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Taking A Walk

June 4, 2014 Filed Under: Current Thoughts, Faith and Family

Kokosing River

For a few years we lived in a wonderful old farmhouse on a dead-end road within walking distance of the Kokosing River. It was a beautiful place to live. This is a classic re-post of an incident that will always live in my heart.

When a Dad and a boy and a dog take a walk in the country, if the Dad walks a mile the boy walks two and the dog five. That was the way of things one autumn afternoon on the banks of the Kokosing. Kyle climbed on rocks. Ginger chased her fancy up the hills and ran ahead scouting for us. Then she would circle back and trot panting at our side for a while before shooting off again. I walked with a stick, ambling slowly along enjoying the sound of water over rocks and the scent of autumn that hung in the air. The leaves were falling steadily into the water and along the bank. A couple hard frosts had brought on the color and killed off the flies and mosquitoes.

A wall of rock ran up on our left. We walked northeast along the river on our right following a fisherman’s path. At one point Kyle left the dirt path and climbed up onto some rocks. They were covered with leaves and drying vegetation. I was a few paces ahead when I heard him cry out. It was not a little call for help but a terrified scream. He had fallen into the hole obscured by brush. I looked back and I could see him clinging to the rock and trying to keep from falling further into the hole. Later he told me that one of the reasons he was so frightened is that just before the ground gave way beneath his feet, he saw a snake slide into the hole.

When I looked back I could see that he had fallen down between two rocks into a hole about five feet deep. He had no way of knowing that his feet dangled only eight or ten inches from the ground. The frightened snake was no threat and he was in no real danger. All this was immediately evident to me, but his cry was so desperate, so pitiful. I ran to him, bounded up on the rock and pulled him from the hole. The fear on his face and the desperation in his voice stirred my soul even though I could see he was in no real danger. I was only rescuing him from his own panic. He clung to me for a moment with a hammering in his little chest.

We both enjoyed a good laugh when I showed him that he was never really in any danger. We walked home. He walked a little closer to me on the way back. The sun was well on it’s way down the sky, and we decided it would be a good time to see what Mom was planning for supper.

I don’t know about you, but I’ve had the bottom fall out on me a couple of times. It throws a scare into you. But the Word promises that the Lord will spring to the aid of his children when they cry out to him in desperation. He knows exactly how much danger we are in. He knows the fear that torments our hearts, and He knows the end from the beginning. So when the bottom falls out and we are plunged into fear, the right thing to do is cry out to out father. Sometime He will deliver us from danger. Sometimes he will deliver us from our own panic, and then we walk a little closer to Him on the way home.

“I sought the Lord and He heard me and delivered me from all my fears.” (Psalm 34:4)

In A Dozen Weeks the Leaves Will Turn and Fall

June 3, 2014 Filed Under: Current Thoughts

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This afternoon I was thinking about how delightful it is to feel the summer breeze blowing through the open windows and stirring the trees outside.

I don’t want to be an agent of doom and depression, but in just a dozen weeks the leaves now just darkening will turn and fall. The balmy air will cool and the days will shorten.

Robert Frost, the New England poet, observed this with sadness and captures the melancholy of it in this poem about taking an autumn walk…

When I go up through the mowing field,
The headless aftermath,
Smooth-laid like thatch with the heavy dew,
Half closes the garden path.

And when I come to the garden ground,
The whir of sober birds
Up from the tangle of withered weeds
Is sadder than any words

A tree beside the wall stands bare,
But a leaf that lingered brown,
Disturbed, I doubt not, by my thought,
Comes softly rattling down.

I end not far from my going forth
By picking the faded blue
Of the last remaining aster flower
To carry again to you.

-Robert Frost

Important Questions

May 31, 2014 Filed Under: Current Thoughts, Virtues and Values

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Dirty talk, corse talk, bathroom humor, sexual innuendo, double-entendre have become common among many who say they are followers of Jesus, but Jesus said a good man has a treasure of good things in his heart.

-Are you a follower of Jesus?

-Would he talk the way you do?

-Are you using your tongue in an honorable way?

Here are some questions and some scriptures that will help you as you examine your heart about this. James said the word is like a mirror. When you hold the mirror of the word up to your heart it will reveal what is inside.

Is your heart a treasure of good things? Matt 12:33-37

Are you a vessel set apart by the Master for an honorable use cleansed from dishonorable things? 2 Tim 2:19-22

Do you allow corrupting talk to come out if your mouth? Eph. 4:28

Do you participate in filthiness, foolish talk, or crude joking? Eph. 5:4

Do you continually think about things that are true, honorable, just, pure, lovely, commendable, excellent, and worthy of praise? Phil 4:8

After you have carefully considered these scriptures, spend some quiet time with the Lord seeking his forgiveness and asking his help in cleansing your heart. Aspire, with God’s help, to make your heart a treasure of good things. You could be a blessing to many. You can be among those who call on God out of a pure heart or you can be swept down-stream with the rest of those don’t know God and don’t love God.

Ken Pierpont Storytelling Podcast

Jess Curtis; Story Podcast #4

May 31, 2014 Filed Under: Current Thoughts, Story Podcast

https://kenpierpont.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/2014-06-01-Jess-Curtis-KPSP-4-52414-7.33-AM.mp3

Ken-fence-Amish

In this podcast I have included a story told in the Evangel Pulpit. All around us are people who need the sweetness of God’s love.


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Ten Dollar Lemonade

May 26, 2014 Filed Under: Current Thoughts

Homemade Lemonade

Yesterday was a beautiful Lord’s Day. The service at Evangel was uplifting, the music was beautiful and meaningful and the people entered in wholeheartedly. I had a special freedom in preaching and I am preaching right through the heart of the Book of Romans right now.

After church we went to a little BBQ place and enjoyed some perfect brisket and washed it down with ice cold classes of lemonade. It was a good day. I drove home and when Chuk arrived a bit later he was carrying a paper cup of lemonade.

“What’s that?”

“Lemonade”

“Where did you get it?”

“The little brothers who live around the corner have a little stand.”

“How much were they charging?”

“They said .50 a cup, but I gave them ten dollars and told them to share.”

I thought about the little boys who live there. They are always out wearing out the grass and doing the kinds of things little boys do. I walk in the neighborhood so a few times I have heard the exchanges with their dad. He’s a barker. Everything I have ever heard him say to them, he barked. He may be a great dad and he may be sensitive and kind behind closed doors, but our in the yard he brakes and they scamper around and try to keep him happy.

I imagined the look on their faces when they sold Chuk a cup of lemonade for 10.00 and it put a smile in my heart. Chuk is an entrepreneur at heart and had always had something going. He has turned the basement of Granville Cottage into a candle-manufacturing shop. He is a manager at Starbucks so he understands customer service and selling beverages to people.

I found myself breathing a little prayer. “Lord, you saw that. Bless my son for his generous heart. Bless him, Lord.”

The generous soul will be made rich, And he who waters will also be watered himself. Proverbs 11:25

Ken Pierpont
Granville Cottage
Riverview, Michigan
May 26, 2014

Ken Pierpont Storytelling Podcast

Cherry Sours; Story Podcast #3

May 24, 2014 Filed Under: Current Thoughts, Story Podcast

https://kenpierpont.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/2014-05-24-Cherry-Sours-KPSP-3-52414-7.01-AM.mp3

Ken-fence-Amish

In this podcast I have included a story told in the Evangel Pulpit. All around us are people who need the sweetness of God’s love.


Subscribe to the Ken Pierpont Storytelling Podcast

Storytelling Podcast RSS Feed
Storytelling Podcast in iTunes

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