Thursday, April 18, 2019

2001-a road trip odyssey

















When asked to give directions, I can get you there, I just have trouble with the names of the streets.  Still not sure about all the names in my own neighborhood after 17 years, but it seems I always get to where I want to go.  Sometimes in an imaginative road trip.  I am definitely not a GPS guy, I can get lost without their help, and being spied upon.  And after passing the same diner for the third time following its directions, even I can see there is something wrong.  But I have taken many rides with only a destination, aka a place for the night, and turned a 200 mile ride into a 500 mile odyssey.  After making reservations in El Paso, riding from San Antonio, after seeing it, we kept going, to Tucson.  Only an 800+ mile ride on the Sprint ST, but closer to home the next day.  So we can take a longer route, and ride a road we wondered where it went.  See?  But maybe even worse than the horror of GPS, is the person who means well when giving directions, and including so much info you cannot absorb it all.  “Take the 15, get off at Little Curvy Road, not sure of the exit number, go about 1.5 miles, past the red house which is being painted blue, an old gas station used to be across the street, go four, or is it five stop signs, look for out of order sign on diner on right.  If you miss it, go back and take the y you passed, and your destination is on the right, about a half mile.  I think.”  The real version is “ get off at exit 25, go right 2.5 miles, your address is on the left.  You cannot miss it.”  Leaving El Paso was so easy.....
On one trip through Wisconsin, a detour closed the highway, but some local cars ignored it, so did I.  No big deal, but it did allow me to go through a farmer’s yard.  He waved, wonder what he thought of the motorcycle from Cali that day?  Or the time outside of KC on a 100 degree day, “if you don’t mind a gravel road, I can save you an hour.”  Gravel, on a Tiger?  Save an hour?  Show me, and we followed him.  While others sat in traffic, we sat in the pool at the motel.  But not all roads or road trips are so lucky, as in the rain one night I got off the freeway in Ohio, don’t ask me how, and ended up at a dead end in some heavy woods, in a downpour.  When a sheriff pulled up and warned me “this is a place people go into and are never heard from again.”  And guided me back to I-70.  Or the old state trooper in Indiana, who spread his map out over the trunk of his car and showed me lightly patrolled roads great for riding.  What is an extra hour on a cross country trip?  A friendly restaurant manager seeing our helmets, offers to take off the next day and guide us through Texas Hill Country, and comped the desserts!  Seems on a motorcycle even those who don’t ride see you different....like the farmer and his son eating lunch at Joy Lunch in Corydon, Indiana, who wanted to trade places, it was haying day, and please honk and wave to his wife as we pass.  The pastor and his wife in Hillsboro, Wisconsin, who tells he was to fill in for the old pastor, temporarily, and has for 35 years.  But my favorite is taking our bikes into our motel room in Monterey for the races.  Cool waking up next to an FJ100 and a Ninja 750, but yuk, the smell of gas.  But oh the memories....
With so much emphasis on going to church, we forget Jesus tells us we are the church.  Read you Bible, so much of time Jesus was on the road.  And so many things happened on the road.  From Paul’s conversion, the good Samaritan, Philip meeting the eunuch, and note Joseph and Mary were where when Jesus was born, on the road.  How did he enter Jerusalem, on the road.  Even crucified along the road.  From Genesis to Revelation you can find examples of God’s blessings on the road.  Abraham choosing which road to take.  Moses leading the Jews on a road.  Even Jonah taking a water road if you will.  All trips that someone set out on, not knowing what the day would bring, but the blessings abounding when traveling with God.  Adam and Eve, maybe the first road, walking with God, I cannot see them trampling flowers, it must have been a path.  See how many you can think of, then ask yourself, “am I on the road I am supposed to be on?”  A detour to us is not to God, how many of us are assured of the road we are on in Christ?
Jesus taught in the temple, but told his flock, “as you go, spread the gospel.”  All the time, not just among those who believe like you do.  His love extended all over the known world, and extended to a world far beyond that which we know.  Why even in heaven the roads are paved with gold, must mean we will be going somewhere when we get there.  So much for angels floating on clouds.....today as you go, follow the lead of the good shepherd, who knows the roads, knows where the dangers are, and goes ahead so we can travel in safety.  So when an El Paso comes into your life, you have the energy to go on.  And he gives us he instructions via his spirit, simple so we can get it, free so we can afford it.  No GPS can guide like the spirit, and God has no back up route, only the perfect route, with a way back when we fail to listen.  He knew, long before you did.  Or get lost in the woods.  The road you are on is more important than you think. 
So go where the blessings are, get out and live.  God’s neighborhood extends to the heavens, and to heaven.  A block away may be all he wants of you today, or maybe a time zone or two.  But know you never travel alone, for he never leaves you nor forsakes you.
Or you can bee like the woman who brought her Mercedes Benz to us, check it over for a trip up north from La Jolla.  I thought LA, San Fran, maybe Monterey, so her answer surprised me.  “Delmar.”  All seven miles of it.  From what I understand she made it...I hope you do too.  A road trip odyssey is awaiting us all in Christ Jesus, did you know the seven churches mentioned in Revelation are a postal route?  Now how important is the road in your life?
And did I mention road food?
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

