Echoes from the Campfire

Loyalty is one thing. Stupidity is a whole other ball of wax.”
                    –P.W. Moore  (The Devil’s Edge)

       “Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth.”
                    –2 Timothy 2:15 (ESV)
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One thing that cannot be denied is that Peter loved the Lord.  He declared, as Luke recorded, “Lord, I am ready to go with You, both to prison and to death.” (22:33, NKJV)  Don’t be quick to deride Peter.  He may have spoken in haste, not understanding the larger picture.  It may have been an emotional response to heart-felt feelings, not realizing that we are not to be guided by emotions.  In fact, emotions should follow decisions, not make them.  Nevertheless, Peter did speak out of love and loyalty.
     Every time we fail, we sin, we fall short in our obedience. We are doing the same thing Peter did.  Does that mean you are not loyal to the service of the Lord?  Does that mean that your heart is not right?  How many times have you promised not to sin, and you do?  Know this, that does not negate the promise.  It is still there to be kept.  Peter for sure, followed through with his promise to follow Jesus even if it meant death.
     You may have read the book or seen the movie, “Lonesome Dove.”  It is a story loosely based on Oliver Loving and Charles Goodnight moving a herd of cattle from Texas to Colorado.  I want to look a little more closely at what actually took place.  Oliver Loving lay at death’s door in a bed at Fort Sumner with Charles Goodnight as his side.  Loving was shot in the wrist, shattering it by a Comanche weeks earlier.   But now, the stinking decay of gangrene was killing him.
     The story varies at this point.  Some say the doctor amputated, but was inexperienced thus causing the problem to accelerate.  Other accounts read that because of his inexperience the doctor would not amputate.  Either way, the death sentence was pronounced.  Loving said to Goodnight, “I regret to have to be laid away in a foreign country.”  Goodnight promised–a sacred vow–to take him home to Texas.
     Loving died and was buried in New Mexico.  Goodnight had to fulfill his obligation to deliver the herd which took months.  Then he rode six hundred miles back to fulfill a promise.  A lesser man, with little integrity, may have gone on his way, after all Loving was dead and buried and would never know.  Proverbs 20:6, declares, “Many will say they are loyal friends, but who can find one who is really faithful?” (NLT)  Goodnight was fulfilling his promise to his friend, but more importantly maintaining his integrity.  It is as Bryce Dominic Valor says, “By keeping every promise, I make my word as reliable as the sunrise, and my character as solid as bedrock.”
     He had Loving’s body exhumed, sealed in a tin casket filled with charcoal, and loaded into a wagon.  Now get this, it wasn’t just Charles Goodnight, but the entire outfit formed a five-six hundred mile funeral procession to Weatherford, TX.  Any one of those men could have found a reason, an excuse not to be there.  It took nearly six months.  That’s what is called stubborn loyalty.  Six months to fulfill a promise, plus the months that it took to get the herd to Denver and ride back to Fort Sumner.  Goodnight’s word was solid, not just a promise, but it was who he was.
     The question is, how loyal are we?  We do know One who was loyal.  Loyal to His Father, loyal to His mission and He carried it out to the finish.  Jesus could have said, “phooey,” that night in the garden.  “Look at the bums over there sleeping.  I’m coming home Father.”  No, He was true to endure the cross, to endure the cruelty, to endure the awfulness of man’s sin coming upon His righteous body.  There is little known regarding Peter.  There are a few verses in Acts, we have his two letters, and there are some in church history.  But I am convinced that his love for the Lord never wavered; his loyalty could never be called into question.  He gives us this advice, not emotional, not out of haste, but out of the depths of his character, “Therefore, beloved, looking forward to these things, be diligent to be found by Him in peace, without spot and blameless.”. (2 Peter 3:14, NKJV)
  
(information regarding Loving-Goodnight taken primarily from “Brand & Backbone” by Bryce Dominic Valor)

 

