Monday, October 31, 2016

one night not in Charlotte














Boone, North Carolina is more than just a beautiful mountain town.  There is no bad road leading to or from Boone if you ride a motorcycle, and even if you don’t.  To some it  is a college town, the home of Appalachian State University, to others it is a great small town to act as a get away for hiking trails, to those of us who ride the twisties one of the roads leading to “the Snake,”  more turns and less traffic than the Dragon.  And I have ridden it twice, with only one of four roads left untried.  A pleasant surprise on a cool, spring day escaping the curse of I-40.  But my next trip to Boone was to visit the Billy Graham Library, which I figured naturally to be in Boone, since that is where Billy lives and grew up.  So with careful planning and great excitement, it was off to Boone we went.
Arriving on a day where it poured, even by their standards.  We had a motel room, so we had a dry and safe place to stay, but arriving in town had us finding shelter under a gas station awning.  The convenience store adjacent to it, was a place to hang for a few minutes, and we asked where the BGL was, and  no one there had heard of it.  Surely Boone’s favorite son’s library was known, it had even been sponsored on TV.  But both clerks, and other customers all shook their head at the wet So Cal bikers, they must have thought we were nuts, and maybe we are, but I was sure someone had to know.  I mean Billy Graham, his home town.....
So after checking in, and drying off, we turned on the TV and watched the local news.  The big story was of the dangerous weather in Charlotte some 120 miles to the east.  It seems over 600 lightning bolts had hit the ground in just over an hour, we were sure glad we weren’t riding there that afternoon.  But still seeking the library, we asked the clerks, and even other guests at the hospitality gathering at the motel, surely someone would know, and someone did.  The BGL wasn’t in Boone, the reason no one would know where it was, it was and is in Charlotte, and if I had been smart and researched it better, we would have been too.  In town just in time for the 600 lightning bolts to use us as a target while riding in.  No better target in a lightning storm than a motorcycle on a highway in the rain, and in my ignorance, the Lord had used it to protect us.  I had prayed asking “Lord where is it?” and never got an answer with directions, I would have headed there.  That was the desired destination.  But his silence and the silence of others to my single request may have saved our lives.  At best it would have been a lousy ride.  But God knew, as he always does, what is best for us. and a simple detour to us, was his plan for our safety all the time.  And a reward of riding the Snake the next morning.  Maybe giving me a new insight as to why when God says no, or is quiet, it is just to get us to slow down and spend the night, seeking shelter from the storm.  In him.
That one night not in Charlotte gave me new insight to the Lord and his direction.  And how even without us being aware, he is looking out for us.  Even when we appear to know where we are going, but really are lost or misdirected, he is still guiding our paths.  But to know where to go and how to get there, we need direction.  And the best place to start is “where are you?”  The first question you ask someone when they ask for directions.  If you don’t know where you are, you have no starting point, and any direction can be wrong.  And with people, we need first to admit we are sinners.  If we don’t think we are, why would we need a savior?  The world around is enough to show of how low we have sunk, but we also have the holy spirit directing us, telling us “you need Jesus,” not an argument for Bible scholars, a denominational call for membership, or an argument to win, we all have fallen short of the glory of God, and Jesus is the way.  The way, not a way.  And until we obey the spirit, and realize we are sinners with no hope, we will not turn to Christ.  We may turn to religion, but it is not the same.  God sent his son, and then left his spirit to guide us, but we will not change until we come to know sin is wrong, and the things we are doing, the way we are living, and our belief system is wrong.  Only Jesus offers forgiveness, and is available no matter where you are, at any moment.  He was in Boone, while we were there, keeping us safe from Charlotte.  Maybe a lesson in patience too, as the old truism about not being lost as long as you have gas is true too.  We had a full tank, we still needed the spirit’s direction.
Another trip would have us returning to Boone, but after a trip to see the Billy Graham Library, in Charlotte.  A place I would give 5 stars too, a peaceful place, telling about Billy, but representing the God he served, giving Jesus all the glory.  Much like we did after seeing the lightning strikes on TV.  Up until that point he was keeping us safe, without us knowing it.  So where are you in Christ?  Who is he in your life?  A Sunday event you must go to, are you a CEO, Christmas and Easter only?  Do you believe in God, but don’t know him?  Even the start of questions, is the sign of the holy spirit calling you.  No one wakes up one morning and decides to go looking for God, the spirit is calling, and our flesh is weak.  That day we were looking for a somewhere, when someone was answering not what we wanted, but what we needed.  We smile about it now, and give thanks for my ignorance, even experienced travelers get lost, or misdirected.  Some of our best rides have been when we missed a turn, only to find a road we never knew about and were blessed.  Again, the spirit was guiding us, and Jesus knows a thing or two about being on the road.  Scripture emphasizes Jesus time on the road, born on the road, rode into Jerusalem on the road, Philip met the eunuch on the road, the two disciples met him on the road, and he fed the five thousand on the road.  He was finally crucified on the road for all passing by to see, don’t you pass by and miss him.  Lost, where are you?  Before you can ask direction, you must know where you are.  We are all on the road to somewhere, but only one road leads to heaven.  Jesus truly is the way, to heaven and to avoid the storm.  One night not in Charlotte may have revealed more about his love than any ride I have ever taken. 
When God asked Adam in the garden “where are you,” it was one of position in their relationship, for God sees everything. He knew right where Adam was, but did Adam?   Yet Adam was found hiding, he knew he was apart from God, do you?  Where are you in Christ?  It’s not too late to change the road you are on.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com