Echoes From the Campfire

I think we all should go to the mountains more often. We should stand alone and look on the peaks and the valleys.”

                         –Louis L’Amour  (Under the Sweetwater Rim)

       “The LORD looks down from heaven upon the children of men, to see if there are any who understand, who seek God.”
                         –Psalm 14:2 (NKJV)
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       “True revival always returns God’s people to fresh and vivid emphasis on the holiness and righteousness of God, His judgment on sin, true repentance, and the overflowing effect of personal conversions to Christ.”  (Max Anders)  Psalm 85 is a cry for revival.  Revival always starts with the individual, with the heart.  Often we get sluggish in our life regarding our walk with God and we need the flame kindled anew–that is revival.  Revival is when the warning in Revelation given to those who lost their first love find it again and live like it.  Eugene Peterson wrote, “O God, when my faith gets overladen with dust, blow it clean with the wind of your Spirit.  When my habits of obedience get stiff and rusty, anoint them with the oil of your Spirit.  Restore the enthusiasm of my first love for you.”

          1 — LORD, You have been favorable to Your land; You have brought back the captivity of Jacob.
          2 — You have forgiven the iniquity of Your people; You have covered all their sin.    Selah
          3 — You have taken away all Your wrath; You have turned from the fierceness of Your anger.
          4 — Restore us, O God of our salvation, and cause Your anger toward us to cease.
          5 — Will You be angry with us forever?  Will You prolong Your anger to all generations?
          6 — Will You not revive us again, that Your people may rejoice in You?
          7 — Show us Your mercy, LORD, and grant us Your salvation.  (NKJV)

       The people must have been experiencing some great difficulty.  It seemed as if the anger of the Lord was upon them.  But, remember, if it comes from the Lord it is to teach a lesson, to discipline, to help us grow, and above all to bring us closer to Him.  Whether it be a national calamity or personal, God wants repentance and for us to draw close to Him.  The Psalmist prays that God will restore.  That indicates that there was once right relationship.
       People are often unforgiving, but not so the Lord.  He is ready to forgive when there is true repentance.  When there is the heart’s desire for renewed and righted relationship.  God is forgiving, why?  Because of His mercy, or as some versions translate, His “unfailing love.”  Through God’s mercy sins are forgiven.  We need to pray honestly that God would work through our sluggishness and disregard for His Word and a personal relationship with Him and “grant us your salvation out of our present problems and spiritual apathy.” (Anders)
                       
               “Many mighty men are lost,
               Daring not to stand,
               Who for God had been a host
               By joining Daniel’s band.
               Dare to be a Daniel,
               Dare to stand alone!
               Dare to have a purpose firm;
               Dare to make it known.”
                        –Philip P. Bliss

 

Coffee Percs

He brought a coffeepot from his gear and dipped water from the stream. He was a practical man, and he liked his coffee.”

                         –Louis L’Amour  (The Key-Lock Man)
 
Pard, can’t get the words out of my mind.  Go ahead, the coffee’s on the stove.  Those words by that ol’ Wyoming cowpoke LeDoux keep singin’ in my mind, “I can’t ride the broncos anymore…”  Yuh remember it?  “There’s a lot of parts on me that don’t work no more.”  My aches and pains remind me of those days, and my land, let me tell yuh that I even have to hang on to the rockin’ chair.  Sometimes it gets to movin’ an’ I’d swear it was tryin’ to throw me.
       What’s yuh smilin’ about?  Jist you wait, one of these days yu’ll be ridin’ that wooden frame.  They’ll probably have to add a seatbelt to keep yuh in that chair.  Nah, just kiddin’ with yuh, drink yur coffee.  By lookin’ at yuh, I reckon yu’ve got at least fifty or sixty miles left in yuh.  At least yur not out runnin’ with the rats.  Oh, and speakin’ of rats, remember election time starts next week here in Texas.  We sure want to keep home and hearth safe for there’s a push to bring in those fuzzy thinkin’ liberals.  Wish we could throw all those ideas in the trash can.  Once a people move away from God…well, it’s easier to keep moving thataway.  
       Ahhhh, that coffee’s good this mornin’.  I’m not doin’ any worryin’ over the outcome.  The Lord’s in charge anyhow.  My mercy, though, ain’t the country goin’ crazy?  All kinds of shenanigans happenin’.  Need to pray for an awakenin’ like the such that’s happened before in this country.  That’s the only way to keep from the Lord’s judgment.
       Say, Pard, yuh be doin’ right!  The road is still before us, we just don’t move as fast as we used to on it.  But those words by LeDoux keep ringin’, “Well a man can’t spend his life in reflection, just thinkin’ about the way things used to be…”  Yeehaw, hang on Pard, the Lord is gettin’ ready to ride!  Yuh best check yur cinch now.
         Vaya con Dios.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

A man ought to get wisdom when he’s young, not when he’s too old for it to matter. We spend a lifetime learning, then we get old, and most of our livin’ is done and it don’t seem like there’s any use for what we’ve learned. It’s like skinnin’ a frog: takes a lot of time and work, but when it’s done what’ve you got? There’s no use for a frog hide.”