Echoes From the Campfire

Towns were the breeding-ground of greed and avarice, treachery and injustice, the places where men preyed on men and where corruption rose up with its ugly head and tried to swallow all that was good and decent, all that was precious and rare.”
                    –Jory Sherman  (Death Rattle)

       “The LORD within her is righteous; he does no injustice; every morning he shows forth his justice; each dawn he does not fail; but the unjust knows no shame.”
                    –Zephaniah 3:5 (ESV)
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          “God’s threats are designed to be trumpet calls that awaken us from our spiritual stupor, to shake us free of our drunken iniquity, and to sober us up, to open our eyes to our sins so that we fall on our knees, confess those sins, and receive the never-ending mercy of God in Jesus Christ.”
                    –Chad Bird

     I want to use the above quotation as sort of a thesis for a short study on Isaiah 5.  Note, though the prophecy was for Judah, God’s Word is for all times and ages; it is eternal and pertains to all nations.  It is a summary of what God is saying to all men.
     Israel, the combined nation, was set apart by God, for God, to be an example to the world.  Israel then, was unlike every other nation.   “But her constant trouble,” states D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, “arose from the fact that she never realised that truth.  She always wanted to think of herself in terms of other nations.”  Israel simply did not want to be different.
     Isaiah 5:1-2 declares, “Let me sing now for my well-beloved a song of my beloved concerning His vineyard.  My well-beloved had a vineyard on a fertile hill.  He dug it all around, removed its stones, and planted it with the choicest vine.  And He built a tower in the middle of it and also hewed out a wine vat in it; then He expected it to produce good grapes, but it produced only worthless ones.” (NASB)  God was making something splendid, beautiful, and unique.  The “Gardener” was God Himself.  He was also the Provider and Protector and the garden (Israel) grew, but look again at the last two phrases from the NLT, “Then he waited for a harvest of sweet grapes, but the grapes that grew were wild and sour.”
     What more could He do, God says through Isaiah in verse 4, “What more was there to do for My vineyard that I have not done in it?  Why, when I expected it to produce good grapes and did it produce worthless ones?”. (NASB)  The sourness of the people was appalling.  They were to live to a certain standard, honor God’s law, and have fellowship with the Almighty.  Instead the nation was producing nothing of ultimate value; it was a sham, with twisted ideas and morals.  Literally the term, “wild grapes” means “stinking things.”  The smell from the people, instead of a sweet aroma to God, had become a foul stink.
     The Gardener decides.  “So now let Me tell you what I am going to do to My vineyard:  I will remove its hedges and it will be consumed; I will break down its wall and it will become trampled ground.  I will lay it waste; it will not be pruned or hoed, but briars and thorns will come up.  I will also charge the clouds to rain no rain on it.” (Isaiah 5:5-6, NASB).  They were to be a fruitful vine, instead, however, they produced sour, bitter grapes.  Now He is going to lay it waste.  With the blessings removed what will happen?  The result will be destruction, chaos, waste, hopelessness…
     God expected justice in the land, but instead there was bloodshed.  Justice had become a mockery.  He looked for righteousness, but instead He heard the howls of distress, the moans of the oppressed.  God will warn them later that, “There is no peace…for the wicked.” (Isaiah 57:21, NASB)  Removing the hedge of protection opens the people to evil forces and spirits (know that prophecy involves the spirit world as well as the natural).  Briars and thorns symbolize anarchy and lawlessness.  “All the enemies of mankind are attacking with a mighty and terrible power–the forces of evil and sin and uncleanness and suggestions and foulness.” (Lloyd-Jones)  God is removing His protection because man has declared he does not need it–man is his own god.
     John Winthrop declared in a sermon taken from Matthew 5:14-16, that the colony that was being established was to be a “city on a hill.”  Despite its problems throughout its history, the United States has been a beacon for Christianity.  It has been on the frontlines of mission work and benevolence aid.  People can say bad things about the nation, but they do not realize that they are part of the problem.  A city on a hill also shines its light on its own citizens, exposing their evil and sin, exposing the perversion of justice, and the mayhem on the streets.  God has an expectation!  He has done all He can to bring justice to the sin that besets mankind with the supreme sacrifice that was paid by His Son, Jesus Christ.  However, once Christ becomes Lord, there are still expectations.  We are now to work out our salvation, honoring Him, bringing glory to His name.  We are not to be producing bitterness, hatred, an immoral society, and one in which justice is perverted.
     I close this morning with verse 7, from the NLT.  “This is the story of the LORD’s people.  They are the vineyard of the LORD Almighty.  Israel and Judah are his pleasant garden.  He expected them to yield a crop of justice, but instead he found bloodshed.  He expected to find righteousness, but instead he heard cries of oppression.”  Yes, there are expectations!  Look in the mirror, America!

