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Wednesday, July 28, 2004

I love to drive through Custer State Park in South Dakota because if you're lucky you get to see a lot of buffalo. Now, seeing them is one thing - riding them is another. We were recently in South Dakota. One important part of our ministry, of course, is reaching what one researcher called the most devastated young people in America, and we were there for an outreach among Native American young people. Reservation young people are in just great need of the Lord. We were with our Lakota Sioux Christian brother and we saw some buffalo, and we joked a little bit about hunting them, and so on. Then he said, "You know, I know someone who rides buffalo in parades and on holidays." I said, "Wait a minute. Did you say rides a buffalo?" I can't imagine boarding one of these wonderful wild animals. Well, somebody asked this buffalo rider, "What's it take?" He said, "Patience." Then he said, "If you neglect him one or two days, he won't be tamed anymore."

I'm Ron Hutchcraft and I want to have A Word With You today about "Buffalo Riding."

Our word for today comes from Romans 7:19. It talks about the buffalo inside you and me - a wild beast that does not want to be tamed. Verse 19: "For what I do is not the good I want to do; no, the evil I do not want to do - this I keep on doing. Now, if I do what I do not want to do, it is no longer I who do it, but it is sin living in me that does it." Verse 24, "What a wretched man I am!" Paul says. "Who will rescue me from this body of death?" It's pretty hopeless up to this point. And then here's the good news. "Thanks be to God - through Jesus Christ our Lord."

There's an animal inside me that wants to go against God. The hymn writer says, "Prone to wander, Lord I feel it ... prone to leave the God I love." We know what God wants. We want it too, but we keep choosing to let that part of us that gets out of control run us. We can't tame it, but we're not without hope. There's a Savior, not only from the penalty of sin, but from the power of sin. Romans 6 says, "sin will no longer be your master." When we surrender that wild part of us to Jesus, He begins to tame what has always ruled us. But you can't tame it once and for all. It takes patience, like the buffalo rider said.

Luke 9:23, "Take up your cross daily, and follow me." If you neglect that buffalo, that animal inside of you one or two days, well, he won't be tamed anymore. That sin has beaten you. And it has to be beaten now on a 24-hour basis. Twenty-four-hour little victories. Some of us have made the mistake of thinking that one great spiritual experience would tame the buffalo once and for all. But it keeps getting away from us again. It keeps riding over us. We miss the daily part.

If you conquer sin one day at a time, and if Jesus is the only one that can conquer it, then it stands to reason you have to be with Jesus each new day. You notice something that happens consistently when you miss a day or two of your time with Jesus. The dark side of you starts to surface again. I see it happen to me. I see traits that I was seeing less of, and suddenly I start seeing more of it again and so does everyone else close to me. It's as if that daily surrender time with Jesus is the only dam that holds back the parts of me I hate. You miss being with the Savior from sin, and the sin starts to leak back in. You need a consistent get-together with the Lord Jesus where you again make Him Lord of your stubborn sins.

That's largely the margin between victory and defeat because we've all got a buffalo to tame. Let him go unattended for a couple of days, and that sin will stampede right over you again. But you can ride the buffalo that has ridden you by daily turning over the reins to the one who died to tame the animal in you - the Savior, Jesus Christ.

                

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Hutchcraft Ministries
P.O. Box 400
Harrison, AR 72602-0400

(870) 741-3300
(877) 741-1200 (toll-free)
(870) 741-3400 (fax)

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