Echoes From the Campfire

A marriage is as much a product of thoughtfulness and consideration as of love.”
                    –Louis L’Amour  (The Key-Lock Man)


       “Life is short, and you love your wife, so enjoy being with her. This is what you are supposed to do as you struggle through life on this earth.”
                    –Ecclesiastes 9:9 (CEV)
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Satan cannot destroy the Church.  He can only attack it, but Christ will not let His Bride be sullied or dirtied.  With that in mind Satan turns his attack to the family; destroy the family and the Church is greatly affected.  The father, Solomon, continues to warn and give advice in this next portion of Proverbs, chapter 5.

          15 — Drink water from your own cistern, and running water from your own well.
          16 — Should your fountains be dispersed abroad, streams of water in the streets?
          17 — Let them be only your own, and not for strangers with you.
          18 — Let your fountain be blessed, and rejoice with the wife of your youth.
          19 — As a loving deer and a graceful doe, let her breasts satisfy you at all times; and always be enraptured with her love.  (NKJV)

     In an arid country a well was a prized possession and a privilege to be cared for.  So is a spouse.  “Drink water is an oblique reference to sexual union, and from your own cistern is a clear call to marital fidelity–one man, one woman, together in marriage.” (NKJV Study Bible)  Marriage is like drinking pure water, but immoral sexual sin is like drinking sewer water.  This water is not to be wasted by pouring it in the streets.  When fifty percent of marriages end in divorce this is a major problem in our country.  As J. Vernon McGee states, “marriage is the highest and holiest relationship” there is on this earth.  The Christian marriage is to be a picture of the relationship between Christ and His Bride–the Church.  This is one sure way to tear down society.  “The brooks and rivers of the land cannot be pure if the springs are defiled.” (J.L. Flores)
     Wiersbe says that “The commitment of marriage is like the banks of the river that keeps the river from becoming a swamp.  And if the water backs up, it becomes a bog, no life is flowing.  Where water has no depth, shallow water then is easy to stir.  Ponder…no commitment, bad things happen.  The writer of Hebrews gives a severe warning, “Marriage is honorable among all, and the bed undefiled; but fornicators and adulterers God will judge.” (13:4, NKJV)  
     Commitment, satisfaction, loyalty, are things that should be considered and upheld says the father in Proverbs.  Charles Bridges says regarding the man who seeks to find another “strange woman” is that this person is dissatisfied with blessings already in his possessions.  “The true husband has a feeling towards his wife to which the licentious man is an entire stranger.” (Flores)
     Rejoice with the wife of your youth…learn to grow old with her with satisfaction.  Always be enraptured with her love.  Ahhh, what more can be said than that.  The ESV, puts it this way, “be intoxicated always in her love.”  I found in my files a song put out by Charlie Pride, written by Ollie Kennedy and have included the second verse below.
               “Time for me passes on,
               And I’m growing old a lifetime nearly gone,
               I cannot unfold night’s dark and cold.
               Warm is your hand in mine,
               Weathered with age and time,
               Light of love still shines
               After all these years.”
I’m not sure Solomon could utter these words at the end of his life…perhaps.  However, in writing the Proverbs he certainly has the wisdom of love and life.

 

