Coffee Percs

He leaned against a rock and sipped the scalding coffee. It tasted good, and he took his time with it, relishing each swallow.”

                        –Louis L’Amour  (High Lonesome)
 
Pard, how many times have I done that?  Leanin’ against a rock, or back propped up against a tree.  Sometimes just sittin’ on the bank of a lake fishin’, or ’round the campfire–mornin’, noon, night, or anytime in between.  How many cups have I shared with pards over the years in similar circumstances or just as we are now, sittin’ ’round the kitchen table.  Good times, good fellowship, good coffee.
       I often think of that Saturday after the crucifixion, the day of quietness, at least in the natural realm.  Just think, Pard, those ol’ boys, and the ladies around them thought they were alone, that their world was a-endin’ when in fact it was really just beginnin’.  Once, in the eyes of the world they were common people, but now, though they didn’t realize it yet, they were children of the King–royalty.  If’n ol’ Peter would’ve known that then, whooeee, but the Lord knew they had to go through a time of mournin’, of drought, of missin’ His presence.
       Let me be passin’ on a story I read this past week.  Sorry, the source slips my feeble mind, but I want yuh to be thinkin’ on it.  Go ‘head take a deep swaller, I’ll wait ’til I see it runnin’ down yur gullet.  Here goes–  There was a Navajo Indian in Arizona on whose land oil was discovered.  He became a very wealthy man, but wealth did not change him.  He went on livin’ just as he was before.  The money piled up in the bank, but every now an’ then the old man would visit the bank and say to the banker, “Crops all dried up; sheep all dead; cattle all stolen.”  The banker knew exactly what to do.  He would take the old man into the vault, sit him at a table and place several bags of silver dollars in front of him for him to count.  After a while the man would come out and say, “Crops fine; sheep all alive; cattle all back.”  
       Good coffee…oh, let me tell yuh the jist of the meanin’.  See, if’n Peter had realized that Saturday, that dark, quiet, and fearful day, that he was buildin’ up an account in the heavenly bank, he wouldn’t have been so fretful.  Pard, we can do the same.  If’n yuh get down and out, yur lower lips sore from yur boots a-steppin’ on it, go count yur blessin’s in yur heavenly account.  My, don’t yuh know we have resources that we haven’t even considered.
       Yep, Pard, tomorrow is what is called Resurrection Sunday, so today, instead of mopin’ ’round, drink some coffee an’ start lookin’ at yur blessin’s.  The Savior has done risen, there’s no need to be wonderin’ ’bout that.  He’s alive, today an’ forevermore!
       Now sayin’ that, don’t go out an’ be doin’ somethin’ stupid with the Lord’s blessin’ and for mercy-sake, check that cinch before mountin’ or yuh just might wind up sittin’ next to yur heavenly account.
         Vaya con Dios.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

There is a big difference between starting and finishing the course.”

                         –D.C. Adkisson (Winter of the Wolves)

       “I have glorified You on the earth.  I have finished the work which You have given me to do.”
                         –John 17:4 (NKJV)
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               “Father, if it is Your will, take this cup away from Me; nevertheless not My will, but Yours, be done.”
                              –Luke 22:42(NKJV)

