There are many bears in North America, including black, brown, grizzly and polar bears. The brown bear we are considering today is the largest bear in the world and lives mostly in Alaska, but there still may be a few left in Canada and the northern United States. It is often mistaken for a grizzly to which it is closely related, but the brown bear is larger and stronger. A large one may weigh nearly a ton, and when standing on its hind feet it will be about ten feet high. It can run thirty-five miles per hour.
This bear is usually thought of as a flesh eater, but actually its favorite foods are grass, weeds, flowers, berries, seeds, acorns and other nuts. Honey is also a favorite food. The bear’s heavy coat of hair protects it from getting stung by angry bees when ripping apart a nest.
There is an exception to the brown bear’s vegetarian diet—when salmon are returning from the ocean to spawn far upstream. At that time, large numbers of these bears wade into the shallow streams, scooping out one fish after another with their front paws onto the shore for a good meal. They never share these fish with each other.
It is most interesting to watch a bear wade out in the strong river current to the very edge of a waterfall. It waits there until a salmon makes a giant leap from below and comes through the air in range to be grabbed in the bear’s jaws and taken to shore for an anticipated meal. Full-grown bears can handle the strong current, but smaller ones don’t venture out. They seem to sense that they could possibly be washed over the edge.
In winter, brown bears do not actually hibernate as most varieties do. They have prepared dens in advance, lined with soft grass and moss, where they remain sleeping much of the time. It is during this period that usually two cubs are born, about the size of kittens. The mother nurses them until she takes them out of the den in early spring.
The Bible speaks in several places of bears. In one place, David told King Saul how he had killed a bear with his bare hands (1 Samuel 17:34-3534And David said unto Saul, Thy servant kept his father's sheep, and there came a lion, and a bear, and took a lamb out of the flock: 35And I went out after him, and smote him, and delivered it out of his mouth: and when he arose against me, I caught him by his beard, and smote him, and slew him. (1 Samuel 17:34‑35)). However, the bears that live in that region of the world are not as large as these brown bears, but they are more fierce.
As part of God’s creation, these creatures are always under His watchful eye. The animals do not know this, but we who do know of His watchful care over us should thank Him often. A Bible verse says, “Let us come before His presence with thanksgiving. . . . For the Lord is a great God” (Psalm 95:2-32Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving, and make a joyful noise unto him with psalms. 3For the Lord is a great God, and a great King above all gods. (Psalm 95:2‑3)).
ML-04/18/2004