Thursday, June 8, 2017

in the midst of a storm-that magic moment



















I’m not sure who or when Classic Music was named.  We were too busy listening to it to think to the future, the future was right now, right where we happened to be at that moment.  The early seventies brought us Oldies, from the 50’s, even WCBS-FM identified itself as an Oldies Station.  We went to see band like The Four Seasons, who were the house band at Frank Coppola’s Garage Room, Jay and the Americans, what a voice Jay Black had.  I cannot count how many Beach Boy concerts I have been too, but one thing all these groups had in common, I saw them after they had been stars, and had faded away. In an ever changing music world where talent didn’t matter, just sell records, they had survived, even though on life support.  Today we call them Classic, and entire stations are devoted to them.  And as they are all in their seventies if still alive, it is the music I remember, but seeing them live brings life to it, and them. 
Union Catholic High School had The Who, The Association, and Iron Butterfly in their high school gym.  I saw the drum solo  In- a- Gadda-Da-Vida live!  For $3.50 because I wasn’t a student there.  If you never heard Chick Corea and Return to Forever, I saw them in a college coffee shop jamming. Where Stanly Clarke gave a session on how to play the Fender bass.  But one night will always stand out, in a blizzard at Seton Hall University, where only about 30 of us nuts enough to be out in the weather saw The Byrds.  Post David Crosby, but still with McGuinn and Skip Batten, they were scheduled to play in an old auditorium that held a few hundred, and was empty due to the storm.  But played they did anyway, really a jam session for a couple of hours, intermixing with the audience, playing requests, jamming alone, and then others joining in.  What to them may have been a paid rehearsal, contract date to be fulfilled, to us was maybe the best concert ever.  And from Alice Cooper to a new Band called The Eagles, to Peter Frampton, to ELP, YES, and others, I had seen some pretty good bands, back before they obtained Classic status.  I may be old, but I saw them when they were new.  But that one night I will always remember, even putting a little leg kick in Chestnut Mare for me, by request.  When was the last time you saw any such band in such a venue?  A drummer sitting on the edge of the stage, drumming on the wooden stage floor?  Acoustic guitars without electronic boost?  And voices sans mics....in the midst of a storm?
It seems only the faithful and devoted or the crazy showed up that night.  To some that might have been considered righteous, showing up in faith, for later we learned the show had been cancelled, from the radio.  But I was there, the band was there and played.  Such faith, such music.  Such was Abraham, as he was credited as being righteous and faithful because he trusted God.  We don’t know how many events between God and Abraham took place where Abraham was faithful, only those recorded in scripture.  Was it when God told him to go?  When he promised him to have infinite descendants?  Was it when being told to sacrifice Isaac?  Was it when he put Isaac on the altar, about to plunge the knife into his own son?  Was it when he believed God’s promise of him?  Here we focus all our attention on Abraham, and can go crazy trying to emulate his faith.  How many times did your mother say “why can’t you be more like so and so?”  How many times do we wish to have faith like Abraham?  But are you willing to go to the lengths he did to believe?  Is it your faith, the promise, or the one who will deliver the promise?  Is it faith in Abraham, God, or ourselves? 
if Abraham had only looked at the world, his difficulties, or his own selfishness, his decisions would have been much different.  Go to Sodom, by pass the altar, hide Isaac, or even quit trying to have him.  But he looked to God, where he saw his deliverer, not his problems.  Last night a lady called telling me how God answered her prayers.  Bragging on the power of prayer, not fully knowing it was the one who answered that gave prayer the power.  That it is the spirit who she called out to and answered.  It was not time to correct her but to encourage her more in Jesus, from whom all blessings flow. 
How many instances has God given you to be counted as faithful and righteous?  Abraham was excited about a promised son to come, how excited are we about the son who has already come?  Can we cease from just asking God and thanking him, changing our relationship as we see his promises fulfilled fully in Christ?  Can we dare to let that first act of faith that led us to Jesus become part of our daily routine?  Can we called faithful because we just trust Jesus?  Will we be found righteous not by our church friends, but by God in heaven because we are faithful to him?  Abraham believed and his actions proved it.  What do your actions prove about Jesus?  Your lack of faith?
Today many classic Christians fill pews, they have been saved so long their relationship has just becom a ritual, another concert date on the calendar.  One night in a blizzard, The Byrds showed up because of a contractual agreement.  The rest of us showed us to hear the music.  We both showed devotion, which one showed faith?  We expected them to show, I wonder if what they expected?  In the end, it was a night to remember, a personal show with music from the heart, playing requests.  Sounds like a good night with God, where he shows up and we don’t know what to expect, he makes it personal, and hears our prayers and answers them.  A show like none other, playing right now, in hearts everywhere.  That’s love, that’s faithfulness on his part.  His righteousness, his sending his son while we were yet sinners.  Saving us a seat up front, and meeting the band.  All on a winter night on a dead quiet college campus, on an old stage.  What a venue.  Not what we expected, but so much more.  That’s faithfulness, letting God give us so much more than we expect.  Letting Jesus rule in our hearts.  And then telling others what he has done.  Just think, your act of faith may point someone to the one who can answer!  What an encore that will be!  All because you trusted God....you may have been at Woodstock, I was at Seton Hall.  Like Jesus, there is nothing like being there.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com