Tuesday, May 3, 2016

in like a lion, out with the lamb















As I sit here today, it is already the third of May, 4 months have passed, and a third of 2016 is over.  Where have I been?  Sometimes I feel like I am on pause, only the clock still ticks, other times I am still at half time and the second half has begun.  Maybe it is true that as you get older time goes by faster, but I think really time stays constant, it is us that slows down.  Where once 24 hours filled a day, my clock still shows 60 minutes per hour and 24 hours per day, I’m on hour 22 and wondering where the other two went.  But with less stress, and as I look at old people, I’m not at 62, I see how in a few years I will really be slow, so enjoy every day as I can.  My main mode of travel is still two wheels with motor included, but planning for our next long trip, I broke it up into 200-300 mile days, not many as compared to the 500-1000 I used to do.  But now I see more, stop more often as more things interest me, and plan a direction rather than a destination.  This year will be east by northeast, and a view of middle America, as opposed to more of California, again.  Freeways be damned, it’s back roads, old highways, highways referred to by name by locals as opposed to by number on a map, and where you actually meet the people along the way, engaging in a conversation that is more than at the counter“next.”  Burning a tank or two of gas, at 200 miles per tank, gas stops will be infrequent, potty stops won’t.  I hope to get the most of every day on the trip, but also the ones leading up to it.  At one time it was all about the ride, the miles, now the ride has expanded to places, meals, old museums, meeting people more, and as the miles accumulate, the memories do too, but at a speed my brain can handle better.  Not as fast, not yet slow, maybe less slow is the best term for it.  And on two wheels the ride continues...
When James Taylor sang of “10 miles behind me, with 10,000 more to go,” some see a long road ahead to their destination.  I see the ride.  America is still out there, even if you aren’t, and waiting to brag on itself, to show just how much God shed his grace on it.  And on thee, by exploring it.  And I have seen a waning grace, not based on God’s grace, but on our grace, for we neglect God more and more everyday.  Where once we did all things based on him, today we try to fit him into our schedule, and we do a pretty good job of it, until something better comes along.  Then it is all about us first, maybe him second, and all of us have been there, sadly I can say I have too, been there, done that, have the t-shirt.  But as I grow in Christ, the t-shirts mean less, and the times I missed with God seem more important.  You cannot go back, so go ahead with him, and enjoy the ride more.  We come into life as a lion, full of sin, whoever taught a baby to say “mine” or to cry when it doesn’t get its way, I know some adults like that, and when confronted with the gospel of Jesus Christ, give our lives to the lamb.  We come in like a lion, but God gives us the choice to go out with the lamb, to leave on an eternal ride in heaven.  Yet many still choose to live like hell, and go there.  Shedding themselves of God’s grace, but not his mercy.  For the key ingredient to gain mercy is that you have to screw up first.  So all of us are eligible.  And so I look forward to seeing God’s grace he shed upon America....the time flying up to the trip, I hope slowing down once I get there.
Today is a wonderful gift of God, enjoy it fully for what God has provided in it.  As many worship the great creations of man, cars, buildings, houses, monuments, and the such, others worship God’s creations such as mountains, beaches, deserts, and the places he put his hand to, yet end up worshipping the work of his hand rather than the hands that made them.  Both close, but yet miss.  As when  you seek Jesus first, all things will be added unto you.  And it will always come down to the people you meet at these places that give them life, that make them accessible, who can relate the testimonies of days passed, and make it more personal.  A few years back we stopped at Mount Rushmore, a must see for all.  A wonderful man created sight, a National Park worthy of its title, but distant just the same.  But when we met Nick Clifford, who had actually worked on the monument, it became personal.  He was history, he had been there.  In his book “Mount Rushmore Carver,” we got background information, learned about the history from one who made it, and saw how things were, not the movie version.  We talked with him, and heard his tales.  His story, history.  It was like being there, and maybe gives more insight into my life than I realized.  We met the man face to face in the book, the man who wrote it.  Like my life in Christ.  Face to face, I know the author personally.
I choose to be where the action is, to live the life.  Visiting some friends who have a lovely home, it was our testimonies of God’s blessings that filled it, we rather be in the picture than looking at it.  To be part of it, rather than hear about it.  I want everything from God I can get, blessings we pray for, but also found that the hardships go along with the ride.  And bring us closer to him, for all things, just not our plans, but his work together for us.  I want the telling of the ride to be as exciting as the ride itself, so I never want the ride to end.  Even if I ride it going less slow, I see more as I slow down, and the destinations are closer, as each day, each mile, each ride is more valuable.  Our rides start with us wanting to get on the road, the day cannot arrive too soon, we are bears, or lions in our attitudes, but as the ride continues we mellow out, we become lambs.  And such is my relationship with Jesus.  As I get closer, the me part wears off, and he grows more and more in me, becoming the focal part of my days.  Some concentrate so much on the beginning and the end they forget we will spend most of our days in the middle.  The in between times, they hurry up and wait, now I just wait.  As I go....
Each day we are closer to heaven than the day before.  Today was tomorrow yesterday.  But Jesus is still the same.  He never hurries, yet is never late.  He never lags behind, it is us who become impatient.  On our set of rules, we seldom are happy, in the spirit we are blessed all the time.  So even though I may have travelled that 10,000 miles, and may have only 10 more to go, I want to get the most from every mile I have left.  To enjoy the ride with Jesus, with him, not just having him along.  There is a difference.  For when we go out with the lamb, it all becomes worth it.  For cars get old and rust, buildings get old and are razed, roads will come and go.  But the Lamb of God will always remain.  He was the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, who became the Lamb of God so we can have a relationship with the Father in heaven.  Guided by his spirit until he returns.  But until then, continue the ride.  Time may pass, be a part of it.  You will meet people who will bless your life, get out and be that blessing to others.  Don’t just watch the documentary on TV, be in it.  Be in Christ, walk in the spirit, and get all life has to offer.  Memorial Day is coming soon, the opening day to summer, be there and ready for it.  But be there, here and now too. 
When asked “where has the time gone?” be ready with the stories of Jesus that filled yours.  People need to hear them, we need to make them.  For by our testimony, and the blood of the lamb, we are saved.  Says so right in the Bible.  Must be true.  Jesus did his part, are you doing yours? 
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com