Showing posts with label Angels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Angels. Show all posts

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Barns, Secrets And Old Houses

I come from country roots, as close to an educated redneck as one can get. I love the modern, contemporary Gospel music, but there will always be a part of me who loves the country gospel music of my youth.

One such song was "This Old House," penned by the composer of "It Is No Secret What God Can Do." This blog space is too small to do justice to the stories behind those Gospel hymns, but suffice to say, the first was composed following a hunting trip in the mountains of northern California. When the author and a hunting companion discovered the remains of an elderly man in his old cabin, the poet saw similarities between the two.

Originally sung slow and reverently, Patty Page recorded "This Old House" as a toe-tapping tune that has made it immortal in the annals of Gospel Music.

The following Perspective on Old Barns reminded me of that song and I wanted to pass it along to my readers. (The older I get, the more like these old barns I get.)

A stranger came by the other day with an offer that set me to thinking. He wanted to buy the old barn that sits out by the highway. I told him right off he was crazy. He was a city type, you could tell by his clothes, his car, his hands, and the way he talked. He said he was driving by and saw that beautiful barn sitting out in the tall grass and wanted to know if it was for sale. I told him he had a funny idea of beauty.


Sure, it was a handsome building in its day. But then, there's been a lot of winters pass with their snow and ice and howling wind. The summer sun's beat down on that old barn till all the paint's gone, and the wood has turned silver gray Now the old building leans a good deal, looking kind of tired. Yet, that fellow called it beautiful.
That set me to thinking. I walked out to the field and just stood there, gazing at that old barn. The stranger said he planned to use the lumber to line the walls of his den in a new country home he's building down the road. He said you couldn't get paint that beautiful. Only years of standing in the weather, bearing the storms and scorching sun, only that can produce beautiful barn wood.
It came to me then. We're a lot like that, you and I. Only it's on the inside that the beauty grows with us. Sure we turn silver gray too ... and lean a bit more than we did when we were young and full of sap. But the Good Lord knows what He's doing. And as the years pass He's busy using the hard weather of our lives, the dry spells and the stormy seasons to do a job of beautifying our souls that nothing else can produce.

They took the old barn down today and hauled it away. I reckon someday you and I'll be hauled off to Heaven to take on whatever chores the Good Lord has for us on the Great Sky Ranch.
And I suspect we'll be more beautiful then for the seasons we've been through here and just maybe even add a bit of beauty to our Father's house.
May there be peace within you today.May you trust God that you are exactly where you are meant to be. I believe that friends are quiet angels who lift us to our feet when our wings have trouble remembering how to fly.

Monday, January 15, 2007

In A Moment, Blink of An Eye




In an Instant, In the Blink of an Eye

It can happen in an instant, . . . In the blink of an eye, . . . And life can take an unexpected turn.

Some people are said to live lives of quiet desperation. Not me. One good gust of wind and I am reminded how much I am loved and love those around me, even total strangers.

I was driving home from an assignment with Whirlwind Tours in Midland, Texas. It was 2:30 AM and I was eastbound on I-20. The roadway had just begun to ice from the cold front that swept through the area.

Suddenly a blast of wind hit the driver's side of my Bronco, causing it to fish-tail. I corrected, but it wasn't enough and after it crossed and recrossed the inside lane I knew it was going to roll.

Roller coasters and thrill rides have never been enjoyable to me. I have no curiosity strong enough for me to keep my eyes open. I prayed, a very simple prayer, "Oh, Jesus help me, help me."

And He did! I can't tell you whether it rolled two or three times, but it stopped upright in the center median. The passenger window was gone, the rear hatch back torn off. The driver's seat was broken but I was firmly held by seat belt. And the dome light was on.

Five wonderful young men stopped to help me. The things inside by car had been thrown completely clear of the vehicle. Clothing, tool box, travel bags, even my computer had become projectiles leaving a flipping ship.

Amazingly I never hit my head or lost consciousness. I was lucid and clear-headed if not a little addled.

Arriving at Scenic Mountain Medical Center I was x-rayed head-to-toe, with special attention paid to my left elbow, forearm and wrist which had begun throb with pain. Nothing came back fractured. It is thought that a nerve in my elbow has been bruised and will take some time to heal. With a shoulder sling, I was sent home and told to wait till the soreness subsides before going back to work.

This "unexpected vacation" from my normal activities has caused me to appreciate the people in my life. Not just family who are here by my side, but all who have written and called to express their concern and love.

In the vast scheme of things, this accident will probably be just a blip on the radar of life, but it is a reminder that a detour can happen in a moment, in a blink of the eye. It's good to know I'm not alone; That there are "angels" of all kinds, dressed as family, paramedics, policemen and hospital worker. How very blessed I am.