Coffee Percs

He gathered wood while I sliced bacon from a slab and placed it in a skillet, then poured ground coffee into a pot.” 

                    –Elmer Kelton  (Other Men’s Horses)
 
     Mornin’ to yuh, Pard, glad yuh were able to stop by.  Got to have yurself some good coffee.  Pard, the thought jist came to my mind.  What kind of coffee do yuh drink durin’ the week?  Do yuh make it yur ownself, or does the missus, or do yuh go out to some coffee shop?  I reckon for sure, that if’n yuh don’t make it yurself, it’s sorta diluted some.  No matter, always glad to have yuh come ’round.
     I read somewhere or heard someone say, that “Coffee is like a journey through time:  with a single sip, I can relive distant memories and create new experiences.”  My mercy, ain’t that the truth, ‘specially now at my age.  Why I sits in my chair a-lookin’ out the window at the woods and ponder all sorts of memories.  Ol’ Kelton brought one to my mind.  I remember the first backpackin’ trip Annie and I took.  It was up in the Indian Peaks Wilderness, and that was back before passes, and reservations, and no cookin’ over campfires, and all that nonsense that has come about because folks don’t know what they’re a-doin’ in the woods.  We camped jist below Blue Lake right at timberline.  Plenty of wood there.
     We only had time to spend a couple of nights, but I recall the marmots yippin’ in the evenin’, and the rush of the stream by our camp that came out from under a snowbank.  Water, oh my, it was cold, but it shor did make good coffee.  Chilly nights even though it was summertime because of the elevation.  The area shore has changed since that hike back in 1974.  Whooeee, that’s a long time ago, amigo.  Annie still insists that I put the iron skillet in her pack.  🤠  
     I wrote the grandkids the other day in a mornin’ note I send them, that the Lord had given them another day to be writin’ their life story.  Yuh realize that we all do that, one day at a time, one hour at a time.  When we get to the end of our time here on earth, most of us will have quite a book.  Some of yuhs, could write a best seller with yur life.  All I know is that the Lord has been faithful and good to us, that I had a wonderful travelin’ pardner through most of it.  Yep, Pard, it could’ve been better, but I’ll take what the Lord has handed out and allowed.
     Ahhh, shor is mighty tasty this mornin’.  Maybe the missus will be up in a bit, an’ she’ll get the biscuits a-goin’ and some gravy.  That’s the normal Saturday breakfast.  If’n we drink the whole pot, I’ll get another one started right away.
     Bein’ tryin’ to stay away from all those liars and woke media folk, and politicians.  Yet, I like to know what’s goin’ on, but it’s hard to tell the truth or the lie.  Yuh want to believe the news, but half the time they’re a-lyin’ jist like the others.  Yuh see a liar, yuh know where they’re from–the ol’ devil himself!  Some of the stuff happenin’ is atrocious.  Injustice, pseudo-justice, mockery of the law and the truth.  Pard, some of it jist jerks my jaws.  Why I read where this one gal said that the Native Americans and blacks were the original inhabitants of this country?  Did she make it past second grade history?  “Nough of that, I’m not gonna get my gizzard riled this mornin’ as I want to be all settled for breakfast.
     Yuh be havin’ a good day, an’ a good week.  Remember, yur writin’ yur life story, so make it a goodun.  Keep lookin’ where yur a-steppin’, I don’t want no root or one of the devil’s snares trippin’ yuh up.  Ride with a smile, knowing that the good Lord is with yuh, and for mercy’s sakes, be a-checkin’ yur cinch.
     Vaya con Dios.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

Every day, you’re making choices. Every one of them either helps you or hurts you. Every friend you make, every word you speak, every dollar you spend…it’s all leading you further out one trail or another. You gotta stop staring at your nose and start watching the horizon.”

                    –John Deacon  (Conn 2)

       “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you.  I do not give to you as the world gives.  Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.”
                    –John 14:27 (NIV)
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I haven’t written anything regarding a hymn at midnight recently.  I have had several, thank the Lord.  Usually if I wake during the night there is one on my mind.  However, there was one on my mind the other night when I woke.  It’s a grand old hymn, but not old enough to be included in my book of hymns.  (By the way, if you haven’t purchased one I’ll include this little ad here.  Great little devotional, New Trails Through the Old Hymns.)  But back to the subject.  This hymn was written in 1958 by Stuart Hamblen and is very appropriate for believers in this day.
     There is a narrative in John that I want to mention first.  Jesus had told His disciples not to let their hearts worry.  We live in an age where there is terror, economic woes, racial unrest, and on I could go.  Don’t let your heart be troubled!  Then one of the disciples, Thomas, asked, “Lord, we don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way?” (14:5, NIV)  It doesn’t say this, but perhaps Jesus gave him “the look.”  You know what I mean, then slapped the side of his head in wonder.  He answers Thomas, along with the other disciples, “I am the way and the truth and the life.  No one comes to the Father except through me.  If you really knew me, you would know my Father as well.  From now on, you do know him and have seen him.” (14:6-7, NIV)  
     Philip, in an almost commanding manner, says, “Lord, show us the Father and that will be enough for us.”  Again “the look,” along with this answer, “Don’t you know me, Philip (or whomever is reading this), even after I have been among you such a long time?” (14:9, NIV)  There is so much more in this powerful chapter, but this is enough to understand that we are to trust in God.  Trust in Him, until that day He calls us home.

