Coffee Percs

Picking up his cup, he blew slightly before taking a sip. Looking deep into the black coffee.”

                         –Cliff Hudgins  (Viejo and the Outlaws)
 
My, my, what has happened to our nation?  What is going on in the world?  Good questions, and I have an answer for yuh, Pard.  It’s gettin’ ready for the return of the Lord.  I don’t read the news much anymore, and shore don’t listen to the pundits spoutin’ off, but I’ll read a headline now and then and I came across a couple.
          “Texas Fire Dept. Chaplain Axed for Biblical View of Gender — Under the city of Austin’s standard, no one who openly holds historic Christian beliefs about the immutable differences between men and women can serve as a chaplain or in any other fire department position.”
          “Climate Change Police–Coming to a City Near You — French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin is hiring 3,000 ‘green police officers’ to go after those who violate green-related criminal issues.  The announcement comes after the EU crisis management tsar Janez Lenarcic called for the rapid creation of a Europe-wide ‘Civil Protection Force’ to enforce climate laws across the EU.”
Yuh don’t understand?  Come on, Pard, it simply means that they’re after you and me and others.  And if that ain’t enough the President done declared us to be dangerous to the country.  Folks like us are tryin’ to destroy the soul of America.  That’s just plain insane!
       Pard, it’s sad…  Yep, I spend time starin’ into my coffee cup as well.  Is there hope?  Wal, for sure, as long as yur breathin’ there’s hope, but the question is hope in what?  My hope is in the Lord and His return.  My hope is in my salvation that He purchased with the price of His blood.  More and more, Pard, I don’t look for the government to do more than continue on a downward spiral.  The thing for us to be is on the Lord’s side.
       What y’da say we concentrate on our coffee.  Good, hot, strong enough to wipe the varnish off the tabletop, and fill the gizzard with joy.  Not much we can do about it, ‘cept pray.  More and more I understand why we are to pray that last prayer in Revelation, “Even so, Lord Jesus, come.”  The days are evil and not just evil, but perverse.  The agenda of the Antichrist is clearer to see and the methods he will use.  
       Be ready, Pard.  Be ready as yuh ride out every day.  Be ready and be a-listenin’ for the trumpet.  Keep yur eyes upon the skies, but yuh also need to be watchin’ where yur steppin’.  Oh, and Pard, one of the ways for yuh to be ready is to check yur cinch.
        Vaya con Dios.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

Trouble and misery aren’t your very own private garden where you can run away to to feel sorry for yourself.”

                         –Douglas Hirt  (“The Kid”)

       “See then that you walk circumspectly, not as fools but as wise.”
                          –Ephesians 5:15(NKJV)
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Part of my early morning devotions are from the Early Church Fathers.  In our modern era we tend to forget their importance and how they led the way.  They had trials and tribulations, some the same as ours, but some different, however, they had a great amount of wisdom.  We may not agree totally with their theology, but we need to look at those truths they present.
       This morning I’d like to pass on something from my reading.  It is from Gregory of Nyssa (335-395).  Gregory was from Cappadocia.  This region is mentioned in the Bible in Acts 2 and in 1st Peter.   Gregory had seen persecution–his parents had their goods confiscated because they were Christians.  His grandfather was killed by “Imperial wrath,” under Emperor Maximinus II.  Gregory was said to be quiet and meek.  Throughout his life he seems to act as a reconciler and mediator with those who differ with the church.  Gregory, himself, was sometimes in controversy with the Church with some of his ideas.  Here he speaks of the right path:

               There is only one right path.  It is narrow and constricted.  It doesn’t have any way to turn on one side or the other.  No matter how we step away from it, there is always the danger of straying hopelessly away.  As a result, we must correct the habit many people have gotten into as much as possible.  I mean those who fight strenuously against the more wicked pleasures, yet who still hunt for pleasure in worldly honor and positions of power.  They act like slaves who longed for freedom, but, instead of working to get away, they only changed masters.  They thought freedom was in that change.  But all people are slaves even thought they may not be ruled by the same masters…  This same thing happens when any emotion, instead of righteous reason, controls the course of a life.  For the Lord’s commands are exceedingly far-reaching.  They “enlighten the eyes” even of “the simple” and declare that good belongs only to God.  But God isn’t pain, but He is pleasure.  He isn’t cowardice, but boldness.  He isn’t fear, anger, or any other emotion that sways the unguided soul.  But, as the Apostle Paul says, He is Wisdom, Sanctification, Truth, Joy, Peace, and everything like that.

