• If you are having problems logging in please use the Contact Us in the lower right hand corner of the forum page for assistance.

Good Sunday Mornin

Shortgrass

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 25, 2006
Messages
2,407
Location
Eastern Colorado
I teach a Sunday School class of teenagers. When I was telling them about this website and "Good Sunday Mornin", and I mentioned that I was known as "Shortgrass" one of the ranch raised boys commented, with his western drawl, "I bet I know whar ya gotcher naime." I had to smile. Indeed any ol' ranch kid in our country knows about short grass. We've seen it so short that a cottontail can hunker down and look like a Volkswagen Bug in an empty parking lot. The grass is real good this fall. Gramma grass is up to your stirrups (long legged cowboy on a short horse). The heads only reach that high. The actual leaves of it will come up around the hocks on the cattle—and that's the really good grass! I recall several years ago a family from Pennsylvania had occasion to visit our ranch. The man ran a small butcher shop and knew cattle, and was accustomed to seeing them at least belly deep or even up to their backs in grass. He asked what I fed my cattle. When I said they just ate the grass, he said "what grass?" I loaded him and his family in the pick-up and showed them the cattle. The cows were in great flesh, milking good and several of them already sporting six weight calves by late summer. He was incredulous that cattle could make a good living on no more feed than he saw growing. Our grass is short, but that is not to say it isn't good. Another term often used is "hard grass." We live in a hard grass country. I have been told that there is only one area in the US (somewhere up in the Dakotas) where there is any more feed value per pound of grass than here. There just don't have to be lots of it to be effective, not does it have to be real "showy" to get the job done. A sermon doesn't have to be long to be good. Nor do we have to be Billy Graham or James Dobson to be an effective servant in the Kingdom of God. No custodian feels as important as the hierarchy of the organization, but his job is none the less essential. We've heard the story of a shoe salesman that led Dwight L. Moody to the Lord. I think of my maternal grandmother who came as a sixteen year old bride to a homestead on these bleak prairies. As a boy, I loved to hear her tell of the hardships that she had endured. Always there was that seemingly insignificant comment "We would never have made it, but for the Lord." There it was that I learned that the Lord is one who we must trust for the day to day business of living and not just someone that we talk about at church. We can and ought to serve the Lord tucked away in our little corner of God's green acre. If we can't, we could not serve him anywhere we would choose to be. LET'S ROLL! You all have yourselves a good Sunday morning, and a good rest of the week.
 
That was another great sermonette, Shortgrass. Thanks for your inspiring words. It kind of boils down to, "it's not the size of the man in the fight, but the size of the fight in the man." Look at the battle between David and Goliath. Goliath was a giant and should have easily been able to overpower David. Though David was small, he had God on his side, and killed Goliath with a slingshot and a stone.
 
As always, thanks so much for the message this morning, Shortgrass. I greatly appreciate it.

Our church has its annual Fall Festival today. It will be a great time for fellowship and friendship, and show how thankful we are for all we have.

Cheers---

TTB :wink:
 
Shortgrass....

I have been in front of those kids before. They at times seem distant and unaffected, but never believe for a minute they aren't lucky to have you. And by you I mean someone comfortable in themsleves and with what gifts God has given them as being enuff.....

Those distant kids are now young adults we taught. They still seek us out and light up when they see us.....They have taken thier own paths, but some are realizing how important it was to know God loves them and the power in that....

Your stories are personal....The old saying, "Nobody cares how much you know until they see how much you care"......Telling personal stories uniqe to you shows our relationship with God and that is the most powerful in my book....

Keep up the good work my friend,


PPRM
 
http://chi.gospelcom.net/DAILYF/2003/04/daily-04-21-2003.shtml

has the story of Dwight L. Moody's life- quite a remarkable and productive man from humble beginnings.
Thank you Short Grass for reminding me about him. and Him.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top