“Gerry, we just took out a cow.”
Can I just
tell you that when you hear those words on a cell phone call, it does not bless
your heart! Especially when the call
comes from a groomsman who just left from your son’s wedding reception and has
another two of your son’s best friends and wedding attendants in the car with
him. I have known these boys for years,
the driver for his entire life. We definitely had some ANGUS ANGST going on and
there may be some future COWnseling necessary.
This crazy COWmikaze event was probably a
result of the powerful thunderstorm that blew across Palo Duro Canyon toward
the end of the wedding reception and left us COWering under cover watching one
of the most amazing light shows I have ever seen.
Young men from the big city of Azle don’t
expect to enCOWnter livestock in the road while they are driving in the rain
late at night. Of course, in cattle
country those BLESSED BOVINES can and do move around during stormy weather. It
is UDDERLY impossible to keep them all under COWntrol and all acCownted for. The
ten minutes it took me to catch up to them after the phone call seemed to COWnt
down like molasses on a January morning.
When I arrived at the scene, the car was totaled and Bessie had departed
for HEIFER HEAVEN, but the boys were ok. They are to be COWngratulated for
their calm response. I’m sure that Zeke’s wedding day will be one they will
never forget--and that's no BULL!
All I could think of was how a spectacularly
wonderful day could have ended in tragedy. Ok, maybe it did end in tragedy for the cow,
but the rest is just stuff. A rancher
lost the value of a cow. Our friends
lost the value of a vehicle. But God
protected our most precious treasures—the lives of three young men.
I don’t know why God let them walk away
unhurt. We don’t usually bother to ask
why on things like that. We ask why the
cow was in the road. We ask why they
weren’t able to swerve at miss it. We
would certainly be asking why if they had been injured or worse. But since we think we deserve good things like
protection, we don’t bother to ask why when it happens.
I’m not suggesting that we should always ask
why things happen the way they do. I am
suggesting that we have a purpose for being here. Sometimes a “near miss” can refocus us on
fulfilling that purpose.
Acts 17:27-28 says, “God did this so that men
would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far
from each one of us. For in him we live and move and have our being.”
Our lives matter so much to God that He has
arranged circumstances so we can enCOWnter Him.
Spiritual lessons from a restless cow? COWabunga!
You need help :-)
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