Praire Wind September

The ranch and Sentinel Butte

Coneflower

THE GIANT

By Wendy Kleker

 

            David blew into camp.  Leading a donkey loaded with supplies, he almost ran up the hill where the tents were pitched. Hearing the battle cries as the armies lined up, each on their own knob, he scurried faster tugging on the donkey’s lead.  David left the donkey with the supply man and his feet flew to the front lines.  Excitedly he looked around at the warriors in their heavy armor, standing straight their spears held in one hand, shields in the other.  His heart beat rapidly.  Surely he would see a battle today, maybe be able to take part in it.

            Suddenly there was a great shout from the Philistine hill, a roar that filled the morning air.  Surely, there is no lion here! David thought, peering across the valley to the Philistine lines. 

            The Philistine soldiers parted on the crest of the hill and a bronze helmet, gleaming in the rising sun, came into view.  As David’s ears were full of the roar and stomping of great feet, a huge chest, shinning like the helmet rose above the armored men on the hill.  A great shield advanced ahead of the immense man, teetering as a shield bearer struggled to hold up the great weight.

            David’s mouth fell open. The warrior was huge, standing many feet above his fellow Philistines.  Nine feet in all, Goliath crashed his feet on the ground with great thumps, brandished his spear with a shaft nearly twice as tall as David and roared so loud the bushes shook.

            “Send your champion to fight me! This day I defy the armies of Israel!”

            With a great gasp the ranks of Israel fell back. The army of the Almighty God ran.  Goliath roared in victory.  The Philistines laughed. 

            David was appalled.  “Who is this Philistine who defies the army of the LIVING God?”  He asked as he swaggered amongst the milling soldiers.

            Here was a mere boy, who still shepherded his father’s sheep, giving grown men and seasoned soldiers the what for.  A cocky banty rooster?  Obviously.  Over confident little twerp?  Absolutely.  irritating? No doubt.  Sure ticked his brother off big time, who called him on it, but David ignored his older brother and kept right on asking why no one would fight the giant. 

            However, David followed up his words with action.  “Never fear,” he confidently said to Saul, “I will fight the Philistine.”

            King Saul was taken aback.  “What!” he cried, “why you are just a boy!  This—this giant is a seasoned soldier who has been fighting since he was your age!”

            David bowed before his king, whom he knew very well to have a fiery temper.  “My king” he said, “can I tell you a little story?” At Saul’s nod he went on.  “When I was out in the desert watching my father’s sheep, lions and bears came upon them.  One night I heard the sheep bleating something terrible and by the light from the moon, I saw a great lion carrying a lamb from the flock. I ran after it and struck it with a stone from my sling dazing it, and took the lamb from its mouth.  The lion turned on me so I grabbed it by its hair and struck it and killed it.  Now do you think I could do that with my own strength? No.  Not with my own strength, but God’s. I have killed both the lion and the bear with my bare hands; this Philistine will be no more difficult to kill.  God, who delivered me from the paws of the lions and bears, will deliver me from this great giant.”

            Now how could Saul argue that?  He didn’t even try, but he did have the grace to give his own armor to the boy. David put on the heavy, plated armor and large bronze helmet, then clunked and clanked around the tent trying to get used to it. 

            He shook his head inside the helmet.  “I can’t wear this, my King, I am not used to it and it is much too big.”  So he took it off and in his shepherd’s tunic only, with his staff, he went to the stream and picked out five smooth stones about the size of a golf ball and he put them in his shepherd’s bag. 

            With heart slamming in his chest and sling in his hand, he approached the huge Philistine. 

            Goliath was appalled.  He stomped closer and peered at David. “A boy!” He bellowed, “You send a boy with mere toys!”   He swore and yelled so loud they heard him all the way to Bethlehem.  “Come, I will feed your flesh to the birds of the air and the beasts of the field!”

            Unabashed, David calmly said, “You come against me with the sword and spear and javelin, but I come against you in the name of the Lord Almighty, the God of Israel.  This day the Lord will hand you over to me and all gathered here will know that it is not by the sword and the spear that the Lord saves.  The battle belongs to the Lord!”

            At that Goliath was enraged and ran to attack the shepherd boy.  David ran towards the giant and quick as a wink, put a stone in his sling and slung it over his head.

            WACK!  All could hear the stone hit the giant’s forehead and as it sunk deep, the huge man toppled forward and hit the ground with a great WUMP!

