Month: November 2025
Echoes From the Campfire
I love the quiet of riding in the dark and the peace of stars twinkling overhead.”
“I am leaving you with a gift–peace of mind and heart. And the peace I give isn’t like the peace the world gives. So don’t be troubled or afraid.”
–John 14:27 (NLT)
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“Good news!” Wouldn’t that be a change? There is so much doom and gloom, hatred and bitterness in the news and going on throughout the nation and the world that good news is seldom heard. But that was the message that we were and are given by the angels that night long ago in Bethlehem. This is the good news of salvation, peace on earth, and joy to all people.
Christmas? Too early! No, it should be celebrated in our hearts all year long if we are truly born-again believers. Our hearts should be joyous and filled with peace despite what is going on around us. People clamor for peace, but there can be no true peace unless there is first peace with one’s Maker. Charles L. Childers said, “Peace between man and God is an essential prerequisite to peace between man and his fellowman.” Let’s look back at that night when the skies were suddenly burst asunder by a mighty voice of an angel. (I normally use the NKJV version but am going to go with NLT this morning) First the preface to the short angelic hymn.
“That night some shepherds were in the fields outside the village, guarding their flocks of sheep. Suddenly, an angel of the Lord appeared among them, and the radiance of the Lord’s glory surrounded them. They were terribly frightened, but the angel reassured them. ‘Don’t be afraid!’ he said. ‘I bring you good news of great joy for everyone! The Savior–yes, the Messiah, the Lord–has been born tonight in Bethlehem, the city of David. And this is how you will recognize him: You will find a baby lying in a manger, wrapped snugly in strips of cloth!’ Suddenly, the angel was joined by a vast host of others–the armies of heaven–praising God: (Luke 2:8-13)
Angelic hymn: “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and peace on earth to all whom God favors.” (Luke 2:14)
Link to the Psalms: “Praise the Lord! Praise the LORD from the heavens! Praise him from the skies! Praise him, all his angels! Praise him, all the armies of heaven!” (Psalm 148:1-2, NLT)
WOW! Can you even imagine? There is a great lesson here–never forget your experiences with the Lord. There are experiences in life that we may have only once, do not forget them. Peter, James and John would never forget the transfiguration, Jacob would never forget wrestling with the Lord, thus we should never forget those wonderful experiences that we have had. Let no one take them away from you. They are yours and they add to your faith.
“Good news of great joy for everyone!” It is there–the good news. Rejoice in it, if you have received and partaken of that wonderful news of the Savior and have received Him. Great joy for everyone? Yes, yes, if they partake and believe in the good news. We have this tremendous joy given to us by the Holy Spirit, not only when we celebrate Christmas but every day of the year. Christmas brings us that great “joy unspeakable and full of glory.” The world may cry for peace, but my friend, if we have the Holy Spirit residing in us, that peace overflows like a river.
So this holiday (holy-day) season partake of the riches of this joy and peace, and if you haven’t done so before, let it fill your heart and flow through your being throughout the year.
“On Christmas night all Christians sing to hear the news the angels bring,
News of great joy, news of great mirth, news of a merciful Savior’s birth.
Then why should men on earth be sad, since our Redeemer made us glad,
When from our sin, He set us free, all for to gain our liberty?”
–Luke Wadding
Coffee Percs
He turned away to get an enamel cup and the coffee pot off the stove in the corner. He poured the cup full, sat the steaming black brew in front of the man, and stepped back. ‘That’ll be a nickel.’”
Echoes From the Campfire
He was learning that to speak of love is not easy when the feeling is deep and strong.”
–Louis L’Amour (The Burning Hills)
“And we have known and believed the love that God has for us. God is love, and he who abides in love abides in God, and God in him.”
–1 John 4:16 (NKJV)
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The Supreme Court confirmed it, “love is love”, so says the governor of Colorado. Not so! The Colorado governor is mistaken. Love is love cannot be right for there are many ways the term is used and there is also false love, emotional love, pseudo-love, and deceptive love. This term is misused and misunderstood by most everyone. I may say, “I love apple pie,” and then turn to my wife and say, “I love you, honey.” They do not equate.
The Greeks understood this to an extent. They used “phileo” to mean “tender affection,” a brotherly type of love or deep friendship. “Storge,” which is familial love and “eros,” which is romantic, passionate love. We see “agape” and “phileo” in the New Testament. Greek thought that “agape” or “agapao” love was impossible for man to show as it was a god-type love and was seen only in their literature. How can man love like the gods, they thought?
So when the governor of Colorado is speaking of love he cannot be thinking of “agape.” For “agape” is pure love; it is God love. It is the love that says, “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have eternal life.” (John 3:16, NASB) It is the love that Jesus spoke of when He said, “Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends.” (John 15:13, NASB) I would ask my apologetics class, “Do you love me?” Most would answer in the positive, while the intelligent ones would not reply. One student, in the front row was emphatic in her declaration. I proceeded, “I am old, lived most of my life, and you are just getting started in yours, so am I to believe that you would willingly die for me?” Well, that caught her, and she crawfished. She was beginning to understand a little about “love.” I will say, later in the year she came to me and confirmed her earlier statement by informing me, “Mr. Adkisson, I would die for you.”
There was one time, while walking down the halls at school, a parent walked by me and said, “Love you, brother,” and continued on. “Love me,” he doesn’t even know my name. Then there are those individuals, the worst being youth evangelists who spout out, “I love you all.” Hmmm? This brings me to my point. “Love,” what the Greeks thought only the gods could have, is a mystical, supernatural love. It comes from God. For us to love like Him, we need to have the Holy Spirit in our lives. When Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 13, we need to remember that he is writing to believers, not those in the world.
I have always been careful in expressing my feelings using the term, “love.” It can be so flippant, so easily spouted out of the mouth with honestly no real meaning. So can a person say, “I love you” without knowing you? Only through the love of God. Can an evangelist honestly say that he loves everyone in front of his voice? Perhaps, but only through the love of God. That love which is so powerful, so giving, so sacrificing has to come from God. This love is not an impulse that spurts out from emotions. Love is thoughtful. I cannot love a piece of apple pie with “agape”; if that could happen then that piece of pie, which I would soon consume, would become an idol. See, “apage” is an attribute of God that shows His essential nature. With the Holy Spirit living within us, we can truly (at times) say, “I agape you.”
We are moving closer to Christmas so let me say that this time of the year we can show “agape” as the Holy Spirit leads us. It was the Incarnation that showed one of the greatest aspects of “agape.” God sent His Son–a gift–a gift because He loved man so much to want to redeem him. The Father sent “Agape” because He “agaped” mankind. O the great, wonderful, magnificent, deep love of God.
O, the deep, deep love of Jesus,
Vast, unmeasured, boundless, free!
Rolling as a mighty ocean
In its fullness over me!
Underneath me, all around me,
Is the current of Thy love
Leading onward, leading homeward
To Thy glorious rest above!
–Samuel Trevor Francis