The Saga of Miles Forrest

As you enter the house of God, keep your ears open and your mouth shut!  Don’t be a fool who doesn’t realize that mindless offerings to God are evil.”
       –Ecclesiastes 5:1 (NLT)
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
     “It was a nice few days,” I reflected as I settled down in my seat, it would be close to four hours to Silverton so I tried to get comfortable.  I found myself chuckling as I remembered the time it took on horseback before they built this railway.  “The picnic with Molly was nice; we should do that more.”
     I tried to take notice of everyone who boarded.  It was mostly men going up to look for work in the mines or wanting to try prospecting on their own, a worthless task for the most part these days.  The car was almost full but I was able to keep a full seat to myself.  I started to place the Greener against the side of the car but for some reason I left it on the seat the barrel pointed towards the aisle.
     “Pleasure or business, Marshal?” asked the conductor, knowing full well that it was business.
     Cocking an eye at him, “Now Mr. Lewis, when have I ever taken a trip to Silverton for pleasure?” I chided him, then added, “Maybe I should try my hand at prospectin’.  It seems like these boys are doin’ so well.”
     Now that brought a brief guffaw from him.  “Ticket please,” he muttered in his laughter.
     Perhaps it was the picnic or the fact that I was concerned about the condition of the marshal’s office in Silverton.  I thought Beavin was a tough enough man, but he had no experience as a lawdog.  Well, in a few hours I’d find out, but in the meantime I found myself dozing.
     After the second time we stopped for water, I was nodding off when I felt a cold piece of steel against the side of my face.  “Easy,” came a voice as I jerked away from what I saw was a .45.
     “Hey, now,” I said a little louder than normal so I could pull the hammer back on the shotgun.
     “I don’t want to kill you, so just shut up!” came a growl from the man.  “You’re McGinnis’ bargaining chip.”
     I sighed, relaxed to get him off guard, looked upward at his face, then pulled the trigger.  The blast blew both his legs from under him and he crashed to the floor dropping his pistol.  The growl now was a fierce moan of pain.  I quickly jumped up, kicking his gun under the seat, then placed my back to the door and holding the Greener up surveying the rest of the passengers.  
     Frank Lewis, the conductor, started pushing his way towards me moving gawkers out of the aisle.  “Marshal, what in the world…” he started but left it at that when he saw the shotgun and the man writhing in the aisle.
     “Mister Lewis, see if anyone has any medical experience or this man is goin’ to bleed out.”
     He turned around, then stepped up on the seat to holler.  “I need someone with medical know-how!  Right now!”  From about half-way back a man lumbered into the aisle.  He sure didn’t look much like a doctor.  He was a tall, thin man wearing a long duster.  To be on the safe side, I pulled back the other hammer on the Greener.
     My action was noticed for he stopped momentarily on his walk.  “You a doctor?” I asked.
     Shaking his head, “No, but I do have some knowledge of wounds.”  He took off his coat, laying it over the back of the seat in front of me.  He bent down to examine the man.  I noticed he was wearing a gunbelt with what appeared to be a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber.  Almost immediately he ordered the man standing to the seat just behind him to give him his belt.  “I need a tourniquet or he’ll bleed to death…he might anyhow.
     Minutes later the man was quiet and his Samaritan stood, keeping his hands out in front of him.  “Mister, you sure played havoc with that man’s legs.”  He then turned his attention to the conductor.  “Any place along the way where he can get help.  I’m not sure he’ll make it to Silverton.”
     “You got a name,” I snapped a little too harshly.
     “Sure I do, everyone’s has a name.  I’m sure you do as well.”
     Our eyes met.  This was no slouch, he was a man who hired out, I knew it in my bones.  “But since you asked so politely, my daddy named me Vespasian as he was a lover of the Romans.  I go by Vess.  Vess Dawson.”  It didn’t ring a bell, but then again I didn’t know every gunman in the West.  “Uh, Mister, you mind pointing that Greener somewhere’s else?  I see you have the hammer cocked, and, well, I’d hate for a jolt of this train to cause it to go off.” 
     He was calm, I’d give him that.  Uncocking the shotgun, I said, “I’m Deputy United States Marshal Miles Forrest,” then I added, “thank you for your assistance.”
     Dawson looked down at the man briefly.  “I can’t do anything more for him.  I’d leave him stretched out in the aisle.  Is there anything else, Marshal?”
     I shook my head, thanking him again.  He reached for his coat then turned to walk back to his seat.  
     By this time most of the passengers had taken their seats, only a few remained standing.  Lewis started moving back down the aisle to assure them that everything was all right.
     I stood with my back to the door watching Vess Dawson glide back to his seat.  I wonder…

 

