Echoes From the Campfire

There was something about the mountain air that made one want to inhale deeply…it was like fresh, clear, cold water in the throat.”
                    –Louis L’Amour  (Shalako)

       “As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, O God.”
                    –Psalm 42:1 (NIV)
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       “Blessed [joyful, nourished by God’s goodness] are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness [those who actively seek right standing with God], for they will be [completely] satisfied.”  –Matthew 5:6 (Amplified)

     I have never truly been starving, but I have been very thirsty a few times in my life.  Ask a person who has been starving what it means and he could tell you.  How then, do we judge hunger?  If we are to hunger and thirst after righteousness how do we do so?  Thomas Watson gives us some insight.  First, true hunger is a painful thing.  As the Psalmist wrote, “They were hungry and thirsty, and their lives ebbed away.” (107:5, NIV)  Food and water are required for life.  If that is true in the natural, how much more true is it in the spiritual?  Hunger is satisfied with nothing but food.  The content is important–food is needed, not flowers, not music, not well wishes.  Give me a steak!  
     Watson continues and says that hunger wrestles with difficulties and hunts for food.  Man in many parts of the world was a hunting and gathering society.  They spent most of their time hunting.  Why?  Because they were hungry, they knew that food was imperative to life.  Oh, that we could grasp that in the spiritual.  How much do we search for food in the Scriptures?  Why do we not understand that it is imperative to our spiritual life?  He then says that the hungry man goes to his food with a strong appetite.  You do not have to persuade him to eat.  One more thing, though not required, he tastes flavor in his food; it is not bland.  Spices and salt are not required, the food has enough flavor of its own.  The Bible has its own flavor, it does not need an outside opinion.
     “Don’t eat that!  You’ll ruin your supper!”  Have you ever heard that before?  Or perhaps, “don’t eat that, it’s not good for you.”  We should avoid things which will hinder our appetite.  Sweet things spoil our appetite and can hinder the taste of real, supportive food.  Watson states, “When one is filled with a windy opinion of his own righteousness, he will not hunger after Christ’s righteousness.”  Stay away from false doctrine though it might appeal to the senses.  Then watch out for the wrong type of calories.  American youth look healthy because they are getting plenty of calories, but in reality most are not because of the type of calories they are eating.  “You cannot glut yourself upon the world, and at the same time be greatly in love with Christ.” (Watson)  What music do you listen to?  What friends do you hang with?  What do you watch on television, movies, social media?  Are they the right type of “calories” to help your spiritual nourishment?  John tells us, “Do not love the world, or anything in the world.  If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him.” (1 John 2:15, NIV)  We should do all that we can to provide a nourishing spiritual appetite.  We are reminded by Paul, “Have nothing to do with godless myths and old wives’ tales; rather, train yourself to be godly.  For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come.” (1 Timothy 4:7-8, NIV)
     When we eat we are satisfied now, but there will come a day when we will hunger no more.  To eat of the world’s bounty is fading, not filling.  We read in Psalms, “My soul will be satisfied as with the richest of foods; with singing lips my mouth will praise you.” (63:5, NIV)  Jeremiah brings us a promise from God, “I will bless my people with more food than they need, and the priests will enjoy the choice cuts of meat.  I, the Lord, have spoken.” (31:14, CEV).  God, and His bounty, His provision, His life-sustaining food, can never be exhausted.  Know this, sin will starve the soul.  Stay away from what the world offers and look instead to the table of the Lord.  Realize also, that the hungry soul is the most thankful.  We should be “looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, the home of righteousness.” (2 Peter 3:13, NIV)
     “O the bliss of the man who longs for total righteousness as a starving man longs for food, and a man perishing of thirst longs for water, for that man will be truly satisfied!”  

 

Echoes From the Campfire

Chase life, not death.”
                    –Eric H. Heisner  (Seven Fingers a’ Brazos)

       “I am the Living One:  I was dead, and behold I am alive for ever and ever!  And I hold the keys of death and Hades.”
                    –Revelation 1:18 (NIV)
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               “He walks with me and talks with me along life’s narrow way”
                          –Alfred H. Ackley

Take some time this week, in fact today–Good Friday–would be a good time to read the words of Jesus from Gethsemane through His trial.  We are familiar with the words from the cross and I will not diminish them, but we often lose sight of the rest of the ordeal.  Jesus actually said very little in His three “trials.”  However, what He said had a great impact.  
     Start with the two words in the Garden when asked if He was Jesus.  He simply replied, “I am,” and the soldiers and priests were hurled to the ground.  Just the power behind that title!  I have pondered and contemplated over what took place at that time.  It seems to me that it should have gotten their attention, but no, not even the very breath and words of God could deter them.  They were under a great delusion as the world will be under the influence of the Antichrist.  Then ponder for a moment.  What took place in the spiritual realm when Jesus made His declaration in Gethsemane?  They demons, the angels, the old serpent himself knew who He was, but were they shaken as well?
     They came to take Him, to put Him to death.  But He told Pilate during one interview, “You rightly say that I am a king.  For this cause I was born, and for this cause I have come into the world, that I should bear witness to the truth.  Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice.” (John 18:37, NKJV)  Remember that Jesus already declared, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.  No one comes to the Father except through Me.” (John 14:8, NKJV)  No matter what anyone says, He is the Truth!  He revealed Himself as “I AM”!  Think of that when you sing this Sunday.