            “So David the young shepherd boy from Bethlehem triumphed over the Philistine with a sling and stone, without a sword in his hand, he struck down the great giant and killed him.”          (From 1 Sam. 17:50)

            A miracle, you say, only in God’s strength, with His hand, under His power.  No doubt.  Possibly after hand-to-hand combat with an angry lion and facing a hungry bear with only a sling, a giant man seemed easy to David. Possibly, but not probably. 

            I have faced lions and bears too.  Have fought them and had great victories, so when the giants march up do I remember that God delivered me?  Do I say like David, “The Lord who delivered me before, will fight my battle”?  Usually not.  Most of the time I run like the mighty men of Israel or hide in my tent like the brave king.

            However, this time was a bit different.  At first, I fell back when the giant stood before the church congregation and roared.    They needed Sunday School teachers and if anyone was interested to let the SS Superintendent know.  I backed up a few steps.  Never have taught Sunday School.  Not my thing.  Don’t like to be tied down to going to church every Sunday.

            Several times in a month this announcement was made.  Each time a niggling, a slight push would come. Naw, I don’t teach Sunday School.  I don’t know any of the kids.  They wouldn’t want me since I’m so new to the church.  Surely there’re lots if people to teach.  I turned and ran. 

            Then the Sunday came when it was announced the SSS would be having a meeting afterwards for anyone interested in teaching.  Again the challenge rang deep in my heart.  Oh I’m sure there will be lots of folks at the meeting.  People who have taught before.  People familiar with the kids and parents.  They don’t need me.  Anyway I don’t teach Sunday School.  After church I saw only one lady talking to the SSS.  I hid in the bathroom.

            Do you think David was scared?  That he saw all these seasoned warriors running and thought who was he to fight a giant of a man?  Do you think he might have wanted to hide?  Or go home?  Or do you think he was just young and cocky enough that he never doubted he could beat the great Goliath?  I wonder if he had a little talk with God in the privy.  Or did his feet just march into Saul’s tent on their own accord?

            My little talk with God did NOT go my way. 

            “You can do this, you know, it’s just a little giant, after all.”

            “Ha! God there’s no such thing as a LITTLE giant.”

            “This is the way.  Walk in it.”

            Then I remembered asking God to use me in this new place.  Oh boy.  But one thing, I hope I have learned; when God gives a command that strong and that sure I better be doing it.

            So opening the door to the bathroom I marched out.  Looking at the table where the meeting was going on, sure enough there was only, still, one gal talking to the SSS.  My feet seemed to walk to the table on their own accord.  Mouth opened.

            “Do you need any help?” I looked over my shoulder.  Now who said that? Well maybe I can just help.

            Big grin on the SSS’s face as she looked at her one and only teacher, “Well, see!” she said and then, “Thank you God!” 

            BIG Oh, Oh!

            “So what age do you like to work with?”

            “Ahhh—“

            Then there’s the matter of the armor.  Get ready.  Prepare.  Load up on information.,  There are all kinds of ways to be prepared these days, and I’m not just talking about teaching Sunday School.  Cell phones so we’re never alone.  Text so we’re never disconnected. GPS so we’re never lost.  On Star so we’re never without a guardian.  Email so we’re never left out.  Internet so we’re never uninformed.  Face Book so we’re never forgotten.  Digital cameras so we are never without instant memory.  Satellite TV so we’re never without entertainment.  And now we can have all of the above, and probably more,  in one little, tiny, skinny, black box, which I think is called a “Black Berry.”  And it’s not even good to eat.  Where ever we go.

            Hey I like some of these things too and I use them, you bet.  They are good things and can be used for good stuff.  But where is my trust, really?  What happens if my little Black Berry (which I don’t have) gets lost?  Or the satellite is blocked so I don’t have internet, or email or TV?  Or if I don’t get cell service or if the GPS is too far from a tower to tell me where to go?  What then?  What am I relying on?

            Okay, we’ll let some giants lie and get back to the Sunday School story.

             I was prepared; read up, studied down, prayed over and on my way to church.  Yet how do you prepare to face a rowdy giant towering over you with the happy faces of a fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh graders? 

            “There are some rowdy boys,” I was told.  Okay I’ve handled rowdy boys before, had one of my own. With my heart thundering in my chest, I marched into the church.   A looong time ago.   Can I do this? Why, oh why did I volunteer?  I never teach Sunday School.

