Tuesday, June 9, 2015

somewhere between here and there








The Corbin seat I ordered for my new 2007 Tiger 1050 is scheduled to be here today.  The people at Corbin were great in putting a rush on it, and shipping it so I will have it time to leave on my next trip.  But when it arrives today via Fedex Ground, it will have been in their possession over 87 hours!  To travel 430 miles, which if I had ridden to pick it up would have taken less than 7 hours each way!  Suddenly the Postal service looks great compared to their shipping times, and a break down shows some questionable wait times.  Questionable delays.  It took almost 9 hours from Watsonville to Newark, California, a distance of 63 miles-or 7 miles per hour.  What gives here?  Then from Newark to Pacoima, in the LA area, almost 40 hours, a distance of 340 miles, again about 7 mph.  Finally the last leg to Sand Diego then to me, only 18 hours!  Now I don’t wish to appear impatient, but what is going on here?  In 87 hours, almost two weeks of full time working, I could have taken a nice trip, ridden at a leisurely pace, and been home in time to get my new seat.  Or stopped along the way and picked it up. So why can Amazon ship overnight for free, yet Fedex take so long for ground?  Guess where my next order will be from?  The next truck stop I see with Fedex semis sitting I will ask, just curious of course. 
Living in Durango we were 250 miles from Albuquerque and over 450 to Denver.  Almost 200 miles to the closest freeway, and some kids had never seen an ocean or an elevator.  Yet whenever we needed anything not in stock in town,  the shipper would put it on the bus, and we would have it the next morning when the business opened.  Snow, cold, rain, sleet and hail, things that didn’t stop the Post Office from delivering didn’t stop the Trailways buses either.  I cannot remember when they didn’t arrive, so next time I will ask if they can put it on the bus to Escondido, rather than delay my shipping time with Fedex. 
A clever bumper sticker once advised “this car gets 0 miles per gallon at idle.”  Consistency when riding or travelling is one key to making time.  Given 10-15 minutes for a fuel stop, I can fill up, water a lemon tree, eat a Tootsie Roll and be rested and riding again.  Again do the math, 70 miles covered in one hour=70 mph.  70 miles covered in 75 minutes=56mph.  How many breaks did my seat take on Fedex?  And some wonder why we ride such great distances in such short time, it isn’t high speed, but consistent speed.  If you stop for 30 minutes as many like to do and talk, based on my exercise above your speed drops to 70 miles in 90 minutes = 47 mph.  Over a ten hour ride, I am 100 miles ahead, resting by the pool, and we both travelled at the same speed.  Any rider knows this, does Fedex?  Do they even care?  We got your package, now you’re gonna wait....if I had known I could have spent the weekend in Hollister.  Or LA, or any points in between.  What did you do with your weekend, I’m not sure what Fedex did with mine.
Consistency is a good thing, it builds faith, which then builds trust.  Works in any relationship, and even with God.  Too many have no respect for other’s time, and in their disrespect cause others to delay.  Fortunately God is consistent, and dependable.  Imagine if prayer time with God was like Fedex delivery, that it got hung up while waiting.  Yet we see when Martha and Mary asked Jesus to see their brother Lazarus, he delayed.  At least they thought he did, to him the timing was perfect.  Lazarus had to be in the tomb to be resurrected, you cannot save something that is alive.  Works with sin too, and we were all dead in our sin.  It took Jesus to change our lives to save us.  Without the spirit guiding us, we never would have considered Jesus, and be like others who seek false Gods, try drugs, trances, channeling or other means to find God.  God isn’t lost, we are, and he knows right where we are.  Better than Fedex tracking, he knows the shipper and the receiver, the route we need to take and why.  When it positively absolutely has to be there, He is.  So maybe in my whining my seat will be vindicated, Lazarus took 4 days in the grave, my seat took 4 days in the truck. 
So maybe there is a difference between waiting and delaying.  Jesus had Lazarus and his sisters wait, they thought he delayed and learned a lesson.  Today people make excuses for not coming to Christ.  Delaying an answer, when saying nothing is still saying no.  And in their delaying many fail and go to hell.  The most popular tool of Satan is to make you delay in your decision for Christ, and the longer the better for him, worse for you.  Those that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength.  Those that delay, or hesitate often fail.  Coulda, shoulda, and woulda is not a testimony I want to have.  I coulda trusted God, and look what happened when I didn’t.  I shoulda listened and prayed, but I didn’t.  I woulda done as God said, but-------------------. fill in the blank.  So what are you waiting for?
You could be sitting by the pool resting or hanging out gassing up?  Is there any consistency in your relationship with Christ that encourages me to want to be like you?  To know Christ?  To be saved?
Jesus is waiting, at just the right time he died for us.  Your right time could be today.  What are you waiting for?  A personal invitation?  Well here it is, do you want to be saved or not?  Why are you delaying?  What are you waiting for?  The what is really a who, a someone who is waiting for you.  Don’t delay, today was tomorrow yesterday.  Time passes, where will you spend eternity?  Time is the only finite commodity we can never get back.  Use yours wisely today, spend time with Jesus.  Hang with him like in Psalm 1.  Be blessed, not burdened.  And while others delay, you live in the security that if I die before I wake, I know the Lord my soul will take.  Blessed assurance, now what are you waiting for?  Somewhere between here and there he is waiting.  Jesus Christ, when you absolutely positively need to go to heaven.  Free shipping included.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com