          “I serve a risen Savior, He’s in the world today;
          I know that He is living, whatever men may say;
          I see His hand of mercy, I hear His voice of cheer,
          And just the time I need Him He’s always near.”
                     –Alfred H. Ackley

     He is the God who is here!  Right now, right beside you, right beside me.  There is no other, there is only Jesus Christ, the risen Savior!  He proclaimed to the high priest when questioned, “You rightly say that I am”! (Luke 22:70)  WOW!  Get that!  The priest along with the Sandhedrin was stunned, but they will be even more stunned when they bow before Him in judgment.  Mark (14:62) and Matthew (26:64) shows that Jesus declares who He is.  “I am.  And you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Power, and coming with the clouds of heaven.”  Oh, they will tremble as will all those who do not accept His wonderful offer of salvation.

          “In all the world around me I see His loving care,
          And tho’ my heart grows weary I never will despair;
          I know that He is leading, thro’ all the stormy blast,
          The day of His appearing will come at last.”

    Jesus came to present the truth; the truth that He is the Truth!  Now is the day of salvation.  It was purchased, paid for in full, by the blood of Jesus on the cross for anyone and everyone who will accept it.  If the priests did not tremble with the statement of “I AM” I wonder what they thought when the tomb was empty?  Could they believe that a bunch of common people, the disciples, could overcome a Roman guard?  The empty tomb would linger and haunt their mind…and I might say, for eternity.  Think of their private thoughts, think of the conversations in the small groups.  Could Jesus be alive?  Makes me smile to think of the delusion of their thoughts.  He is risen!  He is alive!  Therefore…

          “Rejoice, rejoice, O Christian, lift up your voice and sing
          Eternal hallelujahs to Jesus Christ the King!
          The Hope of all who seek Him, the Help of all who find,
          None other is so loving, so good and kind.”

     The “I AM” is alive, and He is with every believer, every moment of every day.  WOW!  He does walk with us and talk with us along this narrow way that we trod.  

          “He lives, He lives, Christ Jesus lives today!
          He walks with me and talks with me along life’s narrow way.
          He lives, He lives, salvation to impart!
          You ask me how I know He lives?  He lives within my heart.”

 

Echoes From the Campfire

He enjoyed the territory, always most content when he rode alone in new country, given time to enjoy the solitude with his Lord and all of His creation.”

                    –B.N. Rundell  (Last Chance Gulch)

       “Though you have not seen him, you love him.  Though you do not see him now, yet by believing in him, you are filled with a joy that is inexpressible and filled with glory.”
                    –1 Peter 1:8 (ESV)
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               “It is joy unspeakable and full of glory,
               Oh, the half has never yet been told.”
                         –B.E. Warren

What a tremendous Easter song!  But wait, this is a solemn, sorrowful time.  We read the words of Isaiah, “He was despised and rejected by men, a Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief.  And we hid, as it were, our faces from Him; He was despised, and we did not esteem Him.” (53:3, NKJV)  He was a man of sorrows, He knew and experienced grief, more than any man who ever lived, for He saw sin in its reality and fullness, and in fact, felt it firsthand.  Yes, it was agony, shame, and the cross was real, the pain was real, but there was more.  Jesus was a man full of joy!
     I cannot remember in my long years a message of the joy of the Holy Week.  Yes, there are songs of triumph, of victory, of overcoming, but joy?  Those last few weeks before the crucifixion Jesus did much teaching about what was to come and what to expect.  One of the aspects He told His disciples was that of joy.  John tells us, “These things I have spoken to you, that My joy may remain in you, and that your joy may be full.” (15:11, NKJV).  The cross is looming before Him, the intense agony of physical torture and of spiritual torture waits only days away, and Jesus is speaking of joy.
     We tend to dwell and stay only on the intenseness of the cross and that whole week of ordeal.  But there is more, so I want to just take a few moments and in this week of Jesus moving towards Calvary and think of His joy.  George Morrison tells us that “Jesus’ joy was an intense reality.”  While many dwell on the sorrow, and walk around with a lower lip hanging on the ground, Jesus was speaking of joy.  Look at His life and often we see His joy.  It was the times of joy that the Pharisees could not understand and caused them consternation.  They could understand sorrow, grief coming from the Messiah, but joy?
     Jesus living in the fullness of life.  The fruit of the Spirit burst forth from His very being.  “Morally, He was in perfect poise with heaven.  Spiritually, He had the fullness of the Spirit.” (Morrison)  He had life, and He came so others could have life, and that they might have it abundantly. (John 10:10)  Morrison says, “He came to give what He Himself possessed.  And that abundant life, rooted in His sinlessness and continually enriched by new obedience, was one of the splendid secrets of His joy.”
     The source of Jesus’ joy was in the relationship with the Father.  Jesus’ joy was rooted in the love and fellowship with the Father.  The source of Jesus’ joy was complete surrender to His purpose in life.  His vocation, His calling and surrendering to it brought joy.  He was completely surrendered to the will of the Father.  As Morrison reminds us, “Neglect your work and you are never glad.  Do it half-heartedly, and gloom is everywhere.  But give yourself to it, with heart and soul and strength, and all the birds are singing in the trees.”  
     The source of Jesus’ joy was the fulfillment of His purpose.  He looked forward to the reward of His suffering, agony, and death.  We read in Hebrew 12:2, “Looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.” (NKJV)  J.B. Phillips translates it this way, “For he himself endured a cross and thought nothing of its shame because of the joy he knew would follow his suffering…”  I have to take some inventory here on my own life.  The cross I am told to pick up, do I do it with joy knowing that there is a reward waiting?  Do I moan and groan, whine and complain, or do I see the results and thus pick it up and carry it joyfully, rejoicing on my way?
     Easter, a glorious time!  Take time to reflect, to contemplate, to meditate.  Take time with family, enJOY them.  Take some time to be alone with the Lord.  However, in all of this know that the joy of the Lord is your strength, and that we should have joy unspeakable as we travel this often troublesome road to glory.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

