joy (James 1:2): these present sufferings are not worth comparing to future glories (Rom. 8:18). God’s Word presses you forward through the challenges of wild places, trusting he’ll bring you to better moments. Young men, God has filled wild places with challenges, and he has created you to overcome challenges.

I think of wilderness adversities like a school, preparing young men for life’s greater sufferings. Any fortitude gained through battling the wilderness, God will surely use when he leads you through a future spiritual wilderness.

4. Wild Experiences Lead to Brotherhood​

After returning from a wild place, I’ll often be asked, “How was your trip?” I offer a brief report, but it’s impossible to explain to someone who wasn’t there. For the friend who was there, all we need is a glance to remember. And the stories we love to repeat aren’t of blue skies and clear waters but of when we came through the storm together, when we struggled side by side, and when the wild places forged a brotherhood between us. Nowhere but in the wild have I more consistently learned that a “brother is born for adversity” (Prov. 17:17).

The wild places are for you. Find a friend, leave your screens behind, and get out there to discover that creation declares the glory of God (Ps. 19:1).

Disclaimer: Fools walk into the wild with no experience. If you don’t have experience, find a more seasoned man. Likely, he’ll be eager to introduce you to wild places. If you don’t know anyone, ask God to bring such a man into your life. God loves to give good gifts!
 

Dave...

Active Member
I can vouch for this as I've experienced this in my life, though not as much as I would have liked. There's something about being in the wild, especially for men, that makes us feel like we were born to be out there where a man can breathe.
 

Cathode

Well-Known Member
Important to have a good heavy base large pot and small pot with lids, steel frypan, heavy ply canvas tarp with reenforced eyelets and minimum 8mm guy ropes that don’t slip with a tautline hitch.
Mosquito net that is sand fly rated. These ones are very tough.
2 x 16 inch bolo machete. Sharpening pucks and fire steels.
Bow saw. With extra blades.
Plumbing shovel long handle.
Steel canteen and slung brew kit.
Camelback 3ltr.
Solar charged LED lamps that can hang inside your shelter or ridge line and throw good light.


5 gallon bucket with steel handle and lid. 15 feet of 6mm rope.
Cast nets. Mono filament one for salt water, cotton one for fresh water.
Four Cuban reel hand lines from 5lb to 150lb with terminal tackle, stainless cheapo multitool, fishing knife. Keep all this in the bucket.

3kg iodised salt. Gallon of veg oil. 200 yards of catering foil.
Good first aid kit.

Good surplus 30 cal rifle with cuff sling, butt pouch with pull through, oil, solvent, sawn off toothbrush and Cotton rags and patches. I used the Nagant for years, I’ve seen meat fly off the pigs on impact, especially when it hit bone, plenty of power. Has a useful tri hollow grind spike bayonet if a pig charges or needs finishing off.

Really humid environments, take a stainless synthetic stock 30 cal rifle for more carefree maintenance.

For smaller game take a 22 long rifle, humid environment same again, stainless synthetic. Take a good amount of subsonic with your super sonic ammo. I use target pistol solids for my subsonic rounds, they are even more quiet than standard subsonic ammo. The 22 is great for opportunity meat, or knocking down coconuts, you will find yourself using it often.

Conibear kill traps, #330, #220, #160, #110.
3x duke #11 long spring foot hold traps. Set up with drowners for more options.
Snares for small to medium game.
Make up a bunch of recovery trap anchors.

Keep your Holy hardware in a separate quality pelican case that is sealed. Bible NT, Prayer books and lives of the saints, office, blessed candles, holy water, spare rosaries etc. Ziplock bags can also be used for extra protection.
 

Cathode

Well-Known Member
Disclaimer: Fools walk into the wild with no experience. If you don’t have experience, find a more seasoned man. Likely, he’ll be eager to introduce you to wild places. If you don’t know anyone, ask God to bring such a man into your life. God loves to give good gifts!

discover that creation declares the glory of God

You can also discover that creation declares war on you.


cast-nets-for-catching-bait-qw560q27bl4vikdz99in2qy7nocq21s71uhy152m4g.jpg



You can really enjoy yourself out there if you know what you are doing.