working on my second million

































Somewhere, sometime in the last 18 months I went over one million miles riding on a motorcycle.  I never set out to do it, but after talking with someone who thought it would be cool to ride that much, I checked my mental files, and then adding in all the miles on press bikes, it amazed me, over one million miles!  Not I am not sure which bike, which road, or even which state I did it in, but I did it.  Amazing what you can do when you set out to just go for a ride.  I have ridden over 100 miles IN one hour twice, ridden coast to coast in under 70 hours, without thinking about it, and been cross country almost two dozen times.  48 states, Canada and Mexico.  I guess the miles actually do add up....and I will add more to them today.
But in addition to working on my second million, miles that is, oh if I only had a dollar for each mile ridden, today is a true testament to God in my life.  If you are reading this, it is my 2000th devotion written on Matthew 25 Biker.  Even more if I include those lost on my laptop and never recovered, but check it out, 2000!  Does that make me a millenial?  When God inspired me to write, I thought maybe 100, but by his spirit he still inspires me.  He showed me years ago that he is the best editor, best publisher, and best distribution man.  I have heard from readers on six continents, it is translated into Russian for use by a motorcycle ministry for street kids, and sent into and read in prisons across the US of A.  By prisoners, whose letters are my paycheck, and that always seem to arrive just when I need them.  God made it clear to me one day when I was asked to attend a conference for Christian writers.  “Can you find a better editor than me?  Publisher?”  And so I passed, and everyday I write, this is a letter written to him, emphasizing him, and giving him the preeminence.  Giving people a chance to hear the gospel in real life terms, and making them consider Jesus Christ.  It has never been about me, except my Christian testimonies, it has been designed to point all who read it to Jesus.  For over eight years I used it as the basis of pastoring a group of people living on the edge, and have seen his spirit save, change, and grow people in Christ.  What pastor could ask for anything more?
But this is also a year of change, Triumph changed their press fleet policies, no more new bikes for me.  And the owner of Dustin Arms is bringing in new management.  So I will be changing jobs, sort of speak, and at almost 65, retiring, but not slowing down, and not changing Gods.  Who would have ever thought someone from a small town in Jersey could have been so blessed?  Whose life would reveal Jesus, who would take his friend Jesus with him everywhere, and oh the places he has taken me.  I can prove the scripture that God gives you the desire of your heart, and when he is your desire, you are fulfilled.  Like I tell people, “Jesus, Theresa, and motorcycles, it just don’t get any better.” 
When I consider Jesus I think of a best friend who is always with me, but never intruding.  Who forgives me, and doesn’t condemn me.  Who is present always, but cannot be seen, except by his spirit.  Who has shown me heaven, yet sent me back to minister, and be ministered to.  Yes there is a heaven, and the only way to describe it is, “I want to go back.”  Whatever you think it to be, it is better.  And we don’t have to wait to have the things of heaven here on earth.  For wherever you are, he is with you.  Even when we turn our backs on him, he is still in front of us, for he is omnipresent, and omnipotent.  He knows us and loves us anyway.  I cannot imagine riding a few miles let alone a million without him.  So if you have the time, read about how he has changed my life.  Let him change you, as he encourages you.  Find the beauty in being forgiven, and of being loved.  I have never made a million dollars in my life, never even came close, but would never change all the miles for all the dollars.  Once your money is spent it is gone, but the memories of my rides with Jesus last forever.  I can relate to John when he wrote “if all the stories about Jesus were written, no library could hold them.”  And so I will continue to ride, write, and encourage in Jesus Christ.  I thank him for the nights of waking up and him showing me want to write, of the articles I read to inspire, and the times I sit staring at the keyboard, wondering what will I write today?  The stories I wonder “what was I writing?” minister to many, when the ones I think are the best, I find are just between God and me. So let me leave with a word of advice.
Never let anything get between you and Jesus.  Find freedom in the spirit.  Remember you can do all things through Christ who is IN you.  Forgive and love.  And please forgive my spelling.  The right hand still grips everything like a throttle.  It has always been all about Jesus, never about me.  Let him be all about you.  I hope your first million is a great as mine.  And  the second is twice as rewarding.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