            But as it came time to go with the kids to the class, I reached in my bag and grabbed a smooth stone and put it in my sling and slung it. 

            “The armor is too heavy,” David said,  “I can not fight in these.”  Sometimes we just have to face the giant with five little stones.

           “He rescued me from my powerful enemy, from my foes who were too strong for me.  They confronted me in the day of my disaster, but the Lord was my support.  He brought me out into a spacious place, he rescued me because he delighted in me.”    

                “With your help, I can advance against a troop, with God I can scale a wall. 

            It is God who arms me with strength and makes my way perfect.  He makes my feet like the feet of a deer, he enables me to stand on the heights.  He trains my hands for battle, my arms can bend a bow of bronze. 

             You give me your shield of victory and your right hand sustains me; you stoop down to make me great.  You broaden the path beneath me, so that my ankles do not turn.”  Ps. 18:17-19,    32-36

Read I Sam. 17

           

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Prairie Wind July

A rainbow in the storm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 SHOWERS  OF BLESSINGS

 “Be not afraid O wild animals for the open pastures are becoming green.  The trees are bearing their fruit; the fig tree and the vine yield their riches.”  Joel 2:22

           I really do NOT like summer.  There’s the heat, the sweat, the dust and dirt, the snakes, the mosquitoes, the gnats and other crawling things.  Then there’s always more commotion and noise; the ranchers ranching, farmers, farming, workers working.  I’m a real good whiner.  One day I told John, “I wish there was ONE good thing I liked about summer.”

             God must have shook His head and sighed and said, “That child needs to be shown a thing or two.”   So it seems He set out to shower me with summer blessings.

            I told you about the glorious day, well there have been many such days.  When the clouds are so dazzling, white they hurt the eyes and the sky so blue it seems to have no end.  The colors of emerald grass and many wildflowers pop out as if looking through a kaleidoscope, changing with every turn of the head. These days come especially after the storms when the air is washed clean by the downpours and the winds. 

            The storms even though a bit scary with the threat of tornados bring about a beauty all their own.  A big storm was brewing last night, as tall billowing thunderheads lumbered across the western sky.  As the sun set, the upper jagged edges of the clouds were lined with dazzling gold and the lower half was billowy pink.  Breathtakingly beautiful.

            Later I stood out in the yard in the dark after the thunder storm had passed and watched an amazing sight.  Black clouds towering so high they seemed to reach to the very heavens emanated continuous flashes of light coming from within the billowing center.  Every so often, a long jagged lightening bolt ripped through the very heart of the cloud.  Brilliant silver lined the top of the dark cloud.  Absolutely gorgeous.  I was awestruck.  Gold lined to silver lined.

            I have sat out in the yard many evenings and watched God’s light shows like nothing man can imitate. I have never seen so much lightening and storm clouds in one summer and the evening air is balmy and soft, yet cool on the skin. I was amazed to sit in my chair in the rain feeling like I was in a soft refreshing shower.

             Sitting in the yard is a blessing.  First, I have a comfy chair that my dear hubby gave me, which reclines back so I can gaze at the stars.  Also, here, unlike Chinook, there are no mosquitoes to chase me into the house as soon as the sun sets.  It’s become quite a habit to sit outside with the dogs curled up by my chair and read until it’s too dark or sometimes just to sit even after dark and soak in the beauty and coolness of the summer night with the birds calling their goodnights and the wind whistling through the night hawk’s wings.  Sometimes the coyotes join in with their yodel songs and my dogs raise their tunes to the wild symphony.

            Ahh the adventures I’ve had while walking in my hills with the dogs.  One day two coyotes went after Doti who was 50 yards away.  I sent Happy to her rescue and he chased the two over a ridge with Doti hot on their trail.  I whistled and ran to the top of the ridge where I could see the coyotes going after Happy’s rear every time he turned to come back.  I yelled and they moved off a bit allowing the dogs to get back to me.  Digging out my camera from my pack, I walked on up the ridge.  The two yotes followed close and the male snuck in to 30 feet, then went after Doti when she wondered from my side.  He chased her to ten feet from me while I was snapping pictures.