 

Echoes From the Campfire

But nature never wavered. If you messed up or just got unlucky, nature would drown you, freeze your blood, or cook you with lightning no matter how you begged or bargained.”
                    –John Deacon  (The Provider 2)

        “For as the lightning comes from the east and flashes to the west, so will be the coming of the Son of Man.”
                     –Matthew 24:27 (NIV)
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          “The fear of the wicked will come upon him, and the desires of the righteous will be granted.  When the whirlwind passes by, the wicked is no more, but the righteous has an everlasting foundation.”  –Proverbs 10:24-25 (NKJV)
          “What the wicked dreads will come upon him, but the desire of the righteous will be granted.  When the tempest passes, the wicked is no more, but the righteous is established forever.”  –Proverbs 10;24-25 (ESV)

What is the deep-seated dread of the wicked?  They may deny, disregard, and even show contempt for the idea, but it is that God will ultimately overtake them, judge them, and send them to perdition.  Therefore, they attempt to escape in one form or another until that day.  Bob Beasley writes, “People hide themselves in religion, good works, temporal wealth and position, revelry and promiscuity, drugs and alcohol, and other diversions.  But whatever they try will not extricate them from the coming storm of God’s wrath.”  We read in Acts, “Because He has appointed a day on which He will judge the world in righteousness by the Man whom He has ordained…”. (17:31, NKJV)  There is an appointment awaiting everyone.
     Ironically, the righteous desire the same as the wicked dread–to meet God face to face.  Yes, we all have to stand before the Almighty, but the righteous stand redeemed through the blood of Jesus Christ.  Right from the beginning, Adam and Eve tried to hide, escape the face of God.  Why?  Their sin made it so they could not stand to face God.  They knew they had broken His commandments, sin had entered.  Man continues to hide in one form or another, but there is no use.  Paul writes that, “They show that the work of the law is written on their hearts.  Their consciences confirm this.  Their competing thoughts will either accuse or excuse them.” (Romans 2:15, HCSB)
     Dan Dick says that “the future of the evildoer is similar to that which lies in the path of a tornado.  In its time, it will be swept completely away, and after the coming of the Lord, it will be as if it never existed.”  I felt the fear of the tornado on the ground, seeing its wicked tail begin to form in the sky, ever twisting and moving downward.  A once peaceful valley, sun shining and normal life going on.  Then the sky darkens, the greenish evil-looking sky becomes menacing and in a matter of seconds what was once peaceful and serene is in the throes of an angry destructive tornado.  They are the same we see then, the wicked and the whirlwind as both are destructive forces. This is in direct contrast to the righteous.  They will remain after the storm.  “When our foundation is the Lord of all creation, there is nothing that can destroy us.” (Dick)  
     It isn’t fair today–but there is a coming day when the fears of the wicked will be realized and justice will prevail.  I recall what Luke wrote about the rich man on earth who lived in luxury every day.  Near his house there was a beggar named Lazarus who was covered in sores, hungry, even willing to eat what the rich man threw away.  He was in such a poor situation that the dogs would come and lick his sores.  Now there is justice, both died.  Lazarus went to Abraham’s side, he was now in complete comfort.  The rich man, however, went to hell and was tormented.  One shunned the other on earth, now a great gulf separated them.  The rich received his comfort, though temporal on earth while the beggar Lazarus, though tormented on earth, was now in the comfort of godly saints. (Luke 16:19-31).
     The best way to have our wills satisfied is to be godly.  “Our will must be agreeable to God’s will, the desire must be holy, and seasoned with the Spirit; and not carnal and corrupted by the flesh.” (John Dod)  Nothing can be built upon the whirlwind, the hopes and desires and lusts of the wicked will be blown to kingdom come.  “Thus righteousness is a constructive force in the world–a foundation without which society cannot exist.” (J.L. Flores)  Think of what the righteous, the church, does to calm the destructive forces of evil and sin on earth.  All of the world benefits, but my friend a day is coming–there is an Appointment.  When the Lord returns for His saints, the world will rush into havoc and chaos.

