Friday, January 8, 2016

the race

















Did you know that on the first week in February the International 500 Mile Snowmobile will take place?  For the 48th time!  Where on snow and ice racers will travel at speeds exceeding 100 mph in near zero degree weather?  Now that’s hard core....that’s racing.  Also next year The Race of Gentlemen will offer a west coast venue at Pismo Beach?  You can be assured I will be there, as vintage cars from 1932-45, and pre-1945 motorcycles race a 1/8 mile on the sand-for fun and bragging rights.  And the right coast version has moved to June in Wildwood, New Jersey.  Whoever said nothing good comes out of Jersey?  Check both events out on the internet.  It seems that within the heart of man, whenever two or more are gathered, they want to race.  Whether it is comparing 401k’s, size of house, trophy wives, or even race cars, the competition begins.  We want to win, or at least to compete and not lose.  I was never much of a racer, I ride for fun, but one afternoon from Golden to New Madrid, New Mexico I answered, or more precisely the dare.  And I found in me a competitive spirit I thought I had lost...
Being the new kid in town, I had moved to Albuquerque only 8 months before, I was selling motorcycles at Motorsport, BMW, Suzuki, and Triumph.  I owned a 1974 R90S, that had been tuned by a friend at Lindner’s shop in Connecticut before I left, and it ran fast.  The sound through the Dunstall pipes was like the sirens sweetly singing, to anyone who heard them.  And on that fateful day, I would need all the horsepower, speed, courage on the edge of stupidity, and luck I could muster.  On Highway 14, the road to the Crest, a little tavern that was the town of Golden sits, and meeting a braggart there, with his all girl fan club tested me.  He carried in his white Chevy van Ron Pierce’s #4 Daytona racer Yamaha 350.  Not your basic bike, the one that had raced at Daytona, when Ron was a national #4 racer.  It was geared to do over 140mph, and he liked to go out and race it against others, who didn’t know what the bike was.  He kept pushing me, and I refused, until my pride was so insulted it couldn’t back down, and we raced.  Nothing formal, just a seven mile race on the road between Golden and New Madrid, now just Madrid as seen in the biker movie Wild Hogs.  30 years before.  Non-yuppie then.  And the race was on...
According to road tests at the time,  the BMW was geared for 124-fast at the time.  He took off, and ran faster for a while, until the curves.  Who said BMW’s don’t handle?  And after awhile I passed him, in one set of curves, going over 100 mph.  He backed off,  I slid sideways, but kept it up and passed him.  By the time he got to the end, I was parked in front of the mine shaft museum with my helmet off.  Maybe it is the rider after all, it was that day.  He told me “that bike is fast, but you’re nuts passing me the way you did and sliding.”  And so a sedate ride back followed, and when the girls ran to meet him, ready to celebrate, I let him lead, he muttered how I had won, threw the bike in his van, and left with his cheerleaders in tow.  Maybe second place isn’t so bad. But by the next morning the word was on the street, and guys I never heard of were coming into the shop to meet me.  Some to challenge me.  Some to see the bike.  It seems he was a local hero or legend, at least in his own mind, and I had beat him.  And now others wanted to see me race.  And I never did.  For it had scared me pretty good too, and now you know.  I had won the race, the only race I would ever race, and retired undefeated.  1-0.
Another time 2000 years ago, two men met, and one challenged the other.  Nicodemus, aka Nick at Night, had met with Jesus.  Both powerful and influential men, Nicky had heard of Jesus, and wanted to meet him.  Nicky was a Pharisee, head of the Sanhedrin, and a wealthy and powerful man.  If nothing else but reputation he deserved heaven.  He kept all the Mosaic laws, performed his priestly duties, and was well loved and respected.  His opening line acknowledged Jesus as coming from God, as no one could do the things he did if not from God.  Things no man had ever done before-even the mighty Pharisees.  But Jesus told him “you must be born again.”  He cut right to the chase, not mixing words.  You see without a spiritual change, you cannot enter heaven a spiritual place.  You must be born of the spirit, a new birth, that Nicky like many of us try translate into physical terms.  Living in a physical world that is only natural, what we need is super natural.  We need the spirit to point us to Jesus to be saved.
You see Nicodemus had won all the races of the human race.  Accolades befell him no matter his peer group.  He was rich, powerful, and religious.  All the things of success in the world, quite the opposite of Jesus who was poor, but powerful in love, and anything but religious.  In fact, the Pharisees were his enemies.  And Nicky was one, but his heart was about to change.  He was about to be a new creation in Christ, born again in the spirit, born of an incorruptible seed, and become a new hope, passing from death unto life.  And he left pondering the words of Jesus, as we do, until 20 chapters later in John, where he risks everything calling for the body of Jesus after his crucifixion.  He called on Jesus after his death, and we can too.  For Jesus has been resurrected just as he said he would be, and is alive, calling to us to be born again.  By the spirit so we can defeat death and live in heaven with him.  Jesus fulfilled an emptiness in Nicky that he hadn’t counted on, his life and style still left him empty, only Jesus could fulfill the God shaped vacuum in his life, and ours.  Today may be the first time you encounter Jesus, but someday the spirit will call and ask you “who is Jesus?”  Some say teacher, or rabbi, great teacher.  But only the spirit reveals his deity, and when you see that, you can repent and be born again.  No matter where, how, or what you are.  No matter the race or machine, you can be a winner.  And retire one with a simple victory in Christ.
Now racing in zero degree weather may sound crazy, so does a 1/8 mile in the sand for nothing but recognition.  What was I thinking that afternoon?  We don’t always race for a trophy, but we do race to win.  I did that day, and would on other bikes over other courses.  But never with the drive and intensity of that afternoon.  Now I choose my races better, and like my battles I win more.  But when I won the prize of heaven in Jesus, then I became a real winner, with a testimony to share with others.  Nicky met him in a garden in town, I met him on the beach in Santa Monica.  Each race venue for salvation will be different, and you can claim victory in it in Jesus.  But you will race, and you will be a competitor.  Why not join the winning team and enjoy life, and heaven too?  Nick at Night met Jesus, and his forever changed.  You see you will be challenged as I was that afternoon, in a situation where you cannot back down.  Today I issue the challenge to you, life in Jesus or death.  Born again or death.  Heaven or hell.  The gospel is simple, you must be born again.  No second place finish for heaven, truly second is first loser in forever.  Today you can win the race of life, running what you brung, but leaving it behind.  If the richest Pharisee, head of the Sanhedrin gave it all up for heaven, what have you to lose to gain it all?  You never know where or when the next challenge will come from.  I know Jesus, and I won the race of life. 
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com