Pea Ridge Times

Renewed daily

- JERRY NICHOLS United Methodist Church retired

“They who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall mount up with wings like eagle’s, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.”

This passage from the prophet Isaiah, Isaiah 40:31, reminds us that there is a constant and ongoing renewal of the spirit in the lives of those who trust in the Lord, and who yield their hearts to the inspiratio­ns of God’s spirit. How greatly I believe people of our time would profit if rather than relying on perpetual excitement­s, energy drinks and stimulants to feel more alive, they instead attach themselves to the renewing energies of God’s purposes, the lifegiving fellowship of Jesus Christ our Savior, and to the vital hope which is continuall­y stirred in our hearts by the Holy Spirit.

Every day we have experience of things that wear away at us, using up our energy of body, draining our emotional resources, tempting us to become resigned and discourage­d, to give in to cynicism and negativism. In reading the Bible, especially the letters of the apostle Paul in the New Testament, I have always been impressed with his optimism, with his enduring expectancy toward God’s help to be experience­d in every need. Especially, I am impressed that his outlook in these things came not out of a favored and easy life, but out of a life faced with challenges, reverses, problems, opposition­s and even determined persecutio­ns. I’m looking at 2 Corinthian­s 4:16 as just one example of that outlook: ”So we do not lose heart. Though our outer nature is wasting away, our inner nature is being renewed every day.”

Several years ago, Dr. Norman Vincent Peale made a momentous impression on his generation through his book, “The Power of Positive Thinking.” Frankly, I have never been hugely impressed with that title, but at least the title points to a high value and a high potential to be found in a positive expectancy and a hopefilled outlook based in trusting God and living responsive­ly to the will and purpose of the Lord. The Christian life is a renewing life. The walk with Jesus is a rejuvenati­ng walk. Life in the spirit is an experience of life that wells up from within the heart of faith, awakening us to the blessing of eternal life, arousing us to new appreciati­on of our blessings, to a more perceptive experience of joys in the Lord’s fellowship, moving us to live thankfully and thoughtful­ly.

A month ago, as I went over the pastures on our farm, everywhere I was seeing the lifeless brown of dying plants suffering from the season’s heat and drought. Today, as I look over the same pastures, everywhere I see green; with the pasture grasses coming out again and the hay crop seeming to promise a cutting of hay before the onset of fall. The earth has a way of being renewed. What a difference is made by a few slow, soaking rains! A month or so ago, it would seem natural to be thinking that everything is against us, everything is drying up, everything is going from bad to worse! Yet, even back then, some were thinking, we’ve seen it bad before, and it got better. We’ve seen it dry before, and the rains eventually came. We’ve seen nature around us wasting away; but it came back. It was renewed. Which way of thinking is the correct way? Which is the better? Which makes better use of the opportunit­ies opening up? Which best responds to the developing potentials when they appear? Which more fully enjoys the renewal when it comes?

Should we as Christians not draw on this sense of being renewed daily in the spirit of Christ even as we live through times of economic difficulty? One of the factors which perpetuate­s recessions has been called “consumer confidence,” or the lack of such. This is the idea that negative expectatio­ns tend to create the conditions which fulfill and perpetuate those very negative expectatio­ns. Economies grow not just out of presidenti­al initiative­s or out of government­al policies, but out of expectant economic activity on the part of the people who make up the economy. Creative initiative­s on the part of the ordinary people are important too. It is not just the rich and powerful who drive economic vitality, it is the energy and the creativity and the participat­ion of the everyday workers and consumers, and of the ordinary families across the country. Without that grassroots creativity and expectancy, the wealthy may just sit on their wealth, and nothing really happens.

They who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength. It is an expectancy to live by. It is an attitude which equips for success, both now and eternally. We do not lose heart in this walk with Christ. Our inner nature is being renewed every day. Like a spring in a dry and thirsty land, the life of Jesus manifests itself in the inward person, awakening new expectancy, empowering new purpose, inspiring the heart to high endeavors in the Lord, instilling in the heart a sense of fulfilment and joy in the Lord.

••• Editor’s note: Jerry Nichols, a native of Pea Ridge, is an award-winning columnist, a retired Methodist minister with a passion for history. He is vice president of the Pea Ridge Historical Society. He can be contacted by e-mail at joe369@centurytel.net, or call 621-1621.

40 Years Ago Thursday, Sept. 21, 1972 Pea Ridge Graphic

In the monthly session, Pea Ridge City Council voted to have Rogers attorney J. Wesley Sampier draw up three ordinances: An ordinance creating the Pea Ridge Planning Commission, an ordinance to compel local property owners to remove unsightly things from their property and an ordinance making it unlawful to move old houses into the city of Pea Ridge.

The Pea Ridge school enrollment stood at 510 at the close of the first three weeks of school. This figure compares with 491 enrollment at the end of the first month’s school a year ago.

A former Pea Ridge coach, his wife and 11-yearold son were killed in a five-car pileup west of Tontitown. James Albert Ballenger, his wife Caroldean and their son, Jimmy were killed, while their 9-yearold daughter was critically injured. Ballenger coached and taught in Pea Ridge from 1957 to about 1961.

30 Years Ago Wednesday, Sept. 22, 1982 Pea Ridge Country Times

The condition, repair, resurfacin­g and rebuilding of Town of Avoca roads and streets occupied most of the meeting time of the Avoca council. In addition, one alderman, Dale Kroll, was removed from the council due to moving outside city limits and the resignatio­n of alderman Merill Latham was accepted.

Union officer Capt. Henry Curtis Jr.’s jacket and cap were presented as a gift to the Pea Ridge National Military Park from descendant grandson Horace Jones.

Eleven members and spouses of the 22-member Pea Ridge High School Class of 1937 met for their 45th reunion.

PTA officers for 1982-83 were: Margaret Cheek, hospitalit­y chairman; Caro-

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