Echoes From the Campfire

It is not our God you do not understand. It is our lives you do not understand—our failure to conform to our professed teachings.”
                    –Zane Grey  (Captive of the Desert)

       “He is the Rock; his work is perfect. Everything he does is just and fair. He is a faithful God who does no wrong; how just and upright he is!”
                    –Deuteronomy 32:4 (NLT)
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     We close out this month of June and it is fitting that we close out Psalm 145 as well.  What a wonderful portion of Scripture.  No matter what we can praise God.  In the good times we often get so busy enjoying them that we forget to praise the Lord.  It is also easy to praise the Lord when He quickly answers our prayers, but what about those times when it seems that He lingers or doesn’t answer at all?  

          14 — The LORD upholds all who fall, and raises up all who are bowed down.
          15 — The eyes of all look expectantly to You, and You give them their food in due season.
          16 — You open Your hand and satisfy the desire of every living thing.
          17 — The LORD is righteous in all His ways, gracious in all His works.
          18 — The LORD is near to all who call upon Him, to all who call upon Him in truth.
          19 — He will fulfill the desire of those who fear Him; He also will hear their cry and save them.
          20 — The LORD preserves all who love Him, but all the wicked He will destroy.
          21 — My mouth shall speak the praise of the LORD, and all flesh shall bless His holy name forever and ever.  (NKJV)

     “In a world in which life is tough, the Psalms delight in affirming that God is good and that there is no limit to His power, His love, and His concern for His people.” (NKJV Study Bible)  Hold on tightly to that saying–never forget that God is there.  Think of His care for all people first of all.  The rain falls on the just and the unjust, but God also blesses the unjust.  How many people live in America who are wicked, yet they receive the blessings of this great country?  God upholds the life of all, and He offers grace and mercy to all.  
     Continue to thank God for His “general” blessings, but also remember those special blessings He has given to His people, and even more so those blessings He has given to you and you alone.  I was reading while studying for this psalm of a minister in a German town during the Thirty Years’ War.  In one year, the plague swept through that city where Martin Rinckart conducted funerals for five thousand victims, including his wife.  During this pestilence and war he wrote a hymn, “Now Thank We All Our God” in which he praises God for the wondrous things He has done. (William J. Petersen)  Remember COVID?  I was sort of dismayed when I saw the effect that it had on believers.  “Most of us find it hard to be thankful in the midst of short-term woes, but we have trouble when our woes continue for very long.  How about thirty year? (Petersen)
     We tend to forget that God will and does provide.  Did Christians die during COVID?  Yes, but we must remember that God is sovereign, and that He “is righteous in all His ways, gracious in all His works.”  The NLT translates it this way, “The LORD is righteous in everything he does; he is filled with kindness.”  We, all too often, look at life, not in God’s perspective but with human eyes and thus we expect Him to answer in a way that we can understand or the way we want.  Steven Lawson writes, “God is righteous toward His people, always just in all His ways.  He never deals with His creation wrongly, nor does He ever mismanage them unequally.  God is infinitely loving, never needlessly harsh.”  Call upon His name and He will answer.  Ah, but be ready, He will answer in His own way.
     This is the problem with many people who say they reject God.  It is because He did not answer them the way they wanted.  One thing also to remember, He is near to those who call upon Him, those who love and fear Him.  The Lord watches over His own.  However, to the wicked, and this is a sobering thought, He will destroy.  Listen, now is the day of salvation, call to Him while He is near.  
     “Rising up from within our souls must be an anthem of perpetual praise to God.” (Lawson)  David finishes this wonderful psalm with praise.  He will bless the name of the Lord forever.  That should be our aim.  We should always be in a state of prayer (and praise) that is what Paul means to “pray without ceasing.”  When we see an accident on the road, send forth a prayer.  Pray when you see the news, or hear of some devastating event.  Paul prayed for those whom he had never met, so why shouldn’t we?  Praise Him for the needs He has met.  When we praise Him we affirm His work in our lives; that He meets our needs and protects us. (George Wood)  Go through the thick and thin of life with a heart full of praise, even when you don’t understand how God is working.  I like this little prayer by George Wood:  “Lord, I can neither fathom Your creative power nor Calvary’s love.  But You never asked me to understand You.  Instead You invite me to praise and love You.  I do that gladly.  I am so little.  You are so great.  I humbly ask You to magnify Your presence in my life this day.”

