Coffee Percs

He slouched over the fire and tipped the pot against his mouth, drinking with an acute thirst. Coffee ran down the seams of his jaw. He said, ‘Ah,’ in great relish and sponged the liquid from the tips of his moustache with sidewise motions of his tongue.”

                      –Ernest Haycox  (Saddle and Ride)
 
Come on in, Pard, sit yurself down, I’ve just been ponderin’ whilst sippin’ my coffee.  Been awhile since I’ve drank straight from the pot or pan; guess I’m what yu’d call sophisticated now.  Big word for such a simple fella.  
     I quoted from that ol’ puncher Lou Bradshaw the other day ’bout the monsters bein’ set loose.  I haven’t heard anything ’bout him in the last couple of years.  Wonder if one of those monsters got him, or he succumbed to a pestilence or the elements.  Most likely he’s crossed over the Great Divide.  Sure hope he went peaceful; I’d hate if one of those monsters came ’round to snatch him.
     Don’t be a-doubtin’ me, Pard.  Those monsters are real.  Why even ol’ Peter hisself spoke of them, saying the devil was like a lion seekin’ someone to devour.  Pard, just hold yur cup for a minute and think, if’n that’s possible for yuh.  How many have you known that some monster has grabbed an’ sent them down to perdition?  Good folks, who at one time were doin’ the Lord’s work and they up an’ give in to the monsters that were chasin’ them.  I read of Hugh Glass bein’ chawed on by that monster grizzly.  That ol’ boy survived an ordeal like few others have been through, and yet, sad to say, some get a kitty scratch and go into fits like they had the hydrophoby.
     Ahhh, good coffee, helps bring the memories back of days gone before.  Pard, don’t get me wrong ’bout that kitty scratch.  I reckon I know it could get infected and the lockjaw could set in, but mercies’ sake sometimes we are so feeble-kneed and whiny that a person would wonder.  I have had the mountains on my mind a time or two, but I wouldn’t succumb to the jaws of the monster.  Yep, back in the summer of ’15, the ol’ heart was smacked by a monster, but my faith was in the Lord, an’ He took care of me and has continued to do so.
     Don’t get me goin’, Pard.  I know that we all got to face that last enemy–Death.  Why he stalks us all the time, and his cohort the devil are always lookin’ for ways to bring us down.  He’s an outlaw for shore, but we know that Death has been defeated by the Lord Jesus Christ.  How we come to face that outlaw, we don’t know.  It may be a monster after us, or a storm, or pestilence, or a battle, or just plain wearin’ out, but one thing we do know is that the Lord is with us.  Yuh need to lay hold of that for a fact!
     Sorry, if I seem a little melancholy, but Pard we got to face those evil monsters out there.  Some are after our family an’ it might be time to tote out the ol’ .44.  Sayin’ that it’ll be a shame if yuh met yur demise by failin’ to check yur cinch.  Yep, sometimes it ain’t the monsters that get us, but those little imps.  Yuh, be careful this week, have yur weapons ready in case yur attacked–hang on to the faith!
      Vaya con Dios.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

The trouble with monsters is they’re hard to control once they get loose.”
                    –Lou Bradshaw  (Texas War Lord)
 