So are some thoughts from the 4th Century.  Ponder them.  There is only one right path!  Did you get that?  One Way!  It is in Jesus Christ, the eternal Son of God.  Contrary to the globalists and other “ists” of the modern day, there are not many paths to God but only one.  Eternal life is reserved for those who believe in Jesus Christ, His crucifixion and resurrection.  A person just doesn’t wander into heaven.  You don’t travel the Eightfold Path and expect to find Jesus there waiting for you.  

              Look carefully then how you walk! Live purposefully and worthily and accurately, not as the unwise and witless, but as wise (sensible, intelligent people).”
                               –Ephesians 5:15(Amplified)

 

Echoes From the Campfire

It was impolite to ask a man how much money he had or to volunteer how much you had. The latter was usually either a brag or a complaint, and nobody wanted to listen to it. Money was no yard-stick of a man’s worth.”

                         –Elmer Kelton  (The Good Old Boys)

       “And behold, I am coming quickly, and My reward is with Me, to give to every one according to his work.”
                         –Revelation 22:12(NKJV)
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Are you keeping your eyes open and on the skies?  Are you looking upward, ready for His coming?  Is the prayer, “Even so, come, Lord Jesus!” on your lips?  He’s coming, and I will repeat, He’s coming.
       I read a story from Jack Graham, where he tells of a group of children who have been told that Jesus is coming soon.  They were so intent upon the words that they continually went to the windows of the house, smudging the glass, looking upward for His appearing.  Graham then related it to the life of Christians, “The windows of every Christian’s home should be smudged and dirty because of our passionate expectation of Christ’s soon return.  So live your life with an eye on the sky waiting for that glorious day!”

               “My heart can sing when I pause to remember,
               A heartache here is but a stepping stone,
               Along a trail that’s winding always upward,
               This troubled world is not my final home.”
                         –Stuart Hamblen

That should be our song of praise.  We should be like Paul and Silas when in the dungeon, not to despair but to sing.  No matter what comes our way the Lord is with us.  The obstacles of life help us gain strength, help us grow.  And the troubles of this world–the terror, the sickness, the death, the suffering are to remind us that this is not our final home.

               “The things of earth will dim and lose their value
               If we recall they’re borrowed for awhile;
               And things of earth that cause the heart to tremble,
               Remembered there will only bring a smile.”

I have always wondered why folks are in such a hurry to gain wealth.  I figure that there are three times when all people are equal:  at birth, at death, and at the cross.  Read Ecclesiates, “And how does a wise man die?  As the fool!” (2:16, NKJV)  You could replace wise with wealthy–all face death, all will be buried, all will return to dust.  It isn’t wrong to want wealth, but to spend your life seeking it rather than seeking what the Lord wants from you is truly vanity.

               “This weary world with all its toil and struggle
               May take its toll of misery and strife;
               The soul of man is like a waiting falcon;
               When it’s released, it’s destined for the skies.
           
                              But until then my heart will go on singing,
                              Until then with joy I’ll carry on,
                              Until the day my eyes behold the city,
                              Until the day God calls me home.”

In the midst of your life do you have joy?  Despite the difficulties there should be joy in your heart.  One of the ways to nurture joy and letting it mature into its fullness in your life is to look upward.  We are told to “Watch therefore, for you do not know what hour your Lord is coming.”  Let there be smudges on your window panes as you look through them upward looking for the Lord.  Be passionate about His coming, don’t live in the mully-grubs of the world.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

The idea that men stole because they were poor or hungry was nonsense. Men or women stole because they wanted more, and wanted it without working for it… They stole because they wanted more faster.” 

