Wednesday, November 15, 2017

the Harleys of Hoboken
























Our first Torches Across America ride in 2005 took a detour on the way to Ground Zero.  We didn’t know it at the time, being in the front of about 3200 motorcycles, the ride form Hope, New Jersey some 90 miles away had gone down flawless.  Except for needing gas along the way, we were invited to ride up front, as we were a core group from California.  After getting gas, I passed 18 miles of motorcycles to get back to our position....but all was going well until we got to the Holland Tunnel, and we came to a halt.  It seems the guys leading us had come to the fork in the freeway and taken the wrong side, the one that said Brooklyn, our destination, but we were going into New York City first.  So when we got to the tunnel, the Port Authority Police had opened it up again to traffic, no one had notified them we were running late, and in the finest of New Jersey traditions, had given us the Bronx cheer.  So 18 plus miles of motorcycles sat waiting for them to clear the tunnel again, clear a path past Ground Zero, and finally the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel.  Which took over an hour, so we all parked, no other choice, and had a block party.  A taxi coming in from another exit turned on his radio and some danced.  Those behind him in cars got out and mingled with us.  We met many that day and took many photos, maybe just another traffic jam in Hoboken, but when the Harleys came to Hoboken that day, it was different.  And a fitting way to end the celebration of those killed in 9/11, and to honor the first responders by just getting out and living life.  The PA Police excepted....
But the next year meeting at the Hoboken Motorcycle Clubhouse, you could see the tunnel entrance from there, we were escorted back to our motel, being told how dangerous it was to ride across town.  So Triple E and is club escorted us through the hometown of Ole Blue Eyes Sinatra, and to our motel on the Passaic River, where signs warned of the water being contaminated, do not swim or drink.  And at a motel where the signs said “PARK AT YOUR OWN RISK” and they meant it.  So we had some of our group take turns standing guard.  This was more like the New Jersey I remember, but for that one afternoon in 2005, celebrating 9/11 heroes, the day the Harleys came to Hoboken, we all got along.  Even a wrong turn, a traffic jam, and stopping for gas hadn’t deterred us.  For one brief shining moment, we were all brothers and sisters in one accord, with a commonality being 9/11.  Even this Triumph guy was welcomed with only a few British jokes to taunt him, and in return the Harley jokes flowed too. 
In Acts 2:42 we see how the church was coming together in one accord, not the Honda Accord, but in spirit.  Many backgrounds and even ethnic types were coming to Christ, and were meeting in homes.  Sunday and other days, they were having church, and doing the things that the spirit instructed them to do.  They were praying for each other, knowing God would answer, and expecting great things.  They were eating together, sharing the food they had, being blessed by God in a time of fellowship.  They were listening to the teaching of the word from the apostles, no New Testament was written yet, they were living what would become the book of Acts, and hung on every word.  It wasn’t for the sake of knowledge, it was wanting to know more about Jesus, to get closer to him, to be like him, and to be in one accord in the spirit.  When someone expressed a need, no special offerings were taken, someone in the group would have what is needed, and God would bless them by giving.  They had a commonism, not a communism about them, they supported each other in Christ, instead of the state supplying their needs.  This was church, and this was the example that Jesus set forth for us, with him at the center.  All were welcome, an excitement was growing, and soon the gospel of Jesus Christ was going forth to other places.  The church was alive, it was growing, and would need good men to carry on God’s work.  And in the book of Timothy we see from Paul’s hand how god wanted it set up, and the requirements of the men to do it. 
Some men were noticeably changed by Jesus, while some remained quiet.  But when praying together, God raised up the ones he wanted, and they became the deacons and elders of the church.  Men held to a higher standard, as they would be the hands and feet of Jesus that was taking the gospel into all the earth, and needed to be right with God or the church would be led in the wrong direction.  Without the direction of the spirit, they had no direction other than their own, and like the ride to Ground Zero, a sign could be misleading, and cause a delay and trouble.  Just like the churches of today.....right?
We live in strange times, 12 men cannot decide on a verdict, a couple cannot agree and divorces.  But on one 9/11 day, over 3000 motorcyclists came to honor those that died.  In one accord.  A lesson I wish we could all learn about Jesus, to come together in one accord, agreeing on what the spirit directs us to do.  In Acts they called it church, the gathering of the saints together.  One simple scripture in Acts defining what the church was to be, and who was to be the head of it.  The day the Harleys came to Hoboken the earth shook, the air was filled with loud exhausts, and many new friends were made.  Even a wrong turn couldn’t deter us, amazing what we can do when we let God lead. For one brief shining moment, there was Paradise.  If it works in Hoboken, do you think maybe it could work for you?
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com