But if you don’t have experience with things out there it can be very dangerous.

Common sense doesn’t exist to some who are new to an environment. You have to explain everything and watch them all the time.
Many experienced people lazily assume that newbies have the same common sense they do, and this is huge mistake, and how people get hurt.

If I’m on the ice pack, something I know nothing about, I want an Inuit next to me nattering information to me constantly explaining things.

Don’t go pat the 1200lb white dog. Then explain why.

Don’t walk on that thin ice with rushing water under it. Then explain why.

In my environment, I would say, don’t go to the waters edge. Then explain why.

Don’t touch the jellyfish on the beach, and definitely don’t swim in the water. Then explain why.
Visitors don’t know that certain times of the year the water is deadly. You will die if you swim at the beach, box jellyfish will kill you.

Preemptive nattering about the dangers and what to do is what a good guide should be doing and watching people closely all the time. You can explain things many times but some people still won’t get it.
A good guide has a lot of patience and inner bother and care. I’ve seen careless guides and trainers and they come back with casualties and near fatalities.

There is a lot to know in certain environments. It can still be very dangerous even for experienced people.

I’m all for people getting out into the wild and experiencing God’s creation, but going out there without preparation or knowledge is never a good idea.
 

Cathode

Well-Known Member
I know what deer are every time my car goes streaming down the road. They are really dying to experience it.

This is why I keep a set of bags and a knife and rope in my vehicles.

I have always had this problem. Animals, fish, birds are all dinner to me sadly.

Mountain clouds, mountains, sunsets, storm fronts, sunlight in trees, open ocean, still moon lit or star lit nights all give me a sense of wonder at God’s creation.
But wild animals I see as something to hunt, trap, catch and process. The tailgate of my truck is setup like a large cutting board and butchers block, inch thick marine ply the full length and width. I don’t just field dress animals, I field butcher them to the last joint of meat, leaving nothing but bones. Nothing to do at home but put the meat in the chest freezers.

I used to draw birds when I was young, but only their heads, seagulls and ducks heads. I was fixated on them, I always thought they were beautiful, but there again their heads were not something edible.

When I look at a beach, I look for gutters where the fish hang out, or rips to carry out my live bait. When I look at a creek or stream, I look for bottle necks, slack water, overhangs or snags where fish will be.
When I see game trails I look to see where a trap, snare or piglet pit can be set up.
When I see a pig, buffalo or bantang, I’m thinking wind direction first so they don’t scent me, then it’s about stalking in the best cover closing to optimal distance.

When I’m hunting birds in trees, I stare through the canopy not focusing on anything, you are only looking for movement in the widest arch with holes in the canopy for reference. Once you see movement, then you focus narrow.

There are many other things to say, but sometimes going bush is hard work depending on your level of involvement.
I remember cast netting regularly for seven hours staring at the water not realising how much time had passed. Only driven out of the fixation by thirst, hunger and cold. Those levels of intense concentration can only be sustained so long in those conditions.

It depends on how far you engage I suppose, whether you are just passing through or mucking in, going bush will effect each man’s soul, you will be out there alone but still with Jesus who created all of it.
 
A1 - Z26

Thread Message # 134253 / 31102 Verses = Remainder-Verse

Second Kings Eleven - Fifteen = 248

Verse 9845 = 26 | 2 Kings 11:15 = 26+2 _ (52) 7 - (54) 9

But Jehoiada the priest commanded the captains of the hundreds=126 the officers of the host, and said unto them, Have her forth without the ranges: and him that followeth her kill with the sword. For the priest had said, Let her not be slain in the house of The LORD. = 2368

Verse 248 = 14 | Genesis 10:13 = 23 _ (
37) 10 = 1

And Mizraim begat Ludim, and Anamim, and Lehabim, and Naphtuhim,

Verse 2368 = 19 | Exo 29:31 = 60 _ (
79) 16 = 7

And thou shalt take the ram of the consecration, and seethe his flesh in the holy place.