                         –C.M. Curtis  (Return of the Outlaw)

       “It is not for you to know times or seasons which the Father has put in His own authority.”
                         –Acts 1:7 (NKJV)
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“O the sighing of the pines
Up here among the timberline
Makes me wish I’d done things different
But wishing don’t make it so.”
       –Ian Tyson

       As the years roll on by, what does one do?  Do they waste away the hours twiddling their thumbs while sitting in the rocking chair moaning. . . moaning about the things they wish they had done, or about the things they did?  Do they look in a new direction for sure the body can handle the pressure and the exertion it once did?  What is the answer?  In coming to some sort of a conclusion let us look at what Peter has to say,

               “Nevertheless, do not let this one fact escape you, beloved, that with the Lord one day is as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day.”
                                 –2 Peter 3:8 (Amplified)

       In my way of thinking, Satan made a mistake (of course he did) when he took the Lord and offered Him all the peoples of the world if He would bow to him.  Jesus looked out upon the scene.  He didn’t think of grandeur, He didn’t think of power (remember, He was a man when tempted in the wilderness).  When he looked out, “He saw the kingdoms of the world in a moment of time–not in their glory but in their unrighteousness.” (George Matheson)  Seeing the kingdoms only helped Him in His resolve to carry out His purpose.
       Can we not have a new glimpse of life in the later years?  I remember being told by many folks older than me back when I was in my prime that time passes faster as you get older.  Hmmm, I didn’t believe them, and I know that it doesn’t, or–does it?  How many hours were wasted in the past?  How many weeks and months were wasted on activities that didn’t help the Kingdom of God?  Those hours can never be retrieved.  Matheson writes, “In age I have the sense of wasted years and little time to retrieve them.  I am deterred from amendment by despair.  How can the short time at my command outweigh the long years I have squandered!”
       Oh me, oh my–the days of my life are shorter.  The end is closer than the start.  Do not let me despair.  Ahh, but the Lord has the answer with the verse above.  It is as if the Lord is saying to me, to us, that He doesn’t measure our path by length of time.  “One day in My courts can retrace the steps of a thousand days outside My courts.” (Matheson)
       In the eleventh hour of life what is the Holy Spirit speaking to you?  He is saying that “one hour with Me will redeem a thousand erring years.” (Matheson)  In other words, life for the day–life is living.  Life in the power and guidance of the Holy Spirit.  Let Him direct your steps, and more important let Him direct your mind and heart.  Make today count–make it worth a thousand years.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

Nothin’ comes easy if it’s worth anything.”

                    –Elmer Kelton  (The Way of the Coyote)

       “About forty thousand prepared for war crossed over before the LORD for battle, to the plains of Jericho.”
                    –Joshua 4:13 (NKJV)
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Last Sunday was Pastor Appreciation Day at our church.  That took my mind to an incident that is found in Joshua, chapter 3.

          “Then the priests who bore the ark of the covenant of the LORD stood firm on dry ground in the midst of the Jordan; and all Israel crossed over on dry ground, until all the people had crossed completely over the Jordan.”
                           –Joshua 3:17(NKJV)

Think of those four priests (perhaps eight depending on how long the staves were) hoisting the ark of the covenant standing where once the Jordan flowed.  
       First they were told by Joshua to “take up the ark of the covenant and cross over before the people.” (3:6)  Second, they obeyed, “So they took up the ark of the covenant and went before the people.” (3:6)  We see here a command and the response through obedience.  Move on over to the next chapter, “So the priests who bore the ark stood in the midst of the Jordan until everything was finished that the LORD had commanded Joshua to speak to the people, according to all that Moses had commanded Joshua; and the people hurried and crossed over.  Then it came to pass, when all the people had completely crossed over, that the ark of the LORD and the priests crossed over in the presence of the people.” (4:10-11, NKJV)
       Think of the audacity, the fear, the courage of those ministers of the Lord.  Remember, we are told (3:15) that the Jordan was in flood stage, but when the foot of the priests bearing the ark entered the river the flow stopped.  Now, I cannot explain the miracle, I can’t even imagine how the water backed up or for how far.  Perhaps there was more than one miracle involved, no matter–the priests stood in the midst of the Jordan.
       Several questions came to my mind.  What were their thoughts looking back at the stopped river?  How long did it take the multitude to cross?  Did the same priests stay in position or were they relieved at some point?  Did they fear that the waters may break loose, or were they resolved to trust in God?
       Think of the pressure of the ark as it was hoisted high.  Those priests had to bear the burden for hours, perhaps days until all the people had crossed over.  Aching arms, tired legs, thirsty, burdened with the load they stood fast in their duty and obligation.  
       I thought then of my pastor with all his load.  Today’s problems are multitudinous for sure.  Culture, society, and political pressure is now upon the pastor who must bear the burden for the people on top of what his obligations are to the local congregation.  In the midst of an epidemic of pestilence the pastor must continue to minister.  I just finished reading a book about the preachers to the lumberjack in the upper MidWest at the beginning of the last century.  At one point the state closed down meetings for the flu and diphtheria epidemics were so bad.  The ministers went from house to house praying and reading God’s Word.  Finally, at one point they defied the mandate and held open meetings.  People were saved, bodies were healed and the epidemic soon passed.  Brave men, not only in facing the sickness and visiting those homes, but also in defying the government and obeying instead God.
       The pastor–holds a severe burden.  His responsibility before the Lord is great.  Therefore, it is up to the people to hold him up in prayer.  It is up to the people to exhort him, to commend him, and once in a while pat him on the back.  He doesn’t do it for the accolades, but because it is his reasonable service; it is what he is called to do despite disease, storm, pestilence, or any other obstacle that may be thrown in his pathway.
       The Lord performed the miracle.  Joshua led the people and gave the order.  However, we often forget the length of the burden that was that of the priests holding the ark.  Don’t neglect to pray and uphold your pastor.  Do not make it a one-day a year thing.  As he has an obligation so you do as well–appreciate him every day of the year.