I judge a man by the way he handles himself, and you’ve been ridin’ for the brand. I ain’t interested in anything else.”

                    –Louis L’Amour  (“Riding for the Brand”)

       “The hireling flees because he is a hireling and does not care about the sheep.”
                    –John 10:13 (NKJV)
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One assignment for you in regards to April Fools Day.  The Book of Proverbs, which we are studying each Wednesday, is loaded with the definition and actions of a fool.  Take time to read them on this day designed to remember “fools.”  Now on to today’s study:
          “The labor of the righteous leads to life, the wages of the wicked to sin.”  –Proverbs 10:16(NKJV)
The first thing to remember is that there are two paths to travel.  The righteous are on the way of life, but the wicked wander from it.  There is the way of the Lord, and there is the way of the world.  When I look at the above verse the first thing that comes to my mind is Romans 6:23, “But the wages of sin is death,” however, the wages of the righteous bring them life, abundantly in this life and full abundance in eternity.  The question that must be answered is, who do you work for?  There are two “bosses” in this world.  One is the Creator, the Lord, the other the prince of darkness, the enemy of our soul.  One represents the kingdom of God, the other the wickedness of the system of this world.  
     In my experiences I have found that most people are simply hirelings.  And the shame of it is that many Christians fall into this category as well.  Oh, they are sure enough believers, but they do not recognize that all they do should be unto the Lord, so they work nominally, haphazardly, only wanting a paycheck and what it can get them.  They haven’t tapped into the great truth that God is their Lord and their work, no matter what it is, should be done unto Him.  The hireling works for a paycheck, benefits, and the weekend.  The non-Christian labors for sure for themselves; their minds are lost to the things of God and they do not submit to righteousness.  Bob Beasley says, they are “Lured by the glamour and glitter of the ‘good life,’ he receives instead the wages of the ‘bad death.'”  As Christians this should not be our attitude nor our actions.  “We work in and through Him.  Our labours, therefore, is His work–wrought in dependence on Him; not for life, but to life.” (Charles Bridges)
     Romans 8:6, is a sobering verse, “For to be carnally minded is death…” (NKJV)  It is important that we realize, as J. Vernon McGee states, “God is not going to fellowship with a carnally-minded person.”  People crave fellowship, in fact some clamor for it.  Isn’t it ironic that many of those who say they desire for fellowship with God and will dance a jig on Sunday will not work for Him in their career, workplace, or studies?  Those that want fellowship, do not consider the things that bring true fellowship with the Lord–“the labor of the righteous leads to life,” is being in fellowship with God.  Charles Bridges tells us that “Labor, not idleness, is the stamp of a servant of God.”
     What about the righteous then?  J.L. Flores gives us some thoughts regarding the righteous.  First, there can be no true life without righteousness.  Secondly, righteousness must show that it exists by honest labor.  Thirdly, the honest labor of a righteous man shall bless his existence.  I shall ask the question again, Who do you work for?
     As you consider that you must then ask the next question, for what do we labor?  To be honest there are hard workers among the godless, but they toil for worldly gain, to get ahead in this life.  That’s all they have–this life.  Spend it now–you can’t take it with you.  Be wise in your perspective of those who work, or do not.  “The whole subject teaches us not to make poverty and riches the standard by which to measure a man’s blessedness or misfortune.” (Flores)  Again we are reminded that, “one’s life does not consist in the abundance of the things he possesses.” (Luke 12:15, NKJV)
     Read again the verse from Proverbs then add to it the words of Paul, “For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 6:23, NKJV)