248 + 2368 = Verse
2616 = 15 | Exodus 37:11 = 48 _ (63) 9

And he overlaid it with pure gold, and made thereunto a crown of gold round about.

7+1+7+9=24=6
9+1+7+9=26=8

<><><><>

A1-Z26 Calculator - Search by the Verse Number
 

Cathode

Well-Known Member
A1 - Z26

Thread Message # 134253 / 31102 Verses = Remainder-Verse

Second Kings Eleven - Fifteen = 248

Verse 9845 = 26 | 2 Kings 11:15 = 26+2 _ (52) 7 - (54) 9

But Jehoiada the priest commanded the captains of the hundreds=126 the officers of the host, and said unto them, Have her forth without the ranges: and him that followeth her kill with the sword. For the priest had said, Let her not be slain in the house of The LORD. = 2368

Verse 248 = 14 | Genesis 10:13 = 23 _ (
37) 10 = 1

And Mizraim begat Ludim, and Anamim, and Lehabim, and Naphtuhim,

Verse 2368 = 19 | Exo 29:31 = 60 _ (
79) 16 = 7

And thou shalt take the ram of the consecration, and seethe his flesh in the holy place.

248 + 2368 = Verse
2616 = 15 | Exodus 37:11 = 48 _ (63) 9

And he overlaid it with pure gold, and made thereunto a crown of gold round about.

7+1+7+9=24=6
9+1+7+9=26=8

<><><><>

A1-Z26 Calculator - Search by the Verse Number

And I always take large bags of potatoes, carrots, pumpkins and onions when in a group. These can keep well for quite a long time stored well.
 

Cathode

Well-Known Member
Some Apostles were fishermen and lived a great deal of time in the wild.

I could relate to the large haul of fish in the Gospel because I caught a massive haul of fish in my throw net. I had to flush some fish out to even move the net to shore. Initially I thought the net was snagged on a rock but I had seen everything at low tide and knew that there was only a sandy bottom. It was all weight in fish.

I had dropped the net on a huge school of sand whiting. One of the best eating fish in the sea.

fishing-for-yellowfin-whiting-5.jpg



The Aboriginal guy I was with said “ This is God doing this, this is God “. I agreed.

I could feed everyone back in the exploration camp including the drillers, and the Aboriginal community in town.

We used some of the whiting as bait catch bigger fish, 8 threadfin salmon and a massive cod, all prized fish and all this in the space of 30-45 minutes.

The Lord chose fishermen for Apostles I think because they are men of faith. They go out not knowing if they will catch anything, but they go out anyway, in Faith and Hope. They navigate and are guided by the heavens. They keep watch for the weather ahead. They were also practical men, and seasoned by hardships and suffering.

I would love to have gone fishing with Peter, I know my ropes and splices and know how to mend nets.
But all this is analogous to saving souls, Jesus wants us to haul souls in, not just for a blessed and glorious day, but a blessed and glorious Eternity with Him.

Street ministry is one thing but I would love a time to haul in a huge catch for Jesus.
 

Cathode

Well-Known Member
No thanks! I did not enjoy the wilds when the Army paid me to go there so not paying for any trips.

Well, the recruiting sargeants tell blokes it’s all cold beer and hula girls out there, not only do they find that a lie when they get there, they are getting shot at, to add insult to injury. :Laugh

Besides the military provides mass produced sub standard equipment, not made for a comfortable time in the bush. Plus you have the pressure of following orders, carrying way to much gear.
 
And I always take large bags of potatoes, carrots, pumpkins and onions when in a group. These can keep well for quite a long time stored well.