               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.”

     Listen, and you better get it resolved not only in your heart and mind, but also in your actions.  The troubles, the pain, the heartaches, the suffering that you have felt and endured along with all the issues in the world–they are but stepping stones upward to glory.  It’s a trail, one that leads us to heaven, and it may be rugged at times, there may be obstacles along the way, some skinned knees and some deeper wounds, but it takes us home.  And know this as well, it’s always upward.  It does not take us down to the pit, but leads us upward.  This world is not our final home so don’t become settlers–we are pilgrims.

               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,
               Remember there, will only bring a smile.

     Too many people are concerned more with their goods and possessions.  They are in the process of settling in this old world, as Lot did in Sodom.  They are temporary, get it?  By death or by rapture, you cannot take them with you.  Understand the importance of what Jesus said, “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” (Matthew 6:21, NIV)  How long have you been a Christian?  Don’t you know Him yet?  Come on “Philip.”  Why tremble here when there is something awaiting you in heaven, in the presence of Christ?
     I had not known of a third verse, but came across the following:

               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 its destined for the skies

Are you ready for that day?  Are you ready to take your flight into the heavenlies, into the place that the Lord has prepared for you?  Then get the right attitude.  Take each step with confidence.  Realize that He is there and you can trust Him on each step of the trail that’s “winding always upward.”  Don’t get caught up in the cares of this world, don’t let the things of this world take your eyes of Jesus.  Sing, if it’s only in your heart–the day is drawing closer,

               But until then, my heart will go on singing,
               Until then, with joy I’ll carry on,
               Until the day my eyes behold that city,
               Until the day God calls me home.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

Take keer of yourself, kid. Watch your cinches!”
                    –Eugene Manlove Rhodes  (The Trusty Knaves)

       “Do not deceive yourselves.  If any one of you thinks he is wise by the standards of this age, he should become a ‘fool’ so that he may become wise.”
                    –1 Corinthians 3:18 (NIV)
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               “Woe to those who are wise in their own eyes, And prudent in their own sight!”  –Isaiah 5:21 (NKJV)
               “Woe to those who are wise in their own opinion and clever in their own sight.”  –(HCSB)

     This is the fifth “woe,” a pronouncement against what we would call “secular humanism” (postmodernism can be added to it).  “Humanism is belief in humanity,” simply stated by D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones.  Man can do all things.  He can go to the moon, he can do magnificent surgeries, he can split an atom (hmm, can he put it back together?)  “It is interested solely in men and women without God.  It banishes God because it believes that human beings are sufficient in and of themselves.” (Lloyd-Jones)  My hasn’t he done a great work?  Pestilence, famine, war, creation in crisis, water shortage, and on we could go.  I like the CEV on this, very blunt, but to the point.  “You think you are clever and smart!”
     Shakespeare gives one of the best definitions and viewpoints of man:  “What a piece of work is a man, now noble in reason, how infinite in faculty, in form and moving how express and admirable.  In action how like an Angel.  In apprehension how like a god, the beauty of the world, the paragon of animals.” (Hamlet)  Yes, man was created a marvelous being, a little lower than the angels, with dignity and in the image of God.  But he threw it away, right from the start he was deceived into thinking he could be like God.  Instead of walking and trusting God he turned to self:  the cosmic humanist to the occult, the secular humanist to science.  Lloyd-Jones says this of the humanist belief, “By delving into the mysteries of the universe and its constitution you discover the scientific truth about life, and from that you proceed to work out your whole scheme of living.”  Woe!
     Man’s greatest gift is that of the mind.  The problem is that people’s minds have gone wrong, “they do not know how to use them properly” (Lloyd-Jones).  Look at your social media or the news and you can quickly see where the mind of man without God has taken him.  As Paul wrote, “Professing to be wise, they became fools…” (Romans 1:22, NKJV)  To misuse this wonderful gift of the mind is one of the most blatant sins of man; it is a blasphemous action against God.
     Given this wonderful gift, they took it and became fools.  Mark 8:36 asks a pertinent question to all, but especially the humanist.  “What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world [of knowledge and of wealth], and lose his own soul?”  Perhaps, this is the time to ask, what is your view of yourself?  Are you in need of a Savior or are you wise in your own eyes?  In the movie, “Shenandoah” we see a very humanistic prayer by the father, Charlie Anderson (played by Jimmy Stewart).  “Lord, we cleared this land.  We plowed it, sowed it, and harvested it.  We cooked the harvest.  It wouldn’t be here and we wouldn’t be eatin’ it if we hadn’t done it all ourselves.  We worked dog-boned hard for every crumb and morsel.  But we thank You just the same anyway, Lord, for this food we’re about to eat.  Amen.”  Me, I, we, or we’ll give a token “thanks” to God.  Self-confidence, self-righteousness, pride, doing what they deem right in their own eyes, self-sufficient–this is nothing but rebellion.  “Who needs God?” they flaunt.  Woe!  Paul writes, “Because the carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, nor indeed can be” (Romans 8:7, NKJV)
     Man in all his greatest inventions, construction, building magnificent monoliths of steel will weep because it cannot stand before Almighty God.  John writes, “Terrified at her torment, they will stand far off and cry:  ‘Woe!  Woe, O great city, O Babylon, city of power!  In one hour your doom has come!’  In one hour such great wealth has been brought to ruin!  With such violence the great city of Babylon will be thrown down, never to be found again.” (Revelation 18:10,16,21, NIV)  Only what God has made will last.  Who can stand before the Almighty?  Certainly not man–woe to those who think they can.