            I knew they had a den they were protecting so keeping the dogs close I sat down to watch hoping they would give some indication where it was.  The male laid down maybe 50 feet from us and the female was no where in sight.  Doti kept watching some rocks not far away, so I figured the female was sneaking up behind those.  Suddenly Doti took off after the female, the male ran after Doti and Happy leaped to her rescue.  All this within a few feet from me.  I gave up my camera and while calling the dogs, dug out my pistol.  The dogs came back and I shot in the air.  The pair of yotes backed off considerably.   I did locate the den and decided to come back another day to stake it out in hopes of getting photos of the pups.

            A few days later, I once again approached the den.  This time the dogs were tied to my belt with leashes and the gun was strapped to my side. The male kept his distance and the female and a pup made a beeline for the den.  I sat a thirty feet from the den behind some tall grass and brush.  Soon a pup came out of the den and curiously looked around.   He snuck in closer and peered through the brush to check out the new yotes on the block.  He popped up from ten feet away and stared at us.  Eyeball to eyeball with a three month old coyote pup!  The very essence of wildness. The wonder of God’s creation.  A blessing beyond measure.

            “Count your blessings, name them one by one.”  A visit from my sister with chatter and silly laughter as only sisters can do.  Camping on a nearby lake with John and the dogs, fishing watching storms move across the water, sunset walks along the lake.  A visit with old friends in Chinook, getting to know a new church family and growing new friends in Sentinel Butte.  Fresh vegetables from a garden growing faster than I can keep up and the satisfying feeling of putting up veggies for the winter.  Nippy mornings, cool evening breezes, the fresh cleansing smell after the rain, many days with temps in the low 80’s or high 70’s.  Even mowing the many acres around the house and buildings is enjoyable on my rider.  “County your many blessings see what God has done.”

            Oh it still gets hot and I still sweat and some evenings are sticky warm until late and the weeds in the garden grow faster than the veggies, and the snakes still slither in the grass, but God says, “Rejoice and be glad for I have given you cooling rains, I have sent you abundant showers both in the spring and in the fall.  I will do so again.”  (from Joel 2:23)        

            So, when I’m hot and grumpy I try to remember that the evening will cool off and I’ll be able to sit outside, then later in the cool night I will snuggle under the blankets.  When the dust flies and the yard bakes, and I have to water the garden yet again,  I know the rains will come, fall will soon be here and before long the land will be frozen under a covering of snow.  Most of all I remember that God sends His showers of blessing both in the spring and the fall and in even in the heart of summer.                     A thing or two indeed!

 “Surely the Lord has done great things.”  Joel 2:21  

Read Joel 2:21-27

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Prairie Wind June

Flax in the Red Hills North Dakota

 

The Red Hills

Glorious Day

by Wendy Kleker

 

            What a day!  I stand on my hills (I’m beginning to think of the Red Hills near our house as MY hills) the view is nearly into forever.  The Hills aren’t very high, but I feel as if I’m on top of the world.  The sky is sapphire blue and straight above it deepens into cobalt, with shinning, white fluffy clouds floating over.  It seems I can almost touch the billowing softness of them. 

            The grass, like an emerald carpet over the land, glistens so bright it hurts my eyes, with a sprinkling of yellow, blue and purple wildflowers everywhere.  Patches of red scorio on the hills stand out like a bright star in the night sky. 

            What a glorious day!  The sun is warm on my back and neck, but a stiff breeze whips my hair and blows cool in my face. I turn in a circle and the vistas stretch out in all directions. The vibrant colors sing a song, with the birds in accompaniment.  Buttes glisten in the sunshine and the white clouds kiss the horizon.

            I burst into song and raise my arms to the Creator of all I see.  Words tumble into my head and praise bursts from my lips.  As I walk towards home, the song keeps coming flowing into my heart and soaring with the clouds to my God.  If it is at all possible, the day becomes brighter as I sing.  The colors become more vibrant, the sun shinning bright on the glistening clouds and the air more pure in my lungs. 

            This is the song I sang.

            Thank you Jesus.  Thank ya, thank ya Jesus! (repeat)

            Thank you for the clouds so bright,

            Thank you for all that is in my sight.

            Thank you for the sky so blue

            Thank you for Your love that’s true.

            Thank you Jesus.  Thank ya, thank ya Jesus!

            Thank you for this glorious day

            Thank you for making my way.

            Thank you for the breeze so sweet

            Thank you for the friends I meet.

            Thank you Jesus!  Thank ya, thank ya Jesus!

            Thank you for the wildflowers

            Thank you for the rain showers.

