Monday, April 4, 2016

"no coke, Pepsi!"











The phrase “no Coke, only Pepsi” was made famous by John Belushi and his fellow SNL comedy mates back in the seventies.  But it was true in some places, as so many associated Coke with soft drinks, just like Kleenex for tissue.  Working for Coca Cola, in sales my job was new business, and I was quite good at it.  We would identify a Pepsi account we wanted, then go after it.  Some would be low volume, but their street presence with Coca Cola signage would irritate them, we called it the “cheese ‘em off factor.”  Some were old time Pepsi strongholds, and I would wear them down, with help from other Coke employees who would start to frequent them at lunch.  Finally breaking down, as “you guys are in here all the time, I’ll switch.”  Many a Coke drinker who had to settle for Pepsi was now satisfied.  In some cases where the restaurant owner owned his own equipment, but was favorable to Pepsi, we would ask for just one fountain head on it, for Coke, so when a customer asked for a Coke, they could get it, and slowly edge out P Cola.  The plan was to eliminate “Is Pepsi OK?” from our territories vernacular, and we were quite good at it.  So good that when I left Coke, Pepsi threw a party since I was gone.  But my crowning blow, the feather in my Coke cap if you would, was having the only Pizza Hut in America that served Coca Cola.  Pizza Hut, owned by Pepsi Cola, of course had a lock on the business, until I started eating at the store in Pagosa Springs, Colorado.  Befriending the owner, I would mention “too bad you don’t serve Coke, I’m tired of iced tea.”  He even went as far as checking with his franchise rep, who only belittled him for asking, but we found a way around it.  He owned the machine, and was required to sell Pepsi products.  No exclusive products mentioned, just he must sell Pepsi.  I even offered to loan him a unit for Coca Cola, but he did me one better.  “I own the unit, put a Coke head on one of the flavors.”   Which we did, which made him unpopular within Pizza Huts, even more so with Pepsi, but he was legal and selling Coca Cola to anyone who asked for one.  He never had to say “no Coke, only Pepsi” again, and we outsold P Cola many times over.  The ultimate “cheese ‘em off factor,” every time some exec form Coca Cola USA came through, they wanted to meet me, the guy who sold Coke in a Pizza Hut.  They never considered our battle plan, looking for a complete conquest, we were happy to get in the door, knowing we would never leave.  Smart as a serpent, yet gentle as a lamb in business, Biblical principals work in the secular world too.  Which is where Jesus spent most of his time.
For the 40 years I have been saved, I have seen Christian only phone books, too many businesses with Christian fish in the window, and others who will only do business with Christians.  As if being saved makes you a better plumber or mechanic?  They believe they are doing the right thing, not becoming part of the world, yet neglecting to notice we still live in it.  And we are to be out sharing the gospel, showing love and ministering to all we meet, including the unsaved.  What good are we if we only preach to the choir?  If we only hang with other Christians, or neglect to notice those who aren’t?  Maybe we are snobbish, and don’t sow the love of Christ.  Yet we neglect to follow the leading of Jesus, who ate with sinners, hung out with criminals, showed love and compassion to prostitutes, thieves, bikers, junkies, and even politicians.  The low lifes he came to save.  Even commenting once, “it is the sick who need a doctor.”  Sick souls and sick bodies, and minds.  Maybe the little steps we used to win Coke accounts makes sense in the Christian world too.
But one afternoon outside of Ogden, Utah God showed me why we need to be out in the world, just not of it.  A sudden rain storm hit hard, and it took over 2 miles to find any shelter.  I got mad as the storm pelted me, with no shelter in  sight, attending a Christian rally, in the midst of Mormon country.  “Why God would you send us into enemy territory?  We’re Christians, aren’t we supposed to be special? Set apart? ”  His answer, as always, was simple yet deep.  “Can you think of a better place to put a hospital than where the people are sick and dying?”  I was so consumed with self and forgot to be an example as we go.  We need to get out in the world, to show the love of Christ, but not be part of it.  My friend Dick hangs out with some hard core bikers, who respect him.  He sits in bars with them drinking water, sometimes hard stuff as they call it, 7-Up, and has made himself available to them.  Ministering and showing love rather than preaching and causing dissent, he is the light in a dark area God has called him to minister to.  Lots of little steps to salvation on our parts, sometimes we forget the simplest, showing love to the unsaved.  Remember, we were all lost once, and someone took a chance and shared Jesus with us.  How quick we forget....or can be influenced by bad doctrine.
You may be the only Bible, the only gospel many see.  Be the one in love they remember, not the jerk who preached, argued, or didn’t minster to them.  Don’t you just love being cut off by an SUV covered with Jesus stickers?  Sadly that is how Christians are seen to many.  Yet if I could change the minds of Pepsi drinkers, imagine what the holy spirit can do with you evangelizing Jesus by just being out there, and showing love.  One trip to help the homeless once a year makes no difference to them, although so many who do their yearly duty heap praise on themselves.  It is getting to know them, building relationships, and loving them that shares the gospel best.  I have seen too many so-called interns interfere, who should have never been sent out and are sent home, because they don’t get it.   “Shut up and listen,” is the best advice I give.  First listen for what the spirit is saying, then do it.  The old saying “they will care how much you know when you show how much you care is still true today.  Remember the spirit is gentle and kind, is your gospel you share the same?
Although Pepsi hated me, and was glad to see me go, they respected me.  Do you respect those who God has chosen to put in your path today?  Or are you so busy reciting the Four Spiritual Laws that you forget the law of love, for which there is no law against?   How many have come to Christ while having an appliance fixed, a car repaired, or stopping to help someone on the side of the road, because they were shown love, and words were few?  Being ministered to, meeting a need in the name of Jesus, their actions and attitudes speaking volumes.  Inviting someone to church is not evangelism, being out among the unsaved like Jesus was, and showing love and compassion is.  Take your education to the next level, application, and show what you learned in church.  Don’t bother bragging about how great your church is, or what a great Christian you are, show me!  Show them.  Good advice from an old serpent, whose heart was changed by a gentle lamb.  And someone who decided to share the gospel with an unsaved heathen on the beach one night.  Not in a church, out in the world, where we live.  Doctors of love, and with many needing a doctor now.  How many Lazaruses have you stepped over on the way to church?  Remember, the best place for a hospital is where the sick are, the best place to show the love of Jesus Christ is out where the darkness lies.  Be that light...you just may be the Coca Cola they asked for, don’t make them settle for Pepsi.
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com