The Saga of Miles Forrest

Marshal Johnson and his crooked deputies were coming down the street.  Confrontation was imminent; it could become a bloodbath.  Sheriff Gold, Miles, Morgan Appleby, and Ron Barnes were inside the Wells Fargo office, ready and waiting.  Would there be bloodshed?  Would the end of the clash find bodies on the floor no longer breathing?  Let’s go back to a time when things were often decided by a gun, when it took courage and fortitude to enforce justice.  
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       I looked around the room, Barnes was over to the far right, behind his desk, but standing.  I motioned for Morgan to go to the left of Charlie and stand slightly behind him next to a table.  Charlie was just to the left of me, perhaps six feet away.  We stood in the middle of the room.  I had the Greener in my hands.
       “It’s your play, Charlie.  You’re the sheriff, we’ll follow your lead,” I said, then followed, “however, if they start shootin’, I won’t wait for your word.”
       “Let’s see how many of them there are, and the intentions of Johnson,” replied Charlie.
       A crowd of men led by Marshal Johnson walked by the window on the right hand side of the office.  They stopped momentarily and I could hear Tioga and Johnson talking but couldn’t make out what they were saying.
       Johnson sent two men through the entrance, I reckon that was to see if we were going to immediately start shooting.  When no shots were fired, Johnson came in next and stood between the first two; he was followed by four more.  The room was becoming quite crowded.  I could see that there were at least two remaining outside the office.
       Anger was etched on Johnson’s face when he bellowed, “Release my deputy immediately!”
       He looked at me, and there was a show of surprise when Charlie answered.  “Can’t, he’s a wanted man.  I have a poster on him.”
       Johnson’s eyes moved over to Charlie.  “That poster is not valid in Colorado.  It’s from Kansas.”
       “I’ll hold him until I can extradite him,” replied Charlie, firm in his resolve, but not threatening.
       It looked as if Johnson was going to explode.  “You can’t hold him!”
       “I can,” I said, figuring it was time to say something.
       I thought I heard a growl coming from Johnson.  “If you don’t release him, I will!” he barked, his hand moving slightly down toward the butt of his pistol.
       “Marshal, you can take your men and leave me to my job.  I really don’t want a bloodbath here and if you make one more move toward your gun that’s exactly what it’ll be,” asserted Charlie.  When he said that I brought the shotgun up to bear; its ugly,deadly eyes boring straight at the Marshal.
       There was silence and a ton of tension in the room.  Suddenly the glass broke to my left side, I didn’t look, but everyone flinched when it happened.  It was quickly followed by a shot, then two rifle shots in close succession.  A man fell through the broken window.
       Mateo was on the job, I raised the Greener, and Johnson quickly threw up his hands shouting, “Don’t shoot, don’t shoot, nobody shoot!”
       I don’t know if it was a ruse or not, but to my right Barnes fired.  There was a grunt and the sound of a gun falling to the floor.  “Don’t shoot!” screamed Johnson.
       “Marshal, why don’t you take your men and depart from these premises,” commanded Charlie.  
       “Move back men,” ordered Johnson.  The men slowly vacated the room with Marshal Johnson stopping at the doorway.  “This isn’t over.  I want Tioga released.”
       “He’ll be released when he arrives in Kansas, not before,” I informed him.
       “Forrest,” he responded with a sneer, “Tioga has friends.”
       “Friends that are ready to die for him, if they interfere with the law?” I answered.
       I could tell he wanted to say more, but he huffed, then turned walking out the entrance.  Waiting for him was the man that Barnes wounded.  It wasn’t serious, the bullet struck him in the wrist.  Of course, he might lose the use of that right hand.
       Morgan went over to the man lying in the window frame and pushed him back outside.  I looked over at Barnes, “You did good.”
       Charlie walked a few paces to me shaking his head.  “Whew, that could have been bad.”
       When Johnson’s men left the area, Mateo came through the door.  There was concern on his face, but when he saw that the four of us were standing with a hole in nary a one of us, he smiled.  “I see that the Lord kept his hand over you.”
       The tension had gone, and now the intensity of the battle was leaving us.  It’s hard to describe how tired one can be after a confrontation where lives are on the line.
       “Miles, there’s a train leaving in thirty minutes.  It might be good that you were on it,” suggested Morgan.
       I grasp his shoulder, “Thanks,” then looked over at Barnes.  “Will you two be all right?”
       He gave a little laugh.  “We might take up praying like you do, but yes, I think we’ll be all right…”

 

Echoes From the Campfire

If a body takes out to follow a made trail down over the hills, he’d best hold to that trail… Most of the trouble a man finds in the mountains is when he tries shortcuts or leaves a known way.”
                    –Louis L’Amour  (Treasure Mountain)

      “Be careful to obey all these commands I am giving you. Show love to the Lord your God by walking in his ways and holding tightly to him.
                    –Deuteronomy 11:22(NLT)
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Psalm 102 started with gloom and despair then moved into the faithfulness and patience, and greatness of the Lord.  To finish we see a challenge.  We, whatever generation you find yourself in, are to leave a record for future generations.  Believers are to leave a godly heritage and legacy to those coming up.  They are to fill the gap and it is the responsibility of the older generations to teach, guide, and provide the means for them to do so.