            Thank you for the thunder clouds

            Thank you for the fear and doubt.

            Thank you Jesus!  Thank ya, thank ya Jesus!

            Thank you for the wind blowing free

            Thank you for the grass like a sea.

            Thank you for my husband so true,

            Thank you for my kids and grandkids too.

            Thank you Jesus!  Thank ya, thank ya Jesus!

            Thank you for this song I sing,

            Thank you for the blessings you bring.

            Thank you for the stars above,

            Thank you for your wonderful love.

            Praise you God!  Praise Your Holy name!

            Praise you God!  Praise Your Holy name!

And on it goes.  It will fit nearly any tune and as the day changes so, the words can differ.  Try it!  Amazing how a song and praise can brighten your day.

The Storm

            Then there’s the storms, Holy cow, I’ve never seen such storms.  Clouds, dark and ominous lumber slowly across the horizon.  The air is absolutely sill.  I listen and there is no sound, no birds, no wind, no crickets, as if all of creation is waiting.  There is a feeling on the air, or is it in my head?  A foreboding feeling of dread and doom.  The evening air seems to tingle and snap with static and tension. 

            I sit in my lounge chair in the yard one night after a particular hot day.  The temps are still in the 80’s at 9:00 and the soft, warm rain falling is as refreshing as a shower.  It seems strange to sit in my shorts in the rain and enjoy it.  I don’t believe there is any place in Montana that I have done this, maybe I have forgotten, but I remember the rain always being chilly. 

            I watch a light show to the south, long jagged streaks of lightening one right after the other a continuous stream of light.  Coming from the west is another black cloud with lightening bolts streaking the sky and I think if they come together we may be in trouble.

            Peaceful is the rain, so relaxing is God’s beautiful show, I ignore the apprehension in the air. Suddenly the wind comes up, the rain is no longer peaceful but driven pellets.  I run for cover.  BAM!  A gust hits the house.  Wind whips in the windows knocking things on the floor, snapping the curtains and blowing in torrents of rain.  I rush from window to window closing them and catching flying objects.  I run upstairs where the wind has blown things on the floor.  I look out the window, the trees are whipping in all directions, lightening flashes constantly and thunder booms.  Suddenly the house shudders and shakes.  A roar fills the air, as if a train is boring down on us.  The dogs bark like crazy.

            This is it!  A tornado!  I run to gather up flashlight, dogs, and my cell phone and head to the basement.  But the roar subsides.  Gusts still hit the house and shake it, the lightening is continuous, the thunder deafening, but maybe, just maybe there won’t be a tornado.  I go from window to window peering at the sky.  The trees are thrashing about, the wind is horrendous, but the train sound is gone.   

            Talk about a nail biter!  My land!  Tension indeed.  Fear making my head hurt.

            “Jesus!  Jesus!  Jesus!  Protect us!” Is all I can say.

            Happy hides in the bathroom since it’s the only room that doesn’t have an outside wall or window.  Doti follows me around like a shadow.  John calls from half way between Belfield and home and says he had to pull over since he couldn’t see the road from the rain and hail.  We had no hail, but the wind here would’ve blown his little car off the road, I’m sure.

            Thunderstorms don’t bother me, but the high winds and threat of tornados are nearly more than I can endure.  Like Happy, I want to curl up somewhere dark and safe and not come out until it’s over. 

            Life is like that, isn’t it?  One minute it’s a glorious day.  Everything is bright and beautiful and shinning in the sun.  The next dark clouds are whirling, spinning and rushing over head.  The wind assaults and roars and thrashes from all directions.   I don’t know where to go or what to do.  I don’t want to face it, not a tornado.  Not today!  I hide in a dark, safe corner. A place that seems secure.  But my seemingly safe and secure hiding place is untrustworthy, fickle, even treacherous when the house is whirled away in the roaring vortex of a tornado.

            The basement is damp, dank, and cold, but it’s the safest place to be, so they tell me, during a tornado.  “Even though you hear a great roaring, crashing, banging, and ripping over your head, STAY THERE! You’ll be safe in the basement, until the storm passes over.”  

            “Do not be afraid.  Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the Lord will bring to you today.”   Until the storm passes over. 

            The storm always passes.  Then the next day, the day after is always the brightest and most glorious day ever. 

            “The Lord will fight for you, you need only to stand still.”  Ex. 14:13

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