Put yourself for a minute in the garden, not asleep like the disciples, but maybe behind a rock watching the agony of Jesus.  Have you ever really thought about what it was that caused this great agony?  Maybe it is not clear from the translation above, so let me give you Harbuck’s, “Father, if You are willing or if it pleases You, remove this cup [of agony] from Me.  Nevertheless, [it is supremely important that] not My will or My desire be carried out, but that Your will be carried out and accomplished.”
       We see the Father’s will and the cup.  This cup was a cup of agony.  “Jesus agonized over His approaching death and the effect of God’s wrath.  The cup is a figure of speech for wrath.” (NKJV Study Bible).  What was this cup?  Yes, death was there, but it was not necessarily death or the grave that brought about the agony.  Jesus wasn’t concerned over the grave, He knew that He would rise again.  In Galatians, we read, that God the Father raised Jesus from the dead (1:1)  Paul writes in Romans that it was the Holy Spirit that raised Christ from the dead (8:11).  Finally, Jesus had His own power to raise Himself (John 3:18).  The grave did not concern Him for He had power over the grave.
       Do not neglect this word “agony.”  It is definitely implied.  Jesus knew He would face severe physical torment.  Agony was the Greek word used of someone fighting a battle with sheer fear.  There is no hope against the torture, the pain–therefore, it is agony.  Vine states that the term meant, “severe emotional strain and anguish.”  At this moment, in that wretched time in Gethsemane, Jesus could have refused the cross.  Think of it, Jesus sweating and blood dripping.  Barclay puts it this way, “The salvation of the world hung in the balance of the Son of God literally sweated it out in Gethsemane; and he won.”
       They had sung a hymn before leaving the room, but now, in the Garden, the song had ceased and the agony began.  He knows He must go through with the Father’s will if mankind is to be redeemed.  He is to face the last enemy of life–death.  He knew He came to earth for this very purpose, but He also knows that He must face a terrible ordeal.  
       What was it then?  Agony of the soul.  Not only was there to be the physical pain, there was the emotional pain that would be attached to it.  Even more–the spiritual pain.  Yes, there is a pain of the spirit.  The holy One, the pure One, the righteous One was now to feel the touch of sin.  Not His, but the world’s–past, present, and future.  Paul writes, “For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us…” (2 Corinthians 5:21, NKJV)  Even in this Jesus Himself did not become a sinner or that He was guilty of sin, but our sins, yours and mine, were imputed or attributed to Him.  Jesus, who walked among mankind, who saw the results of sin, who healed many who were sick that was part of the curse, who saw men die, now would not only see the results, but would feel sin.  The Holy One, received all the sins of the world upon Himself!
       Then He uttered those words; words that saw the redemption of mankind.  “It is finished!”  Redemption is here, the ransom has been paid, God’s justice has been declared and the wrath and punishment has been carried out.  Jesus declared it so!  “It is finished!”  Death came, the agony was over.  “Jesus, the originator and perfecter of the faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross…” (Hebrews 12:2, NASB).  “…Jesus, the One Who is the Originator (Leader, Source) and Finisher and Perfecter of our faith, He, Who for the reason of the joy [of attaining the victory] that lay ahead of Him, endured the cross and ignored the shame…”  (Harbuck)  
       He faced all the agonies that came with the cross.  The enemy–Satan was there, the Father turned His back, sin came upon Him and He cried, not “woe is Me”; but “It is finished!”  I repeat–
            IT IS FINISHED!

 

Echoes From the Campfire

The hills have done it. Look at them! See how calm and strong they are; how they lift their heads above the gloom.”
                    –Harold Bell Wright  (The Shepherd of the Hills)

       “But when these things begin to take place, straighten up and lift up your heads, because your redemption is drawing near.”

                    –Luke 21:28 (NASB)
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               “On a hill far away stood an old rugged cross,
               The emblem of stuff’ring and shame;
               And I love that old cross where the dearest and best
               For a world of lost sinners was slain.”
                         –George Bennard

I mentioned yesterday that we are not to mourn for the Person on the cross.  It may bring sorrow to you, but put that aside–do not mourn for Him.  However, it is not wrong for you to mourn if you are in a sinful state.  If you have not gone to see that the cross is empty; that Jesus paid the price and rose again.  Too many times we get caught up with seeing Jesus on the cross, still there, but He is not!  He, Himself declared it–It is finished!  Yes, look upon the cross, but look at it as what took place there.
       I invite you to read the following taken from Lois A. Cheney, God Is No Fool.

               I stand before the cross
                  and wonder.
               I stand before the cross
                  and fear.
               I kneel before the cross
                  and weep.
               I pray before the cross
                  and rejoice.
               To know the cross
                   Is to know Christ.
               To feel the cross
                   Is to feel Christ.
               To gaze at the cross
                   Is to gaze at Christ.
               To carry the cross
                   Is to be a Christian,
                  And not until then.
               God forgive us.

