Friday, March 28, 2014

one quick trip accross the reservation will make you a believer













I have had a bad head cold the last two days, preventing me from participating in the human race.  Sneezing, coughing, and generally miserable, I have found refuge in my garage archives, where I keep my old magazines.  Car and motorcycle mags going back to the late 1960’s, over 9000 of them, I have a a supply to keep me going for months if needed.  But yesterday was Road and Track day, from 1969-1975.  An age when I was young, still trying to figure my way through life, and enamored by such names as Ferrari, Lamborghini, and Jaguar.  When according to R&T, there were foreign cars, and other, and I was living in the land that produced the others.  So needless to say, it had a great influence on my car dreaming, and also on my car buying.  So when given the chance, I bought my Dad’s 1969 BMW 1600 from him, only 3 years old, it was in great shape.  I paid $1900 for it, cash from my paper route and summer jobs, exactly what the dealer was going to give him in trade against his new 1972 2002.  I was cool, at least among those who knew foreign cars, but in a world of SS396 Chevelles, Boss Mustangs, Olds 442’s, and AMC Javelins, I was the outsider.  My engine was only 1600cc, or 96 cubic inches-no way I could ever compete against 401, 396, or even 327 small block Chevies.  So at the drag strip, our high school parking lot was just over a 1/4 mile long, with a circle at the start, I was not even in the running.  And each day one of the guys had his turn buying a gallon of bleach, and we did bleach burnouts!  And they eyed me with suspicion-small car, non-American, non muscle.  A BMW, British what?, as no one outside of R&T readers knew what a BMW was, MG’s were the most popular sports car, from England, and VW Beetles the most popular import.  No one drove Toyotas, Datsuns, or anything Japanese, unless it was a motorcycle.  I was a stranger in a strange land, which just happened to be my homeland.  But one afternoon, things were to change....
Few people talked handling in the muscle car era, it was 0-60 and 1/4 mile times that counted, all in a straight line.  But BMW’s handled, and we had just the road to prove it on-Johnson Drive.  A road with 13 bumps in it, that had many scary stories attributed to it, and that emptied out into the Watchung Reservation, parks in the woods for the locals.  After chasing a Corvette across Johnson Drive, and having to slow for him in the corners, we hit the reservation-and I blew past him approaching the first corner.  Scaring him, and myself, as the road was shorter than the distance needed to pass, he braked, I passed, and lost him within a couple of turns, and waited for him at the first round about.  And then did it again, and again, until it was not fun anymore.  And when we stopped and talked, suddenly he was interested in my little engined BMW, that had eaten him alive.  Never again would he take a sucker bet against one-and he warned the others about my car.  Not what he had expected, not what he had wanted, and not what he had hoped for, he now was a believer.  Although true there is no substitute for cubic inches, handling in the curves can overcome speed in the straights, if you have enough turns to help you.
A few memories resurrected by the hours spent in the garage in the magazines.  Reminding me of a day when cars were affordable, sort of, and no one knew of or was impressed by a BMW.  Boy have things changed, as today BMW is luxury, and muscle cars from that era bring 6 figures, the price of your memories being the ceiling of your credit limit.  And I find it funny, not ha ha, but weird how some remember those days, especially after reading about them when they were new.  The good old days were once young, like we all were, only time has faded the memories, or custom tuned them to protect our pride, sometimes at the price of our integrity.  The word remember is found 148 times in the King James Bible, maybe an indicator of how we look back, but need to be reminded of what we are looking back at.  It seems that through out time, we forget, or alter our stories, always to make ourselves look better.  But God loves us anyway, and He knows the real story, which is often times less believable than the truth.  And so it was some 40-50 years after Jesus was crucified, that many had forgotten Him, but the few that did had a hard time sharing.  And of course doubting, but God has integrity, and although we change-our minds, morals, and ideas, He never does.  He is no fool, and although we have many versions of the Bible today, with the exception of a few , Message and the Jehovah Witness Bible, and the Mormon version, they are accurate to God’s word.  He isn’t stupid, and we find those who rewrite His word for their own advantage, blaspheme God and condemn themselves.  When first written and read, many were still alive from the time it happened, and would have been able to dispute it, but didn’t. The Torah, or books of the law were only a few thousand years old at the time, and were honored, read, and memorized.  No printing presses, or Internet to file them, so God wrote them on the hearts of men, and still does today.  And why after many years, so many seasoned believers can recite certain verses that are precious.  And can carry on conversations quoting the Bible with others.  He has written them on the hearts of believers so we can always have them with us, ready to do battle when needed, or correct when misquoted.  Like the old R&T’s I read, they reflect how it was, not how it is interpreted today. 
Today a 396 cubic inch engine seems overkill, but in 1969 it was midsized.  Filling up your car for $2.00 was not a bargain then, but a dream now.  My $1900 BMW is worth 10 times that today, so taken in perspective, things have changed.  But not Jesus.  Or His words.  They remain the same, so we don’t have to relate them to something else.  Just to Him.  Where we find the truth has stood the test of time, and editors, and He still saves today, as He did 2000 years ago.  And sadly where some still try to change His words, His message, and try to manipulate the souls of men for their own benefit.  Maybe some things don’t change with time.
So before you get suckered into a curve by some unknown, know what you are driving.  Know in who you believe, and follow Him, not some new trend.  Don’t believe it just because you have never seen it.  Some lives are built for a straight line existence, others thrive in the curves.  Know your enemy, but know Jesus first.  Keep Him between you and danger, and you won’t get suckered.  Fall back on who you know when a new philosophy comes along.  Test the spirit as we are told in 1John, and anyone who denies the deity of Jesus is lying-and many do, avoid them.
The BMW of 1969 in no way compares with the ones of 2014.  Nor does the Chevy or the Ford.  Times change, laws change, and gas gets more expensive.  Our memories fail, and legend becomes truth at the expense of integrity.  Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever-a model you don’t need to change every year.  Lee Iacocca used to tell us “if you can find a better car, buy it,” I have found the best in Jesus.  What’s in your garage may tell us what is in your heart.  More than old magazines, old memories, and entertainment for a sick day, all things point to Christ-see you in the curves-there is a long straightaway ahead-enjoy the ride.  It is not always the size of the engine, but the size of the heart that drives it.  Lessons learned one afternoon in the reservation will make you a believer. 
love with compassion,
Mike
mattehw25biker.blogspot.com