 

The Saga of Miles Forrest

Don’t eavesdrop on others–you may hear your servant laughing at you. For you know how often you yourself have laughed at others.”  –Ecclesiastes 7:21-22 (NLT)
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     The district attorney Luther and I discussed the situation further.  He said five years would probably be the most he could get and that Davy Logan might get probation due to the amputation of his hand.
     “Listen, Counselor, I have two concerns.  The young bucks think that they have a personal warpath against the Navaho.  Both Ignacio and Coloraw have for all practical purposes kicked them out.  They are on their own and it seems like they have a personal vendetta.  Something they must prove, at least to themselves.  My other concern is that Charlie Two-Face will take it upon himself to bring justice to these renegades.  There are two families without anyone to care for their needs, plus the means in which they were killed.”
     “Miles, what do you want me to do?”
     “Can you give me another week?  I’d like to talk with the two men some more.  Blackhand is a dilemma,” I requested, then got up to get the coffeepot.
     Luther was shaking his head, then a smile appeared.  “People think the law is easy.  But there are sometimes situations such as this, that there is no right solution.  Most likely, “he paused, taking time to stroke his goatee before speaking again, “they should be tried for murder.  But without witnesses…” he shrugged, “what can I do?”
     He looked my direction.  “We could take a chance.  Hope that the jury will find them guilty and at least put them in prison,” he paused to repeat his actions with the little beard.  “Of course, they may just request Judge Klaser to listen to the case and bring judgment, and…” shaking his head, “I know the Judge will want witnesses.”
     “I don’t know what I can do, but at least a week.”
     “That I can do without making a formal charge.  But then we have to decide.”
     Reaching out my hand, we shook.  “Thanks Luther for taking the time to see me.  I’m not happy with the way things are turning out.  I’m convinced that they are guilty, and I’m not sure that any rehabilitation is possible.”
     The rest of the week I moved in and out of the jail, speaking with the two men held there.  Logan was in a stupor most of the time with the laudanum that Doc had given him.  However, from time to time I could see his eyes flash full of hatred when he looked at me.  Billy Blackhand, he could be amiable at times, then the hatred came forth from him as well.
     Finally, I laid it out in front of them.  “There’s a chance you may be set free.”  Billy’s eyes lit up.  “If you’re free to walk out of here, what will be your plans?”
     He didn’t hesitate, “I will find Coloraw and ride with him as he fights and kills the white men.”
     At least he was straightforward.  “You won’t go back to fighting the Navaho?” I questioned.
     Hesitating, I could see him working his jaws.  “Only if Coloraw attacks them.”
     I nodded, then I had to ask, “What will you do if Coloraw doesn’t accept you back?”
     He turned his back, looking at the wall, then down at Logan.  “Then you will see, lawman, you will see.”
     Sighing I left the jail.  Lucas glanced at me as I entered the office.  I met his eyes and just shook my head…