I drive WEST….anytime I’m at my parents’ house in Tahoka, I
can’t wait to get alone in my car and head west.
A few miles further west, I pass the semi-famous T-Bar Ranch
where I’ve seen hundreds of cattle branded and also watched my little brother
ride a horse for the first time at the age of two. I can’t help but laugh at the time the
foreman, Frank got irritated at all the cowboys because they came up with
different numbers as they were counting cattle.
Frank asked my little brother, “Matthew, how many did you count?” Matthew said, “All of them.”
The memories are rushing by outside my car window.
When I drive 380, I always wind up six miles out of town at
the “pens” where my Dad and Grandpa used to keep their horses. Behind the rusted gate there stands a
hundred-year-old farmhouse where my Grandpa lived as a boy. How many times did I get out of the truck to
open all those gates? How many midnights
did I spend with my Dad returning the horses to their pasture after a play day
or rodeo? How many times did my siblings,
cousins and I roast marshmallows at the dog pens and sleep in the back of the
pickup? (Well, maybe just once – we were
scared of coyotes.)
Several years ago I asked God to show me His favorite moment
in my life. It might sound silly, but if
you haven’t done that you totally should!
If you ask, He will be faithful to bring something to mind and in an
instant you will know and you will never forget. What He showed me changed my perspective on
who I am in His eyes….
I’m 3-years-old standing between my Dad and Grandpa in the
old blue Chevy truck and we are heading west down Hwy 380 towards the pens. With no seatbelt or car seat, I am standing
next to my Grandpa with my arm around his neck.
I stick my hand out the window and giggle as my hand surfs up and down
in the wind. Dad and Grandpa might have discussed
business or the farm or horses, but all I remember is being in this place right
in the middle of them where I was completely safe and loved beyond anything my
little heart could understand. No wonder
that is God’s favorite memory – it’s mine too, now.
Eventually, I turn the car around at the farmhouse and naturally
head east back towards town. Typically, I
drive straight to the cemetery where Grandpa is buried. Where they are all buried. My four grandparents are buried less than 20
feet apart. I stand in the center and
feel overwhelming gratitude for a childhood spent with four pillars of Godly,
loving grandparents.
So yesterday’s journey up and down Hwy 380 wasn’t unusual until
it occurred to me that all of life seems to be headed west. I sojourn through a myriad of memories every
time I hit this road and those six miles are such a big part of who I am. But I’m always going west, continuing the
journey I started over three decades ago as a child.
And, yet ultimately I always turn around and go east. Then yesterday it hit me! One day we will all turn east at the very
same time. Our eyes will catch a great
light and in one collective motion we will turn east and see Jesus coming in
the clouds.
"For just as the lightning comes from
the east and flashes even to the west, so will the coming of the Son of Man be." Matthew 24:27
Do you believe He is coming back? I know we all say it as Christians – but do
you think about it, ponder it, imagine it?
And do you pray for it? In this
day and age I feel more hopeful than ever that He will return for His bride and
that the injustices of the world will fade away.
But friend, before that day comes there is work to do. The lost and hurting people are
everywhere. And they desperately need to
receive the redeeming love of Jesus.
There are people who have heard the truth, but deny it because it makes
them uncomfortable or because their understanding has been warped by the world
or other Christians. There are others
who think God is just a myth or a voice in the sky anxious to smack them down
for their mistakes.
If we aren’t bringing Jesus to our world, then we are not
doing what these last days call for. I
feel convicted about my insecurities in sharing my faith and my failures to
live out my life where others see Jesus.
But Hwy 380 reminds me that Jesus sees us just as we are – His
bride, spotless, washed in the blood, and redeemed. I want to live like that 3-year-old girl, fearless and confident in who I am in Him.
Look out your window.
Discover who you are in Him. You
will not be disappointed. And once you
know, you can confidently introduce Him to the world around you. They are waiting.
Lovely Jennie. What a beautiful truth.
ReplyDeleteYou are an amazing storyteller. I live in a land of storytellers. To the native americans their stories are the most precious things they have.
ReplyDeleteA remarkable idea to ask God about His favorite memory. Quite remarkable...
ReplyDeleteBeautiful Jen. I love the memory.
ReplyDeleteI love the idea of asking God about his favorite memory of me. I also realize if I asked, "When Father did I most displease you?" He would answer, "My child, my Son's blood covered that, I remember it no longer."
ReplyDelete