          18 — This will be written for the generation to come, that a people yet to be created may praise the LORD.
          19 — For He looked down from the height of His sanctuary; from heaven the LORD viewed the earth.
          20 — To hear the groaning of the prisoner, to release those appointed to death.
          21 — To declare the name of the LORD in Zion, and His praise in Jerusalem.
          22 — When the peoples are gathered together, and the kingdoms, to serve the LORD.
          23 — He weakened my strength in the way; He shortened my days.
          24 — I said, “O my God, do not take me away in the midst of my days; Your years are throughout all generations.
          25 — Of old You laid the foundation of the earth, and the heavens are the work of Your hands.
          26 — They will perish, but You will endure; yes, they will all grow old like a garment; like a cloak You will change them, and they will be changed.
          27 — But You are the same, and Your years will have no end.
          28 — The children of Your servants will continue, and their descendants will be established before You.”  (NKJV)

       What does your biography say?  Was it a broken road, a road full of failure?  Or was it a road of battle and victories; overcoming adversity?  Most likely it was a mixture, but the important thing is that God kept you.  That is your testimony.  God looks down from heaven to view you upon your journey, in fact, we have the Holy Spirit (Paraclete) with us along the way to guide us, to help us, to comfort us, to chastise us and give us direction.
       The people were looking forward to the end of captivity in Babylon.  Then a new people came along, the Persians.  They must have wondered where God was in all of this.  Yes, He said He would discipline the nation, but now has he forgotten His people?  Here the Psalmist says with a resounding cry, No, God is looking down at His people.  I imagine the people had their problems in the midst of being held captive.  Look for example at Daniel, after leaving Babylon, he went to Persia where he would one day enter the lions’ den.
       The Psalmist reminds us that God does not change.  In the midst of life’s journey–God is there and He does not change.  Through life’s journey, we may have pain, sorrow, and heartache–God is there and He does not change.  Along the road there may be vicious attacks and the lions’ den may be our destiny, or a fiery furnace–God is there and He does not change.  “God will forever remain the same, immutable in his divine person and unchangeable in his eternal purpose.  Because the Lord does not change, his future work through his people will be established.” (Steven J. Lawson0
       If you see the church caving into the world it is your duty, your obligation to remain strong and stable.  This is your legacy to those that follow.  If it seems as if the nations rage against God it is your responsibility to be a light and salt to those around you.  Live in hope; live in faith.  Tell the stories of God’s faithfulness from Scripture; tell the stories of His faithfulness in your life.  No matter what, remain faithful and this will be recorded for future generations.

               “In heavenly love abiding,
               No change my heart shall fear;
               And safe is such confiding,
               For nothing changes here.
               The storm may roar around me,
               My heart may low be laid;
               But God is round about me,
               And can I be dismayed?”
                         –Anna L. Waring

 

Coffee Percs

He warned us about the coffee, ‘Don’t get any of it on your clothes. Been known to eat holes in bat-wing chaps.’”

                    –J. Lee Butts  (Lawdog)
 
Come on over to the stove, Pard, while I pour yur coffee.  I want to check yuh over a little more closely.  Now, I’ve known yuh for several years, but with all the hubbub in Congress I think I need to see yuh from this new perspective.  I always thought the lumps on yur noggin was from not checkin’ yur cinch and fallin’ off yur horse, but some of them aliens or, “nonhuman biologics” are pretty lumpy from the photos I’ve seen.  Let’s see, yur not from another galazy…  I did read that there was a book with the title that men were from Mars.  Nah, yuh ain’t red enough.
       There have actually been found some ET pilots on earth.  In fact, the testimony to Congress notes that the U.S. recovered non-human biological pilots from crashed crafts.  My mercy, Pard, I sure hope my .44 has enough stoppin’ power should they seek refuge in my cottage.  Wonder how much that cost the taxpayers to hold those hearin’s and kept them from doin’ their jobs.
       Let’s see, hmmm, cover up for what?  Hunter’s arrest and hearin’s.  And we’re still waitin’ for somethin’ to happen with Epstein’s list.  Or is it something else they’re drawin’ attention from?   Pard, has you ever been in contact with one of them there aliens?  Perhaps ol’ Joe has been talkin’ to them.  It might make some sense in his antics.  I even saw where one person said that we need to do away with some people to make room for those funny-lookin’, nonhuman guys to survive on earth.  Duh, get rid of some to make room for strange aliens?  Yuh know, I think we’ve become more than stupid.
       Does that coffee taste strange?  Maybe there’s some stardust in it, or perhaps a moonbeam passed over the beans last night.  Whooooeeee, talk about the twilight zone.  ‘Course we always knew there were strange folk walkin’ around the halls of Congress.  Take a fresh look at some of them politikin’ folk.  Schiff…yep, there’s a good choice.  Pard, yuh best be carryin’ yur Matel zapper along with yur pistol.  
       Is this the answer that they’re lookin’ for when the Lord has the trumpet blown?  An untold number of us folk down here will disappear into the clouds.  How will that be explained?  Well, let me tell yuh Pard, I’m gonna sit here and sip my coffee and if’n any of those funny-lookin’ fellows come by, I might offer them a cup whether they be alien, nonhuman biologics, or zombies.  ‘Course I’ll keep my pistol at hand.  
       Yuh keep yur eye on the horizon, but with all of this hoodoo yuh might want to look up now and again.  Nah, I don’t mean for those space ships, but the comin’ of the Lord.
Check that cinch, yuh don’t need any more lumps on yur noggin’, one of them there Congressfolk might mistake yuh for one of them nonhumans.
       Vaya con Dios.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