The cross was a place of sorrow, now it is a place of rejoicing.  No longer are we bound by the shackles of sin because of the sacrifice of the Lord.  The cross was the place where the devil thought he had won, but it was the place of his demise.
       Now, since we are redeemed.  Now, since we are bought with a price–He tells us to pick up our cross and follow Him.  Look at that verse, contemplate it.  “And He said to all, If any person wills to come after Me, let him deny himself [disown himself, forget, lose sight of himself and his own interests, refuse and give up himself] and take up his cross daily and follow Me [cleave steadfastly to Me, conform wholly to My example in living and, if need be, in dying also].”  (Luke 9:23, Amplified)

               “To the old rugged cross I will ever be true,
               Its shame and reproach gladly bear;
               Then He’ll call me some day to my home far away,
               Where His glory forever I’ll share.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

It wasn’t his words, but the faith within the words to hand his troubles over to Jesus and trust that the Lord held the outcome in his hands.”
                         –Kenneth Pratt  (A Love to Die For)

       “Now we, brethren, as Isaac was, are children of promise.”
                         –Galatians 4:28(NKJV)
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Isaac–the son of promise.  I would like to take another look at the event that confirmed the faith of Abraham.  By this time Abraham was relatively old, and notice that he placed the wood for the sacrifice upon the back of the one who was to be sacrificed.  Isaac was to carry the burden, yet while they were walking up the mount the heart of Abraham, the father, must have been tremendously burdened.
       Isaac was somewhat confused because he asked his father, “‘Look, the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?’  And Abraham said, ‘My son, God will provide for Himself the lamb for a burnt offering.’  So the two of them went together.” (Genesis 22:7-8, NKJV)  Isaac was to be the “lamb” that was provided.  He did not fight against his father, he did not struggle.  It seemed that he completely trusted his father and willingly allowed himself to be bound and laid down upon the altar.  “He bound Isaac his son and laid him on the altar, upon the wood.” (Genesis 22:9, NKJV).  Such faith!  Such trust!  Not only on the part of Abraham, but also with Isaac.
       There is so much symbolism and types in this story.  Now, let’s look at another one.  “God will provide for Himself the lamb…”  The Father, from before the foundation of the world knew that He would provide the “Lamb” for the ultimate sacrifice.  The one that would redeem mankind.  We know that “without shedding of blood there is no remission” of sin.  There was to be a Lamb provided for this sacrifice.
       Abraham and the child of promise were together all the time.  They had a special bond; they had developed a deep trust in each other.  To see one was to see the other.  Jesus said that He always does those things that please the Father (John 8:29) as did the earthly Isaac with his father.  Jesus sought to please the Father just as Isaac sought to please his father.
       The sacrifice had to be made.  Abraham understood that without faith it is impossible to please God (Hebrews 11:6), but, oh what faith.  But look again.  The knife was in the air, the heart of the father was breaking; he began to lower the knife to make the blood flow when the voice from heaven came.  “Then Abraham lifted his eyes and looked, and there behind him was a ram caught in a thicket by its horns.  So Abraham went and took the ram, and offered it up for a burnt offering instead of his son.” (Genesis 22:13, NKJV)
Isaac, the son of promise, was spared.  However, it was not so with Jesus, the Son of promise.  God gave His only begotten Son to be the sacrifice, the propitiation for our sins.  His blood flowed down upon that wooden altar that we call the old rugged cross.  There was to be no reprieve for the Father, the sacrifice had to be made, blood must be shed for the redemption of mankind and to appease the justice and wrath of God.
       We do not read it, but I’m sure that both Isaac and Abraham rejoiced around the burnt offering on the altar.  I wonder what they talked about as they went back down the mountain to meet up with the servants?  When Jesus was placed upon the altar of sacrifice, the earth shook, the sun darkened; it was not a time and place of rejoicing.  The Father turned His back on the sacrifice–and, the Child of promise died, alone, with ALL the sins of humanity now touching His being.
       But wait!  We no longer mourn, we do rejoice.  We might tremble with the awesomeness of it all, but now we can lift our heart with thanksgiving.  The Lamb has come to redeem the world, and though once dead, He broke the chains of death and overcame sin and the grave rising victoriously.  Yes, this Friday, do not get caught up in the mourning, the emotion of the Lamb dying, but look deeper to realize that His death brought life.  Do not mourn for Him–He is risen, and through Him we are too.