Wednesday, August 29, 2018

worth the price of no admission

















In our area car shows are on the decline.  It seems to me that why should a collector pay to show off his pride and joy, no matter how the proceeds benefit someone, when they could just as easily write the check?  So cruise nights and drive in for coffee or whatever are abounding everywhere.  Where the owners and followers of their particular brand can meet and bench race for the price of a latte.  Hmmm...maybe it might be cheaper to pay the entry fee.  But while up at Monterey Car Week a few years back, I found myself within earshot and eye sight of many incredible cars, only to be far enough away to not see them properly.  I guess if I had a highly prized collectible, I’d keep me away too, but I found a new source of cars on display, with no entry fee, and where I could browse and look as much as I wanted.  Parked along the streets of Carmel, and in the parking lots, were so many collector and cool cars parked, why pay the fee to see trailer queens?  I saw cool cars being used as designed, being driven, some not perfect, some needing a bath, but driven, just like the cars we park in our garages or in the driveways.  Seen in real life just as we know them, not behind a barrier where only the elite can enjoy them.  So I now I cruise the parking lots, walk the streets beyond the shows, and see many interesting cars not invited, or not up to a standard to be displayed.  A free car show, where they can be seen in the harsh environment they and us are forced to live and drive in.  And many times, see more of life, and many memories resurrected when viewing them.
You don’t need to be high end like at Monterey either.  Or even at a car gathering event.  I have seen Ferrari’s driven by housewives in shopping center lots, trying to fit her purchases into the front seat.  Porsches with parking lot permits on the windows, or high school clubs.  How many Mercedes Benz did we have to clean out after service, or remove all the coffee cups or burger wrappers when doing interior work?  Range Rovers filled with hockey gear, and sports equipment, needing some tlc, not neglected, just used as designed.  Sometimes being able to see the cars in their real life environment makes them more real, and attainable.  Never been a fan of trailer queens, bikes are for riding, cars for driving.  Collectors withstanding.  There is a show out there worth the price of no admission.....
Years ago while working at a Mercedes Benz dealer in La Jolla, I parked my Bonneville on the street.  I was amazed at how many would just drop in and look me up, just to share a memory of the one they had.  From doctors to their wives, even with grandkids in tow, they all had a story to share, maybe that is why my street shows are so appealing, they take me back, and I marvel at the things remembered.  If only I had a dollar for all the times I heard, “it never ran right, leaked oil, couldn’t be driven at night, and would leave me stranded.  But I loved that bike, I wish I had never sold it.”  Sometimes the price of admission is paid in more than a wallet can hold.
Fame and fortune have a price many times too much to pay.  I had a friend who was a millionaire, and when we went out to eat lunch, he was always being hit on with great investments for him.  Everyone knew my Dad in Scotch Plains, and it was rare if we went out and someone didn’t come over and talk to him.  Flattering, but sometimes we just want to eat our burgers alone.  In peace.  I once ministered with a man who was always upset with me because I wasn’t a regular church goer, at least not enough in his eyes.  I write five times a week, teach and pastor on Tuesday, and whatever else comes long during the week.  I spent more time with just me and Jesus then he did, his life was all about the church and Jesus.  Mine Jesus, safe and content knowing we are the church.  So many times we feel we must get on a prayer chain, a group feed, or attend a Bible study and express our needs so they can be prayed for.  Neglecting Jesus, forgetting he is right with us.  Setting the example himself, that when tired, and overwhelmed by the needs of others, didn’t go into the sanctuary, but got away one on one with his Father.  Some seek a momentary respite from the pain of life, Jesus went to his father and dealt with the source of the problem.  I am not saying do not go to church, but that Jesus is always available, and the one on one times are the best.  No TV, no i-interrruptions, no one to gossip to or with, no faux face to put on.  Just you and Jesus.  Private and personal.  Yet we approach God many times as if he were that collector car and is off limits, perfect and unblemished, yet in Jesus we see where he bore the bruises, the beatings, and the pain for us.  Some only have a Christian education, what they need is a Christian experience.  They need Jesus, not religion, a specialist not a GP.  Yet so many surround themselves with the barrier tape of religion, never letting Jesus in, going down to the altar, but leaving unaltered.  Not God’s plan for redemption...resurrection, or restoration.
Jesus spent most of his ministry on the road.  Read your Bible, don’t study it, read about Jesus.  His life was on the road, from birth to death.  Where the miracles occurred, where the people were.  A building can only hold so many, and only a few can pay the price of admission.  So Jesus went out to them.  Am I making my point, or rather should I ask, which one?  Jesus is priceless, but he paid the price for us.
So after my Monterey parking lot experience, I left with many memories of the cars not on display, but that really were.  Heading down SR 25 south of Hollister, a great riding road and sports car road, between the sweeping curves, I saw one, then two, then counted seven Bugatti Veyrons, each one worth well over a million dollars and guaranteed to go over 250 mph.  And it hit me, these guys got it. They drove their cars, they experienced their cars, and enjoyed their cars.  As designed.  Maybe a little better off financially than most of us, but with the same attitude.  Ride them don’t hide them.  Making memories instead of listening to others.  Is your life in Christ so fulfilling, are you out living him, or a 90 minute a week commitment to go to church? 
We are the church, we are to be out among the world but not of it.  Jesus spent most of his ministry on the road, driven by the love of others.  What drives you is more important than what you drive.  Our lives are always on display.  What does yours say about Jesus?  Church attendance and that of car shows may be falling, but small groups, one on one with Jesus is growing.  The real church, us.  The real head of it, Jesus.  With no collection plate passed.  Where he is available to all 24/7.  Where we can show his love to others and minister in his name.  Maybe it should come as no surprise why my bikes have so many miles on them, they didn’t get them parked in a lot.  A lesson learned one afternoon in Monterey....Veyrons optional.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com