Friday, November 4, 2016

47 AW-after Woodstock
















If you were a teen in 1969 and visited the Aquarian Arts Festival, aka Woodstock, you know it made an impact on our lives.  The late sixties were turbulent, with war protests, peace marches that were anything but peaceful, and a silent majority awakening over a loud and angry generation.  Woodstock was many things, among them a concert of music, that turned into a drugfest, and left its mark physically, philosophically, and emotionally on history.  I was too young for Woodstock, but in 1973 bought my ticket for Summer Jam-The Dead,The Band, and The Allman Brothers in Watkins Glen.  With an atmosphere that was overwhelming, scary, dangerous, and anything but festive.  Like putting 10 pounds of sand in a five pound bag, something has to give, riding to and through Watkins Glen left us with the impression we rather ride than fight the crowds.  We feared for our bikes, our safety, and our sanity, of course it rained, and hungry and tired we sought a solution to both hunger and shelter.  No food anywhere, it after midnight when we arrived, so we kept going, there just has to be a place of rest somewhere.  And for a few short minutes we found refuge on the front porch of a tourist cabin, in a the thicket of woods.  Trying to destress, we had ridden over 300 miles after work to get there, in the rain, and the traffic was horrible.  Two lane roads that had become parking lots, and even when we stopped to help a fellow BMW rider fix his flat, as we sat and rested before he reinstalled it back on the bike, a car cut through where we were sitting, almost hitting us with no concern but for themselves, and running over his wheel, bending it into a V shape, damaged and useless. Both him and his wheel.   If this was the summer of love revisited, we wanted nothing of it, and decided to push on, sleeping after being chased off the front porch we had found temporary shelter on.
Now I am not a deadhead, or even been to a Grateful Dead concert, but I have seen the Grateful Dead.  While resting on the porch, a helicopter landed, and the band got out, we exchanged hellos as they walked past and we were escorted from the cabin, which was reserved for them.  I came, I saw, and I was conquered.  And swore no event was worth the ride, the rain, or the hassles of going to....until October last.  The year 47AW, after Woodstock brought cars and motorcycles to Pismo Beach, The Race of Gentlemen, and we attended.  Volunteering to work the ticket booth, we soon took it over and helped run it, in a pouring down rain, that seemed would never end.  Arriving early for our 8 am start, the rain kept the course closed and we opened after 11, three hours late. Yet over 12,000 people attended after waiting in the rain, standing and cold, Californians don’t own umbrellas, and then onto a race shortened day, from two days to only a few hours.  The course flooded, the tide washed it away and left a lagoon, and the stands were unusable.  But the weather didn’t dampen the racers, or any attending, we all had fun, and I can say I was there, I have the pictures and the shirts to prove it.  And I cannot wait for next year if they can pull it off, one delay was for the State Parks Commission to check the beach for sand crabs and sea turtles, who were smarter than the state and found safety elsewhere.  Only in California...
But despite the rain, the mud, the over flowing parking lot, and having to wait hours only to be canceled, we only saw one jerk in the crowd, all others were excited and happy to attend, they wanted to see the race, the sights and smells, and be a part of the day.  And we all were, maybe not quite the crowd of Woodstock, not the drugs or free love atmosphere, but a group of people who showed up despite the conditions, and we all had a real good time.  And will be back....
How many of us would stand all day to get a glimpse of Jesus?  How many would meet secretly under threat of persecution or death to have church?  How many complain “it’s too hot, or it’s too cold,”  “someone is in my seat,” or complain about the music?  Yet brag about what great Christians they are, and how they sacrificed a morning for God.  How important is your new dress, showing off a new car, or bragging about what you have done, that you would put it ahead of Jesus and worshipping him?  Yet our church of today is one based on convenience, from starting times to what programs, procedures, processes, and things can be done for me, all in the name of Christ.  How many of us would risk death as some do in North Korea, China, India, and many countries throughout the world to have church?  Would you meet secretly as the apostles many times had to for fear of retribution, just for being a Christian, and claiming Jesus as Lord?  Would you let the spirit guide you and your pastor, who having no Bible is entrusted with one page from Acts, and for over twenty years is the only Bible he has to preach from, and still hasn’t gone as far as using both sides?  Or do you discuss publicly how the King James is the only book, knowing the word, just not having it in you?  Yet fellow Christians around the world are subject to persecution we cannot imagine, yet we complain the loudest. 
47 years after Woodstock have we learned anything about our desires for God?  What makes thousands willing to stand in the mud for days to hear music, or thousands in the rain and wind to watch cars and motorcycles race?  If we can put ourselves out for our desires, why can’t we do the same for God’s desires?  God’s will, his desire is for us to  know Jesus.  They talk of love at Woodstock, love of racing, but do we talk of love for God?  Better yet do we show it?  Do we have the supernatural love, agape that God has for us for others?  God’s love is simple, a commitment of will to cherish and uphold another person.  It is a decision you make to treat another person with concern and care, thoughtfulness and to work for their best interests.  And this love is not difficult if we are aware of how much he loved us.  Sending Jesus, redeeming and forgiving us when we were unlovable.  And once you are aware of God’s love, this supernatural quality called love is easy. 
The Race of Gentlemen lost money this year, but it was more than the money that may keep them away.  California’s laws, rules, fees and taxes are unending, and so demanding it is easier to look elsewhere or quit altogether.  Don’t give up on Jesus the same way, step out of legalism and into the spirit, let his love guide your decisions, putting everyone else above you and your needs.  Share an umbrella in the rain, give up a parking place for someone else, let a person with one item get in front of your basket of goodies.  I learned all about crowds at Watkins Glen and never went back, I saw a different crowd at Pismo for TROG, I hope they come back.  I was part of that crowd, I hope to be again.  Today you will have the chance to share Jesus with someone, as St. Francis of Assisi advised, “preach the word daily, and if needed use words.”  Worked at TROG, if car and bike guys can get it, why can’t we as a church? 
It has been said of the sixties and Woodstock if you remember them you probably weren’t there.  Don’t let it be said of your walk with Jesus. Remember the rain falls on both the just and the unjust, 47 years after Woodstock are we be able to tell the difference?  Can you?
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com