       “Then out of the smoke came locusts upon the earth, and power was given them, as the scorpions of the earth have power…  And they were not permitted to kill anyone, but to torment for five months; and their torment was like the torment of a scorpion when it stings a man.”
                    –Revelation 9:3,5 (NASB)
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     Listen folks, there are monsters among us.  More and more they will show their ugly, evil heads.  More and more the laughter of mockery and glee will pour forth from their mouths.  Think of the orcs from the Lord of the Rings.  They are there.  You can smell them, you can sense their evil–that is if you have spiritual eyes.  Look for a moment at 2 Corinthians 11:14-15, “No wonder, for even Satan distinguishes himself as an angel of light, therefore it is not surprising if his servants also disguise themselves as servants of righteousness, whose end will be according to their deeds.” (NASB)
     There are all kinds of monsters that grasp for our souls.  There is the monster of alcohol that the devil delights in using.  The allure of it is subtle, the ads and the portrayals in movies.  A problem comes along, go to the bottle.  A tribulation over, seek enjoyment in the bottle.  Oh, there’s nothing wrong with a drink, it only dulls the senses, or rev up the joy-juices; it will invigorate you….ha, the devil delights in that thinking.  Or take only a pill, or smoke a joint, you’ll relax, it’ll help you sleep; yes, and lead you to the boneyard of wasted souls.  Sex, lust, gambling, lights and allurement all are monsters that already stalk this earth.  Add to that the idols of entertainment, music, sports, and yes, individuals.  I remember watching a segment of Dead or Alive.  Josh Randall had been through a trying experience.  He dropped his head and started to walk away.  A man asked, “Going to the saloon for a drink?  I don’t blame you.”  To the surprise of the man, Randall replied, “Nope, going to the church.”  Where do you go for relief?
     More and more we see the bizarre, the macabre coming forward.  Moreover the demons of perdition are showing their ugly heads and mocking God.  Did you see the Olympics?  Both the start and the finish portrayed what is beginning to come forth.  I don’t know if you picked up on the ending.   I watched for a few minutes then left.  The “voyager” all prettied up, mystical power that came down upon a darkened earth to bring light.  Sounds sort of strange, sounds sort of like the evil of the “morning star.”  “How you have fallen from heaven, O star of the morning, son of the dawn!…” (Isaiah 14:12, NASB)  However, if we read on we finds that this “star” is not the Creator, but the one who said that he would be greater than God–evil in his essence, Satan.
     Monsters, and they are portrayed in cartoons and movies as benevolent.  Soften the blow…  But man has not fully seen, nor understood the havoc they are doing on the earth, but more when Abaddon is released and his minions.  As the end appears, it seems that men will actually begin to worship demons.  From Revelation 9:20-21, “The rest of mankind, who were not killed by these plagues, did not repent of the works of their hands, so as not to worship demons, and idols of gold and of silver and of brass and of stone and of wood, which can neither see nor hear nor walk; and they did not repent of their murders nor of their sorceries nor of their immorality nor of their thefts.” (NASB)  Notice they didn’t repent from worshipping demons.  Hmmm, shades of that beginning with the ceremonies at the Olympics.  
     Monsters on the loose.  Devil-worshipers on college campuses.  Transgenders reading to elementary students in the schools, flaunting a demonic, immoral lifestyle.  Has the door swung open?  Has inhumanity been released upon humanity?  Is darkness beginning to rise?  If so, how much more should we as Believers in Christ let our lights shine.  That little light of mine, and yours, might be the only light someone living in darkness may see.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

First, I always try to live a life honoring my Heavenly Father. I do what’s right and expect others to do the same. I try to live neighborly and help those who have a need.”
                    –Cliff Hudgins  (Viejo and the Outlaw)

       “I will seek the lost, bring back the strays, bandage the injured, and strengthen the weak, but I will destroy the fat and the strong. I will shepherd them with justice.”
                    –Ezekiel 34:16 (HCSB)
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               “Jesus replied and said, ‘A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among robbers, and they stripped him and beat him, and went away leaving him half dead.  And by chance a priest was going down on that road, and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side.  Likewise a Levite also, when he came to the place and saw him, pass by on the other side.  But a Samaritan, who was on a journey, came upon him; and when he saw him, he felt compassion, and came to him and bandaged up his wounds, pouring oil and wine on them; and he put him on his own beast, and brought him to an inn and took care of him.  On the next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper and said, “Take care of him; and whatever more you spend, when I return I will repay you.”‘”
                            –Luke 10:30-35 (NASB)

If you have ever read about the Natchez Trace you would have discovered that it was a road favored by gangs of thieves.  Goods were taken down the Mississippi River, but to get back home travelers would have to walk north on the Natchez Trace.  Those traveling it would be carrying their profits from the markets in Baton Rouge and New Orleans.  The story is similar on the road from Jerusalem to Jericho.  It was a rugged road known to be beset by robbers.  People seldom traveled this road alone if they were carrying goods or valuables.
     This parable is the story of four men.  One of them, seemingly foolish traveled this road down to Jericho.  He must have know of the dangers.  Whether he was arrogant, ignorant, or foolish we don’t really know.  Luke just relates in the story from Jesus that robbers stripped him, beat him, and left him for dead.  A foolish man, alone on the road, he had no one but “himself to blame for the plight in which he found himself.” (William Barclay)  Hmmm, perhaps you have found yourself in such a plight.
     A priest hurried past.  Jesus does not give a reason for him not stopping.  He looked at the man then deliberately chose to walk on the other side of the road, definitely not wanting to get involved.  From where he stood, he could not tell if the man was dead or not.  If dead, and the priest touched him he would be ceremonially unclean.  Some have suggested that he would lose his turn of duty at the Temple.  If so, “he set the claims of ceremonial above those of charity.” (Barclay)  But notice, he was going away from Jerusalem, therefore he had no excuse.
     The next character is the story of the Levite.  He was involved not with the altar and sacrifices, but still worked in the Temple, therefore he would be ceremonially unclean if the man was dead.  And notice, his response was the same as the priest.  Here we have two men of the Temple, “holy men” if you will.  Why they did what they did we really don’t know.  This Levite may have been concerned with his own safety; he may have thought the robbers might still be in the area.  He would take no risks to help anyone.
     These men weren’t bad men, they were busy.  Gary Inrig, says this, “For them and, too often, for me, people in need are problems, interruptions, nuisances.  They intrude awkwardly on my privacy.  They deflect me from my duty.  They distract me from my responsibility.  They keep me from my pleasures.  I agree that they need help, and I hope that someone does help.  But not me, not now, not here.  I have a different agenda.”
     Finally come the Samaritan.  He is called the “good Samaritan” but to the Jew of that day there was no such thing.  They were considered to be degenerate, a man who was despised by the Jewish people.  The name was sometimes used to describe a man who was a heretic and a breaker of the ceremonial law.  However, this Samaritan man had compassion and took pity on the injured man.  This pity then took the form of sacrificial action.  He saw the same things as the priest and the Levite, but his compassion was expressed in the care of the immediate needs of the man.  Most likely he was not like me who carries a first-aid kit when I travel.  He may have had to tear his clothes for bandages or took from the goods he was carrying.  He uses his own wine, he used his own oil, he put the man on his own donkey, and paid the innkeeper from his own pocket.  This Samaritan also showed courage in helping the man, not only from possible robbers, but a Samaritan transporting a Jewish victim might be suspect.  As one writer said, it would be like an Indian bringing a scalped man on a horse into Dodge.
     Let me conclude with a few final thoughts regarding this good Samaritan.  Despite the possible misunderstanding, he had the courage to bring the injured man to an inn.  Second, we see that his credit was good; he must have been a man of honesty and integrity for the innkeeper trusted him.  Lastly, he was the only one prepared to help.  Barclay says, “A heretic he may have been, but the love of God was in his heart.”

