Thursday, February 8, 2018

Life Is Short, Eternity Is Long

I first posted a version of this in April nearly five years ago. I have known for several weeks that I needed to post it again and today "feels" like the day. A church friend that was only one month older than me passed away suddenly last week and my heart is overwhelmed again with the brevity of life.

I have updated the information to the present day but the post is mostly the same. Please think it over and feel free to pass it on to some one else.
___________________________

Life is Short. If you live to be 100, life is still short. In the light of eternity, this life is so short.

In this picture I am probably about 13 years old. I had known most of these kids all my life and that seemed like a very long time.



Winning a baseball game was probably the most important thing on my mind at the time. My friends and I wondered why we could not play more games in a season. We should play four or five times each week. What is the big deal? Let's play ball. Let's play two games every night.

The coaches, parents, umpires and everybody else involved had life to deal with and we just had baseball. We had not yet learned that there were more important things than baseball. It seemed like an eternity passed if we had to wait a week between games.

At that age I also spent an awful lot of time on the bank of the Little Miami River and along the spillway of Caesar Creek Lake. I had to do something to fill the eternity between games. Two of the guys in that picture were with me a whole bunch of that time. I guess fishing was pretty important to us too.

Nearly 38 years have passed since that summer and time has flown by. There are days that the time elapsed seems more like 38 minutes instead of 38 years. A week is no longer an eternity. A week is a blink of an eye. A year does not drag on forever, it races by with a roar and a flash. Where did the time go?

As time moved along, the priorities of life changed too.

I can not remember the last time I played baseball or cared one little ounce about baseball. Spending the night sleeping on the ground by the river as close to the fire as I dare, does not sound fun at all. Life has moved on and I have moved with it. And it moved so fast.

The week I first wrote this in April of 2013 all of the kids in the picture above were still riding the speeding train of life, as far as I know. The day before I wrote it, one of them was laid in the ground. I attended his viewing. His brother told me that he was talking one minute and that he was dead the next. He literally fell over dead in mid-conversation.

Life is short and it does not take long to die. 13 years old and nothing to worry about but baseball and fishing. The next thing you know, the years have flown by and you are hanging on for dear life. 

Life is so full of things and stuff, joys and problems, family and friends, jobs and obligations, bills and payments, laughter and tears. You do not have time for anything else. How can we fit one more little thing in to our busy lives?

Who has time to think about next month, much less what follows that? Who has time to die? No one. No one has time to die. 

But since life is so short and so crowded we MUST take time to prepare to die.

That is one sure thing that is coming. It is appointed unto man once to die and after that, the judgement. Oh what a thought. Every man must die and then every man must face God. Every man must be prepared to die.

We can not save ourselves. We can not prepare ourselves. There is no one that is good enough for God. But God loves us so much that He sent His only begotten son to die in our place, that whosoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life!

-How can we prepare to die?

-Realize you are not good enough for entrance into Heaven. You can not be good enough. Ever.

-Believe on Jesus Christ, the son of God, as the only remedy for sin.

-Confess your sins.

-Trust Him for your salvation.

-Allow Him to radically and completely change your life.

-Devote yourself to Him and to righteous living.

-When this short life is over, you will be so glad you lived it for Christ.

Life is so short and eternity is long. I can live this short life for me and spend eternity separated from God. Or I can live this short life for Christ and spend eternity with God. 

I have made my decision and everyday I am renewing myself to that commitment. 

Have your made a decision about what to do with your short life?

Davy

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Vintage View Vednesday - July 2003 Recording

Our flashback this week soars back in time to July 2003. We had left the pastorate in Wichita the first Sunday in January and we were enjoying our first full year back on the road since 1993. We were traveling in our 2003 Chevy, pulling our 1984 Hitchhiker 5th wheel, enjoying great revivals and having a time!

A bunch of our immediate family had gathered for a few days of rest in Owensboro, Kentucky at Crabbfest. It was a lot of fun. Afterward we drove to Nashville, Tennessee for our second recording session there. Recording makes us nervous but the excitement is bigger than the nerves every time!

Ben Isaacs had a great bunch of musicians scheduled to lay down the music tracks on Monday at Hilltop Studio. Tracking day is the most exciting part of the recording process and we were stoked for the day to begin.

This was the recording session for "This is How It Feels to Be Free."


This is the song list from that CD.