Quoting Message # 2940876 / 31102 Verses = Remainder-Verse 17288

Proverbs Thirty One - Three = 305

Verse 17288 = 26 | Proverbs 31:3 = 34 _ (60) 6

Give not thy strength unto women, nor thy ways to that which destroyeth kings. = 898

Verse 305 = 8 | Genesis 12:6 = 18 _ (26) 8

And Abram passed through the land unto the place of Sichem, unto the plain of Moreh. And the Canaanite was then in the land.

Verse 898 = 25 | Genesis 31:24 = 55 _ (80) 8

And God came to Laban the Syrian in a dream by night, and said unto him, Take heed that thou speak not to Jacob either good or bad.

305+898 = Verse 1203 = 6 | Genesis 41:7 = 48 _ (54) 9

And the seven=65=11=2 thin ears devoured the seven=65=11=2 rank and full ears. And Pharaoh awoke, and, behold, it was a dream.

65+65=130=4 ___ 7+7=14=5 ___ dream = 41=5

6+8+8+9=31=4 __ 11th Prime

<><><><>

A1-Z26 Calculator - Search by the Verse Number
https://31102Bible.com
 
Last edited:

Earth Wind and Fire

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
This is why I keep a set of bags and a knife and rope in my vehicles.

I have always had this problem. Animals, fish, birds are all dinner to me sadly.

Mountain clouds, mountains, sunsets, storm fronts, sunlight in trees, open ocean, still moon lit or star lit nights all give me a sense of wonder at God’s creation.
But wild animals I see as something to hunt, trap, catch and process. The tailgate of my truck is setup like a large cutting board and butchers block, inch thick marine ply the full length and width. I don’t just field dress animals, I field butcher them to the last joint of meat, leaving nothing but bones. Nothing to do at home but put the meat in the chest freezers.

I used to draw birds when I was young, but only their heads, seagulls and ducks heads. I was fixated on them, I always thought they were beautiful, but there again their heads were not something edible.

When I look at a beach, I look for gutters where the fish hang out, or rips to carry out my live bait. When I look at a creek or stream, I look for bottle necks, slack water, overhangs or snags where fish will be.
When I see game trails I look to see where a trap, snare or piglet pit can be set up.
When I see a pig, buffalo or bantang, I’m thinking wind direction first so they don’t scent me, then it’s about stalking in the best cover closing to optimal distance.

When I’m hunting birds in trees, I stare through the canopy not focusing on anything, you are only looking for movement in the widest arch with holes in the canopy for reference. Once you see movement, then you focus narrow.

There are many other things to say, but sometimes going bush is hard work depending on your level of involvement.
I remember cast netting regularly for seven hours staring at the water not realising how much time had passed. Only driven out of the fixation by thirst, hunger and cold. Those levels of intense concentration can only be sustained so long in those conditions.

It depends on how far you engage I suppose, whether you are just passing through or mucking in, going bush will effect each man’s soul, you will be out there alone but still with Jesus who created all of it.
Do you also carry a range rifle?
 

Cathode

Well-Known Member
Do you also carry a range rifle?

A long range rifle? No. I’m a hunter. The most I’ll shoot to is 450-500 metres. That’s varminting pest control.

I have shot with experimental cartridge guys and had fun shooting past 1000m on paper, but at those ranges, hunting isn’t feasible for the areas I’m in. If I was in the mountains, hunting in New Zealand, then hunting with 750-800m shots is very common.

If you want to get started into long range shooting, I suggest a Tikka heavy barrel in 6.5 creed.
It’s a good rifle, smooth bolt and it will give you much tighter groups at range than a 308, because it is much a higher bc cartridge.

Adjustable comb height and length of pull allows you fully fit the rifle to your requirements. It’s also has a threaded barrel if you are running a can on it.

T3x-Super-Varmint_f182f2a5-000f-48fa-913b-36d0501e00ea.jpg
 
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