Thursday, March 22, 2018

what ride is complete without food?



















After nine days on the road, and 3000 miles, we had eaten many meals consisting of hot dogs and hamburgers along the way.  We were grateful for the free meals on the 2005 Torches Across America ride, but the murmuring had begun.  But one stop in Troy, Illinois had been a great break from tube steak and cow chips, but with fresh pulled porch, home made cole slaw and potato salad, and fresh corn on the cob, we were gluttonous, and gorged ourselves.  With little room for dessert, but being a biker, we somehow found room for the cake, if only just one piece.  It was a meal we would remember until Brooklyn on 9/11, when the locals came out to feed 15,000 of us with all the great foods only New York can offer.  Real subs and spaghetti.  Some Chinese food, and of course hot dogs and hamburgers.  Where the line was the longest, which confused me, why when all this great food do you choose the basics?  With visions of Troy still ruminating in my stomach, it was subs and Italian food, but yet many went for the burgers.  I still don’t get it, but it did make my line shorter.  But after eating and talking, as we had for the past nine days, we stumbled upon one obvious fact.  We had gotten so used to burgers and dogs, we began to complain like the Jews led by Moses in the desert had.  Manna for days on end, provided free and fresh every day, and they still complained.  Even willing to go back to Egypt in slavery, where at least the food was better.  And when this was brought up, we were humbled.  Never looking at burgers and hot dogs the same ever again.
Live to ride and ride to eat we hear often among bikers.  We like big portions, real meat and potatoes, and all the fixin’s with it.  We will still ride over 100 miles just for a meal, but not a hamburger.  Passing all the signs bragging about their “World’s Best Hamburger!” in search of real food.  For what is a ride without food, how many rides end up at a destination to eat?  So road food has become a big deal, we plan our trips around lunches, we one time even BBQ’ed across America.  From fried clams in Two Lights, Maine to fish chowder in Appalachicola, Florida, to cheese steaks in Philly, to real steaks in Oklahoma, the answer is we need to eat, so let’s do it right.  Stop at Ted Drewes Custard Stand in St. Louis, eat a concrete at Culvers across the Midwest and moving west, Steak and Shake milk shakes are a meal unto themselves, and the best subs come from Jersey.  With one memorable meal with Fr. Al in Somerset, Pennsylvania, where I was thinking local fresh food, and he took us out for Mexican!  In Pennsylvania?  Some of the best I ever had, the brothers who owned it were gourmet chefs from the interior of Mexico, Rey Azteca, if in the neighborhood try it.  Fr. Al and I laughed about eating Mexican in Pennsylvania for years...but I did get my Taylor ham and eggs for breakfast with him the next day.  Ummmmm!  Which makes me think of his sister’s sausage and peppers...suddenly I’m starving.
With Easter approaching, we are into the time frame of the Last Supper as it has become known as.  An interesting title, referring to the last meal Jesus had with his disciples, a very special time in the Jewish tradition, as sitting to eat is a time to talk, visit, and unwind while eating.  Almost a holy time, as it is personal and intimate.  But to the disciples it was just another meal at the time, they had no way of knowing it was the last time they would gather to eat with Jesus.  That their lives would be changing drastically, that this upper room would never be the same, and where they now ate in intimacy, they soon would gather in, hiding and in fear from persecution after the crucifixion.  How each relationship would change after that, but no Biblical mention of there recollection of that last meal together.  How different it may have been if they knew Jesus was about to be arrested and killed, how different they would treat Judas, and how different the world would look at them.  That night Jesus changed lives, that of Judas and others, but it wasn’t until later they would understand it.  They would go on to eat many more meals, with a memorable one with Peter and Jesus on the shore, with Jesus cooking.  Which makes me think, of food of course, but of the last meal I had and who I had it with.  Was I a blessing, did I minister, was it a good and intimate time, or just another burger on the run?  Would I look back at it, and how would it affect me?  All things the disciples never thought of until after.  We see Jesus much different after that meal, they did too.  But how do you see him today in your life?  Is he the bread of life to you, is saying grace a ritual or are you truly thankful for him providing?  If offered just one meal with him, what would it be? 
“Do this in remembrance of me,” Jesus told the disciples, and shared the bread and juice for the first communion.  Do we look forward to communion, or is it just another first Sunday of the month interruption?  Do you remember Jesus and what do you remember about him?  If you could have one final meal with him, would it be gourmet, a burger, or would you be content with manna from heaven?  Jesus still sends us manna for heaven every day via his spirit, for we don’t live by bread alone, or what we put between it.  We are fed by what comes out of the mouth of Jesus, how many of eat enough of him?  Gorge on his word?  Do we ride to eat of him, or is life just another meal?  What would that last meal be with him?
The next time you share in communion, it is not about the juice and cracker, make sure you don’t over emphasize the elements.  Consider Jesus, maybe for the first time, and look forward to eating with him again and again.  He may have fed the 5000, but how special is that meal with him?  He saw nobody left hungry...he offered more, yet some only ate the fish.  Take some time today and think on Jesus.  Maybe have cup of juice and a cracker, and hopefully this won’t be the only time you consider him today.  The disciples never knew what was coming, but we do.  We just don’t know when. Enjoy the manna he provides, the ride to eat it, and the table you share with others.  Tip the waitress, if only they knew then what they were to find out, it was Jesus who left the tip on the table for them. 
So is a ride complete without food?  Maybe, but a ride without Jesus will always leave us hungry for more than something to eat.  We saw the hand of God feeding us on the trip, only after we were reminded.  The Jews wandered around for 40 years and never got far from home, but never any closer to God either.  Jesus provides the bread, what you put between it is up to you.  Primonti Bros. in Pittsburgh, a whole meal between the bread.  A variation on the words of Jesus some 2000 years ago.  With no Tripadvisor to guide.  Buon appetite!  Vaya con Dios!  Let’s ride!  Let’s eat!  Let’s pray...that you will never again eat alone.
love with compassion,
Mikematthew25biker.blogspot.com