1. He Came Through (The Lord Came Through)
Ashley Cleveland, James Hollihan, Russ Taff, Walter H. Wilson Jr./Warner-Tamerlane Pub. Co./BMI
2.  You Saved Me
Jeff Silvey, Michael Puryear/Milene Music, BMG Music Pub., Inc./BMI
3.  God Says You Can
Marcia Henry, Karen Peck/Chesnut Mound Music, Karen Peck Music/BMI
4.  I Think I’ll Take Some Time
Bryant Jones Sr./Ship Publishing/All Rights by Just Mike Music/BMI/2nd verse written by Sharon Whitley
5.  When Nothing But A Miracle Will Do
Rhonda Elizabeth Belford, Aaron Wilburn/House of Aaron Music/BMI
6.  Redeemed                                              
Gerald Crabb/Crabb’s Song Music/BMI
7.  This Is How It Feels To Be Free                
Sean Craig, Dave Clark, Don Koch/Ariose Music, Praise Song Press, Admin. By E.M.I Pub./ASCAP
8.  I’m At Your Mercy
Harrie and Joyce Martin McCollough, Jeff Silvey/Berlin Rd. Music, Joyce Martin McCollough Pub., Willow Branch Pub./BMI
9.  Soon Be Gone
Davy Boggs/Odie Podie Music/BMI
10.  Do Your Little Part
David Rose/Odie Podie Music/BMI
11.  Power To Restore
Davy, Kelly and Odie Boggs, Rick Combs/Odie Podie Music/BMI

Wow! We have sung a few of those songs a time or two!

The vintage pictures today come from those few days in Nashville. We need to get back into the studio for another record and these pictures really make us want to do it!

A 17 year old Odie and the incredible Aubrey Haynie. 


Aubrey played fiddle, mandolin and banjo on this project.

Ben Isaacs and Steve Chandler at the board giving someone a hard time.


Ben and Odie doing what we all do best!


Ben recording background vocals



Odie and Bobby All. Bobby played acoustic guitar on this project. 


Bobby's roots run way back in music, playing sessions and producing for many, many years. He played on and produced many of the records we grew up listening to on Eddie Crook's labels.

The fat guy with the John Deer suspenders.




Odie and Gary Prim


Gary played piano on This Is How It Feels To Be Free. Gary has been a piano player, songwriter and producer in Nashville going back to the 70's but we remember he most for his years with the Hinsons! Wow!

Odie and Greg Ritchie.


Greg has played on all of our studio projects in Nashville and we love him to pieces.


Odie and the legendary Kelly Back


Kelly Back was raised in our neck of the woods. He is a Pentecostal boy from Verity Parkway Church in Middletown. He has played for every one including the Hinsons and the Gaither stuff. He is tremendous and a really nice guy.

Kelly Jo singing!












Steve Chandler


Steve has engineered three of our records, Cradled In Grace, This Is How It Feels To Be Free and Simple Truth. I can sit and listen to Steve's stories about traveling with and recording the Happy Goodman's all day long.

Now we are back to Ben and Odie eating donuts again!


That is our Vintage View Vednesday post for this week. I hope you enjoy it.

Davy

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Another Green Machine Milestone

We purchased the Green Machine, a 2006 Envy Green Scion xB, in early May, 2012. It had nearly 74,000 miles on it when we brought it into the family. We introduced it to you on May 9, 2012.

Here are a couple of pictures of it then.



By late November 2013 the Green Machine was rolling over 100,000 miles. We were going through Memphis on our way from Claremore, Oklahoma to where the bus was parked in Alabama.

Here it is at 99,999


And at 100,000 miles at 7:41 PM Thanksgiving Day 11/28/13 in Memphis, Tennessee. 


At that time we were averaging 1370 miles per month and less than 16,500 miles per year. This week, we are approaching 174,000 miles on the odometer. That is 100,000 miles since we bought it and 74,000 miles since the end of November 2013.

That brings our average mileage up to 1480 per month and 17,760 per year. Not too bad for us at all.

In November 2013 when the odometer rolled over 100,000 miles, I estimated that we would hit 200,000 on the odometer in January 2020. Now we are on track to hit that number in June 2019. It will be interesting to keep track of that.

I snapped a few pictures of the Green Machine last week on a sunny day in Foley, Alabama. It was not spiffed up in these pictures but it was reasonably clean.





As you can see, it is a little worse for wear. The above picture is from last week and this one is from early May 2012.


Keep in mind, it has been driven 100,000 miles between pictures plus pulled behind the BoggsMobile probably another 100,000 miles and pulled inside the tent trailer a bunch more miles. It deserves to show its age!

It has been a super great car. I believe it will make it until summer of 2019 when it rolls over 200,000 miles on the odometer and I hope it goes farther than that.

I did tell Kelly Jo recently that after we have the house project behind us, it is time to seriously begin saving for our next vehicle to tow behind the bus. Until then, the Green Machine will keep pushing the BoggsMobile down the road.

Thanks for stopping by to sit a spell today.

Davy