Monday, August 7, 2017

living the dream or reality? life happens more than On Any Sunday





















To a lot of younger riders I meet today, I am just the old guy who has ridden a million miles and who thinks he has seen it all.  But still each ride shows me something new, just like it does for them.  They fail to look at it through my eyes, as I was once where they were, and the dreams of riding places, meeting people, having a fast bike, with all the goodies was once my dream too.  But looking back my reality has been much better than my dreams, only God can do that, and today the reality of life keeps me still dreaming.  There are still more roads, more bikes to ride, and less time now to do it all in.  But one trip back to Cycle Guide magazine, the May of 1980 issue reminds me of how far we have come, how far I have been, how far I still have to go, and rekindles the old dreams again.  The bottom line is I want to get out and ride more, and last week an 1800 mile ride confirmed that.  Back in 1980, that was still a dream....
I owned a 1981 KZ750 like the one on the cover, a superbike at the time, lightweight and running a 12.50 quarter mile.  Bragging rights if you will.  All for $2749 1980 dollars.  The ads again made me think of the dreams, a Windjammer fairing for touring, a big deal back then, as any bike was a touring bike when you added one.  Ads for Alphabet, Hooker, Kerker, Yoshimura, and Jardine headers.  Kawasaki bragging on bringing fuel injection to two wheels, the Vetter Mystery ship revealed on page 36, never saw one on the road.  An article rating motorcycle movies, giving The Wild One only two helmets, we were years away from Harley rewriting marketing and making us all want to be bad.  Bikers were yet to be born for the mainstream rider.  At least Easy Rider and On Any Sunday gained 4 stars!  CHiPs was still prime time, Fonzi rode a Triumph, so did James Brolin on Marcus Welby, MD. and Evel Knievel wasn’t evil, just a fad.  An article on tires never mentioned radials, still 20 years away from everyday use.  Names like Roberts, Springsteen, and Eklund raced at the Astrodome, on the dirt.  Porsche was developing a motor for Harley Davidson, they were still owned by AMF, the Japanese owned motorcycling, BMW’s meant touring, and it was all new and exciting.  The common bond was we all rode, and the breakdown of types of rides was still far away.  Today it divides us, when we need to go back and remember when the fact we rode was more important than what we rode.  And each month we waited for the next issues of Cycle, Cycle Guide, Cycle World, and Road Rider to keep us dreaming.  Only Cycle World remains today....but it seems we have lost more than just the publications, we have lost the brotherhood and dreams it once met.  Now we see groups of Harley riders, Indian riders, Wing nuts or ADV riders, back then I had a Kawi, David rode a Yamaha, Brett and George rode Hondas, and we all got along.  Sadly no one rode BSA’s, Indians, or Triumphs any more, but Triumph would be back, and so is Indian.  The dreams were rekindled and kept alive, maybe this is the good old days after all. 
One thing we needed then, and still do today is we need each other.  Works for riding, it also works for the body of Christ.  Jesus taught us two things in the New Testament, you cannot say “I don’t need you,” and the second is “you don’t need me.”  God set us up as a body who needs each other, and when we realize that, the church, us becomes a vital, living, breathing, and growing body.  We all play a part in God’s kingdom, and none of us should be set apart from it.  Today as always, the ministry of the church belongs to the whole congregation, not just the pastors and staff.  Each one of us is called to be an ambassador of Christ, to bring light and hope into the dark world, to be the Bible they may never read, to be the one who goes out to them, like Jesus did to us.  Inviting someone to church is not evangelism, yet church habits over the years have taught us the pastors are the only ones who can counsel, they are the only ones who can teach, and minister to the hurting.  These are not signs of a healthy church, yet it is talked about, many times from a man hiding behind a pulpit who couldn’t get out and do it, so he doesn’t encourage his flock.  God has given us the privilege of going out and being sharing the gospel wherever we are.  Mention the church, and we think of the building, not those in it.  Jesus saw it differently, and still does.
If your church does not encourage you, it is lacking and may be sick spiritually.  That ought to annoy many, but when we each get out and start to minister, like mentioned in Matthew 25, life becomes exciting, worthwhile,and we see the holy spirit in action.  Life takes on a new insight, as we represent Jesus Christ and not the church.  Do not confuse the two, we need to be guided by the spirit, and should be encouraged from our pastors and his staff.  If not....it has become more important of what we ride than the fact we ride.  The brotherhood we should share becomes splintered, and soon we lose the desire.  Maybe a trip through 1 Corinthians 12 and Romans 12 will give you insight, but then it is up to you as to ride or not, to serve Jesus or not, or be stuck in church wondering what all the excitement is about.  We need each other, but we need the holy spirit to bind us together, to give us the dreams and see them into reality.  In my wildest dreams I never thought I would ride press bikes for Triumph, or ride over 1 million miles, but I do both, and still get excited.  I never thought I would teach Bible concepts and minster to the poor, indigent, and those in jail.  But God did and his spirit inspired me and still does today.  I could not imagine not doing either.  Many cannot see me doing either!   But in Christ-WOW!
The gift of ministry belongs to all who are saved.  We need each other, as I was reminded again when we got back.  I needed a bed, someone called with one.  We need clothes, a couple who has a ministry to the poor supplies all we need.  A large church who distributes food supplies it for us, we get to see those hungry being fed, those naked being clothed, and Jesus at work.  And see them now getting out and doing the same for others, encouraging those who need it, see the Bible come alive, experiencing Jesus, not just learning about him.  Their reality surpassing any dreams they might have had.  Only Jesus can do that!
God has not forgotten about you, have you forgotten about him?  In 1980 motorcycling was different, have we changed or did it?  Still dreaming when you could be out riding?  If your life was a training film for motorcycling, would you watch it?  Would it make you want to ride?  The ads of our youth did, now ask yourself about Jesus, and a movie of him in your life.  What does it tell others?  Would you watch it?  Would it make anyone who did want Jesus?  You cannot teach experience, you can teach about Jesus, but there is nothing like his experience.  Jimi Hendrix once asked “have you ever been  experienced?”  Well have you?  Well, I have.....and the education will never compare to the application.  Or the experience.  Living the dream?  There is nothing like the reality of Christ in your life.  Your ministry is just waiting to begin!
love with compassion,
Mike
mattehw25biker.blogspot.com