ride on Sunday, closed on Monday















Saturday has always been my favorite day, well almost always.  To me it marks the end of the week, a time to sleep in and then go riding.  And for years that was how it was with me, until I went to work for a motorcycle dealer.  With the exception of super stores in SoCal, Saturday has always been the end of the week for them, closing on Sunday and Monday.  But it was the working on Saturday when all my friends were out riding, and many would stop in the shop along the way that about drove me nuts.  I was working while they were playing, how could one day in the week make such a difference?  So Saturday became my Friday, my Sunday my Saturday, but Monday would still be Monday, a six day a week work week.  But the ride on Saturday was the one thing I missed, and I could never understand being closed on Monday also.  Break something on Saturday, need some chain lube or a face shield, gotta wait till Tuesday.  Which meant no riding for those off Monday and Sunday.  Many stores still adhere to the Sunday/Monday schedule, the old gone riding message still in many shop windows.  For those of us who worshipped at the Saturday ride, ride on Sunday, closed on Monday was a reality.  Saturday should be the weekend, but then someone has to take care of us on those days....any volunteers?
So in my semi-retirement era I still like Saturday morning rides, which have a different flavor than my weekday ones.  With only one day or maybe two to ride, they must get in all the riding they can, so places like Palomar, The Rock Store, Cook’s Corner, and other meeting places are full, with riding limited, as the police know this too.  But during the week when I visit these places, no one is there, and so I pass, on both visits.  I haven’t visited the Rock Store in years, too many squids which brought the police, and years back at Alice’s one side of the road was Harleys, where just across the street was lined with sport bikes.  The two not mixing, go figure.  Two elitist groups who both ride, just the brand is different.  Both want to look cool, only one has the speed potential, along with handling.  But it is Saturday man, one day a week cannot we not agree on one thing, we all ride?  So many Saturday rides are shorter, where less traffic is found, and new roads are found, where only cars are out to get you.  I guess they need Saturday too...if only they showed us some respect.  What a wonderful world this would be....
For race fans it will always be win on Sunday, sell on Monday, for those of ride it is ride on Sunday, closed on Monday.  But everyone needs a day off, why not Tuesday or Wednesday, again any volunteers?  But there was a time when Saturday was worship day, and then Jesus came along, making Sunday the first day of the week, and the day the church would meet, since its new beginning.  Like our journey in Christ from sinner to saved, day begins in the dark and is transformed into day, as the light appears.  This weekend many who follow, or are talked into gong to church, will hear of the resurrection of Jesus.  For some the Good Friday crucifixion is Easter, but without his resurrection, his ultimate promise for us, he would have been just another casualty.  But as it is, his empty tomb on that Sunday morning began life anew for us, and the day of worship changed.  No longer in darkness, but in light, as it was early morning when they discovered the empty tomb, the sign of his promise kept.  Jesus changed all things, from meeting Nicodemus at night in secrecy, to him now buying the tomb with Joseph of Arimithea, from hiding to public view.  Jesus never hid who he was, on Easter the world will declare who he was, but do we believe the next day who he is?  Is the tomb empty on Sunday, and our lives on Monday?  Did we buy Jesus on Sunday, but close up on Monday?  Is the one day the world celebrates Jesus all the time you spend with him, all you know about him?  Like my weekday rides, I need Jesus more than on Sunday, more than meeting with those for worship.  Bike shops may close, churches do too, but Jesus never does.  How many churches will have extra staff on Monday for those to inquire, or was Sunday enough?  Where will the newly saved go for answers, wait till Tuesday, or until next Sunday? A lot can happen in one week, look at the last week of Jesus, will your church be open the next day?  Will you?  Some things cannot wait a week....but can we wait three days for him to be resurrected in our lives?
Saved on Sunday, back to work Monday.  How will you describe your first Easter with Jesus?  The devil is just waiting to pounce on the new unprotected ones, he goes after the weak, who will intervene?  You?  Me?  Or do you have enough faith in your rebirth to act?  Jesus asked his disciples “couldn’t you stay awake just one more hour?”  Can we? It may surprise the church community, but many are saved and the gospel goes forth outside the four walls, Jesus said “as you go among the people,”  are you?  Is your heart as open the day after as it is on Easter?  If not, why?  What part of Jesus are you at odds with?  Or have you found that any day to ride is better than no day to ride?  And any time with Jesus is better than just an hour once week, or year?  The spirit is willing, the flesh is weak, do you approach Jesus the same way you do riding?  Easter happens every day in the day of a true believer, a day to celebrate being resurrected, just like Jesus was.  Take some time today and ponder who he is, ask him along on your ride, a broken bike may have to wait until Tuesday, a broken life doesn’t have to wait for next week.  We have a lot of riding and living to do in between.  Saturday may mark a new weekend, but Sunday can mark a new life in Christ.  As for me, any day that ends in Y is a good day to ride, and to know Jesus. 
Happy Resurrection Day, and the days after too.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com