 

Echoes From the Campfire

It you build to last, you’ve got to build with work and with patience.”

                    –Louis L’Amour  (Tucker)

       “O Lord, You know; Remember me and visit me, And take vengeance for me on my persecutors. In Your enduring patience, do not take me away. Know that for Your sake I have suffered rebuke.”
                    –Jeremiah 15:15(NKJV)
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I want patience and I want it now!  Are you glad that God doesn’t have to get patience?  Patience is simply a display of His mercy, Psalms 145:8 states, “The Lord is full of compassion, slow to anger.”  This is one attribute of God that I’m very thankful for.  Without the patience of God where in the world would you and I be?
     Arthur Pink defines the patience of God this way, “that power of control which God exercises over Himself, causing Him to bear with the wicked and forbear so long in punishing them.”  The prophet Nahum says that, “The Lord is slow to anger and great in power.”  The patience of God is that excellency which causes Him to sustain great injuries without immediately avenging Himself.  Many times we do not show patience because we lack or do not take control of our passions.  We want to act immediately.  If you don’t think so, just go out and take a drive, especially during rush hour.  Does it cause your blood pressure to rise?  Or are you like me, and get upset at the arrogance and stupidity of those on the road?  Patience is not only God showing that He is slow to anger, but wisdom, self-control, and mercy are intertwined with His patience.  When we read in Scripture that the “Lord is long-suffering,” it is speaking of His power of self-restraint.
     “Now may the God of patience…” (Romans 15:5)  Just stop and think of that phrase for a moment.  What is it that you want God to be patience in, over?  First of all we know that God is patient in His dealings with sinners.  He doesn’t strike them down with a whim.  He is patient, allowing them either to repent or their sin to fill the cup.  Plus the fact that God forewarns those in which He is going to “lose His patience with.”  In the day of Noah, He warned the people, He waited, and all the time He had a preacher of righteousness warning them.  Today, instead of striking down He allows “nations to walk in their own ways.”  He has grace prepared, mercy in His wings, if only they repent.  But for a time, He shows patience.
     Israel is a prime example of how God is patient with nations and His people.  In the wilderness, He was patience–forty years worth of patience in dealing with that stiff-necked bunch.  He sent judges to Israel to deliver them.  He did not destroy them though they had wicked kings and followed their dictates.  There is another case of His warnings–He sent the prophets.  Finally, He sent them into exile, but He maintained a remnant, and eventually there was the dispersion but even in that God was patient and brought the nation back together in 1948.
     I look at the news and wonder how much longer God will hold in His patience.  Billy Graham said, “If God does not bring judgment upon America He will have to apologize for Sodom and Gomorrah.”  How dare puny man challenge God, mock Him, sully His name, and blaspheme His word.  Why does not the righteous wrath of God make an end to the abominations of earth?  Patience.  Patience and His divine decrees.  There will be a day when He says, “enough is enough,” and the time of the Tribulation will be upon the earth.
     But what about us?  God has patience with each of us and that should be a reason to worship and praise Him.  The Scottish theologian, Donald Gee writes, “God defers judgment, not because He is not interested in righteousness, but because He is longsuffering with human sin and rebellion.  The reason is not that God is otiose and does not care.  Rather it is that He cares so much that He is prepared to suffer an attitude towards His divine majesty that must be obnoxious beyond anything we can understand, in order that men may have the maximum opportunity to repent.”  Our admonishment then is to emulate the Father by loving our enemies, bless them that curse us, and do good to those that hate us–in other words, show patience.