                    –Louis L’Amour  (“Bowdrie:  A Job for a Ranger”)

       “For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul?  Or what will a man give in exchange for his soul?”
                    –Mark 8:36-37 (NKJV)
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       One thing the Book of Ecclesiastes does is to show life realistically, even perhaps somewhat pessimistically.  “Then I returned and considered all the oppression that is done under the sun:  And look!  The tears of the oppressed, but they have no comforter–on the side of their oppressors there is power, but they have no comforter.” (Ecclesiastes 4:1, NKJV)  No comforter!
       I am reminded of the old Negro Spiritual, “Nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen.”  Woe is me, life is tough, it’s unfair.  There is no comforter and I am lost and undone.  There is oppression and exploitation all around and especially seen in the halls of justice.  Innocent people suffer pain and sorrow, they suffer for no apparent reason.  People who could help don’t; they only serve their own agenda.  There is a “carnal, savage-level selfishness” (Swindoll) in the world.  Let the more vicious dog win.  
       How does one learn to be content in such a world?  Wiersbe writes, “Learning and living must be brought together.”  Success can be more lethal than having little.  There is a danger in wealth that the poor never have to worry about.  Solomon says, “Better a handful with quietness than both hands full, together with toil and grasping for the wind.” (4:6, NKJV)  The rich have much competition to get ahead, and even to stay solvent.  As the competition increases so does the intensity of life.  The goal of life becomes to get ahead not quality of workmanship or thinking of glorifying God with their work.  The rich want more, more, more–yet they already have it all.

                    “Better is a little with the fear of the LORD, than great treasure with trouble.  Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a fatted calf with hatred…  Better is a little with righteousness, than vast treasures without justice.”
                              –Proverbs 15:16-17; 16:8 (NKJV)

       The rich want more, the poor are exploited.  The rich often become so caught up with their lives that other important things go by the wayside.  Oh, they may give some money to charities to show off their riches and appease their guilty souls, but they are careful to give just enough.  Jesus warned the rich with His story about the rich man storing up his goods.  “But God said to him, ‘Fool!  This night your soul will be required of you; then whose will those things be which you have provided?’  So is he who lays up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God.”  (Luke 12:13-21, NKJV)
       Then we have the idle–the lazy, the sluggards in life.  Instead of saying “more, more, more” they holler out “give, give, give.”  Do your duty and give to fulfill my needs.  Why are you rich when I am destitute?  These are those who want to live off the wealth of others.  These are the snowflakes and twinkies of the hour.  Take my debt; it’s your duty to do so and by saying that they are showing that they are destitute of character.  Ray Steadman says, “When you sit in idleness you devour yourself, your resources disappear, your self-respect vanishes.”  The lazy man is warned in Proverbs that poverty will come upon him (Proverbs 6:10-11).

                    “The industrious man was motivated by competition and caught in the rat race of life.  He had no leisure time.  The idle man was motivated by pleasure and was headed for ruin.  He had no productive time…  The industrious man thinks that money will bring him peace, but he has no time to enjoy it.  The idle man thinks that doing nothing will bring him peace, but his life-style only destroys him.”
                              –Warren W. Wiersbe

       One thing that Solomon has forgotten.  One thing he either did not consider or he was ignorant of–the Holy Spirit, the Comforter.  “There is no comforter” came the cry, but there is!  The Holy Spirit, the One who walks beside, who directs our steps, who speaks direction to our soul is there in the time of need as well as in the time of plenty.  There is an answer to the cry of the heart and that is the Lord Jesus Christ.  When the cry goes out, “This night your soul will be required of you,” will there be panic, dread, or will the smile of a child of God be on your face?  Will God say, “Fool!” or will He call you “Faithful”?  How you live your life for Him, and how you let the Comforter guide you will be the difference.  “Nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen…Nobody knows, but Jesus…”