               “Now thank we all our God with heart and hands and voices,
               Who wondrous things hath done, in whom his world rejoices;
               Who, from our mother’s arms, hath blessed us on our way
               With countless gifts of love, and still is ours today.”
                       –Martin Rinckart

 

Coffee Percs

The smell of fresh coffee soon brought them back to life. Both men grabbed a tin cup, and each filled it to the brim.”

                     –Nathan Wright  (Marshal Warrix)
 
Mornin’ to yuh, Pard, grab a cup, the coffee’s hot and waitin’ to be drunk.  Get yurself ready for I’ve got some sermonizin’ for yuh.  Mercy, for sure there’s a great day a-comin’.  I don’t know exactly when, but something has to give sooner or later.  Take a sip first, that way we’ll start with something good.  Ahhh…
     First, Pard, I know my ol’ stalkin’ grounds has gone to pot, go ‘head an’ laugh that’s an intended pun.  Yep, thinkin’ they’re bein’ progressive and wise my home state of Colorado has a law that bans sex-exclusive spaces.  Go ahead, slap yurself upside the head.  I’ll tellin’ yuh what I read.  But let me give yuh a glimmer of hope.  A Christian camp won a lawsuit against the state when they said that boys would be allowed to stay in the girls’ cabins.  Man cannot continue to be ignorin’ God’s moral laws; it’s like tryin’ to slap Him in the face.
     Pard, take another sip, and I’m tellin’ this so’s yuh can watch yur backside in a crowd.  This here happened just last week.  Thank the Lord it wasn’t in our country, but if it can happen in France it can happen here.  I don’t know what these folks were thinkin’…well, they weren’t thinkin’ right that’s for sure.  Seems like 145 people at a music festival were stuck with syringes.  Authorities aren’t sure yet what was in those needles, but imagine idiots goin’ around pokin’ folk.  At the time of the article fourteen fools had been arrested.  Yuh see why I tell yuh to be wary when yur in a crowd?
     Whooee, Pard, then take a look at all the stupidity.  Duh, don’t folks know what the term “illegal” means?  Nope, yur right Pard.  It’s like callin’ my coffee–tea. Most of them are just riotin’ with no notion of what’s goin’ on.  Don’t any of them have jobs?  People are so moronic, they want to gripe, act like fools, but then when someone goes to stop them, they become the victims.  I sure do take my hat off to those officers and guardsmen that have to put up with such nonsense.  They must have some kinda special patience bone; I mean, I’d just want to slap them silly, maybe try an’ knock some of the foolish notions out of them.  Pard, I’m reminded of the words of our Savior when He said, “Because of the increase of wickedness, the love of most will grow cold, but he who stands firm to the end will be saved.”  Uh, that’s from Matthew 24.  Look it up, ponder it an’ see if’n it might not relate to all the evil we’re a-seein’ around us.  
     Coffee’s gone, it’s time for me to quiet my preachifyin’, but let me give yuh one more thought.  Pard, let me ask yuh, wasn’t it just twenty-four years ago nearly 3000 people lost their lives to attack led by Muslims in New York City?  Now they’re got this socialistic Muslim runnin’ for mayor.  Pard, sometimes the Lord allows our foolishness to punish us.  Some things are just too hard for my simple brain to be a-comprehendin’.  
     The mornin’s most over, the coffee is gone, an’ I know yuh gots to be leavin’.  Watch out Pard, don’t let no one stick yuh with a needle.  That could end up bein’ worse than yuh forgettin’ to check yur cinch.  For sure we must be travelin’ with the Lord.
     Vaya con Dios.