 

Echoes From the Campfire

Anger and outward elation and cursing all gushed from the same fountain of weakness.”
                    –John Deacon  (Justice Returns)

       “Set a guard over my mouth, O LORD; keep watch over the door of my lips.”
                    –Psalm 141:3 (NIV)
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               “The mouth of the righteous brings forth wisdom, But the perverse tongue will be cut out. The lips of the righteous know what is acceptable, But the mouth of the wicked what is perverse.”  –Proverbs 10:31-32 (NKJV)

     Much of Proverbs deals with wisdom.  There is much foolishness, evil, and mockery in the world in which we live, therefore wisdom is needed as never before.  However, there is more to wisdom than just the sayings.  Bob Beasley points out, “It’s not just what we say that shows forth wisdom, it’s how we say it, when we say it, where we say it, and to whom we say it.”  The Scripture reminds us that “If anyone considers himself religious and yet does not keep a tight rein on his tongue, he deceives himself and his religion is worthless.” (James 1:26, NIV)  I often cringe when I’m out in public at the terrible language that flows from the mouths of people, and even on social media, the verbiage is garbage.  Luke speaks directly to this issue, “The good person out of the good treasure of his heart produces good, and the evil person out of his evil treasure produces evil, for out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.” (6:45, ESV)  That which fills his heart will come forth from his mouth.
     The righteous man speaks properly and truthfully, his opposite, the perverted person speaks profanity, foolishness, and blasphemy.  The righteous will praise God in all he does, including what he says, the perverted will be “cut off” (or have his tongue “cut out”)  The perverted heart is warped and full of deception.  It is at war against the kingdom of God and the righteous and will do what it can to stop or mock it, whether it is a corrupt lifestyle, confusion and chaos, or false ideologies including that of twisting Scripture.  The perverted tongue can cause the righteous to “feel dirty” and in need of a spiritual bath.  We live in the world, and it dirties up (note the laver in the tabernacle), thus we need to be cleansed and being with the community of believers helps to do that.
     Righteousness, as is perversion, is an attitude, a lifestyle.  Both know what is acceptable–one purposely speaks what is evil, the other what is good.  Know this, the perverse will be cut down, “There shall, at last, be the silence of shame and confusion” (Edward Plumptre)  The righteous knows what words are acceptable to God; they know how to approach Him and how to represent Him.  The Ephesians must have had a problem with their mouth, for Paul sends them two direct messages,  “Let no corrupting talk come out of your mouths, but only such as is good for building up, as fits the occasion, that it may give grace to those who hear.” (4:29, ESV)  The NKJV translates it this way, as “is good for necessary edification.”  He then pens again in 5:4, “Let there be no filthiness nor foolish talk nor crude joking, which are out of place, but instead let there be thanksgiving.” (ESV)  Paul reminds the church at Colossae, that they must “put away…slander and obscene talk from their mouth.” (3:8, ESV)  
     One time I was with a group of boys going on a campout.  One of the kids had a loose mouth and the man in charge took out one of those little bars of soap found in motels and stuck it in his mouth with the wrapping on, not wanting to alarm the kids too badly, and left it there.  The leader forgot and the boy sat there with the bar in his mouth until the paper began to dissolve and suds began to appear.  Needless to say, he watched his words (I wonder if he watched his heart?)  Perhaps, no, we need some “spiritual soap” placed in the mouths of so many in today’s world for they cannot speak without some kind of filth spewing forth.
     A good tree will bear good fruit.  Are you watching your words, your attitude, your actions?  Are they pleasing to your Lord and Savior?  Michael Jermin said, “The righteous man speaketh that which pleaseth God and pleaseth man, and he speaks it in a pleasing manner.”