Never give up. Life is too important. You find a way to fight for every second of life.”

                    –C.J. Petit  (Luke)

       “Is there not a cause?…  Let no man’s heart fail because of him; your servant will go and fight with this Philistine.”
                    –1 Samuel 17:29, 32 (NKJV)
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I was fortunate that from the age of two onward, I was told or read the stories from the Bible.  My aunt either told them told me, or read them to me, and they were certainly brought to my attention in Sunday School.  I must have heard the story of David and Goliath over a hundred times because of this and subsequent sermons.  Now I may have heard this somewhere before but it really didn’t stick in my thoughts until the other evening when I was reading a book by Alan Redpath.
       I have always imagined Goliath strutting around, mocking the armies of Israel.  When you read about his appearance he must have been something to behold.  He was clothed in brass, and he was a majestic sight.  Then add to his image that of his weapons.  Wow, what a specimen, and he knew it.  Not only was he a great warrior, but he was arrogant.  “Look at me,” he would proclaim, and he did so in the sight of Israel’s army for forty days, challenging, mocking, and scorning them.
       Satan is much the same.  He strides through cities and countries in marvelous garb.  It may be an ideology, it may be modern education, it may be evolution, it may be postmodernism, or any numerous other ideas.  The modern mind is brought to the strutting being with his flashing garb of whatever it may be.  He looks at Christians and mocks them.  And much of the time we are like the army of Israel–pathetic.  Fear grips us, compromise looks alluring, what could it hurt.  Think of COVID and remember how the nations quaked in fear.  “They were a people in covenant relationship with God, but actually in the bondage of fear before Goliath and all that he stood for!” (Redpath)  Paul writes, “Whose minds the god of this age has blinded, who do not believe, lest the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine on them” (2 Corinthians 4:4, NKJV).  Man will believe the giants around him, but not the word of Almighty God.  How foolish!  Satan, like Goliath, defies the people of God.  
       I always wondered why Saul, the king, a warrior in his own right, did not go out to face Goliath.  Wasn’t that his responsibility?  But Saul, by this time had forfeited the anointing of the Holy Spirit that was once upon him.  Disobedience, dabbling in the things of the world, things he was told not to do, Saul was quaking with the rest of the army.  One the scene a champion.  The giant was calling, “Give me a man!” (1 Samuel 17:10)  David appears and in the larger sense, Jesus appears.  Yet he was scorned, by his brethren, especially Eliab.  Hmmm, why didn’t Eliab go face Goliath?  He ridiculed David, “Eliab’s anger was aroused against David…I know your pride and the insolence of your heart, for you have come down to see the battle.” (1 Samuel 17:28, NKJV)  A picture of our Lord, “He came to His own, and His own did not receive Him” (John 1:11, NKJV)  Isaiah said, “He is despised and rejected by men, a Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief…” (Isaiah 53:3, NKJV)
       David was a picture of the Lord Jesus Christ, who overcame the “giant” (Satan) at Calvary.  Know this, as it was with Goliath, who cried, “Give me a man!”  The same is true of Satan, give me a man.  The battle was to be decided by representatives of each side:  Goliath–Satan; Jesus–church of believers.  Satan, the giant who sneers at the Church, and on the scene comes a man.  He doesn’t look like much.  He is not arrayed in magnificent armor.  All He has is the Word of God.  He will face this giant for us.  I am amazed that Saul even allowed David to go fight.  After all, he was a representative.  If he was killed then the Philistines would prevail and Israel would be their slaves.  But Saul sends him out, his brothers are angry with him, but he doesn’t care–he has a mission.  The world didn’t care about the coming of Christ–ah, but He had a mission.