It wasn’t exactly a barbecue.
Not in the strictest sense of the word. It was more like the
way his mother used to serve lamb chops. If they’re smokin’, they’re cookin’,
if they’re ashes, we're done. Then, once the meal he handed over to the stranger had gone up in smoke, the guy suddenly
disappeared, too.
Maybe I
should’ve cooked that myself, Gideon thought, staring at the charred remains
that once resembled food. He hadn’t even brought the fellow a match. The man just
held out his staff to touch the meat and bread when poof! It all burst into flames.
Incinerated.
“I
wonder where I could get a stick like that,” he thought out loud. Brushing the
still warm debris from off the rock, it occurred to him that men who could
appear and disappear and perform magic tricks like this weren’t your normal,
run of the mill tourists. There may have been something a little more
supernatural about him. Then again, maybe Gideon was just overcome by gluten
and wine fumes.
He was
still scratching his head and wondering what to do next when suddenly the
stranger was standing in front of him again.
“Hey,
where’d you go?” Gideon asked, startled by the interruption. Eyeing him with suspicion, he pressed, “You got food poisoning, didn’t you? Well, next time you
may want to tone down that stick just a little. First time with a new toy?”
The man
smiled and shook his head. “I wasn’t hungry. I’m here to prove something to
you.”
“That you’re
a pyromaniac?”
“I’m
here to offer you peace. And tell you you’re not going to die.”
Gideon
put a hand to his forehead. “That’s good news. Guess I'm not coming down with a fever.” He crossed his
arms, eyeing the stranger. “I’m not going to die of what?”
“Fear.
You’re not going to die from fear.”
It wasn’t
exactly the answer he’d expected. He didn’t think he agreed with it, either.
Lots of people caved to fear. Hadn’t this guy ever heard news reports? Fishermen
die of fear in sudden storm on lake. That one happened all the time. Or
maybe they drowned. Either way, dead is dead, he thought.
Gideon
eyed the visitor. “That’s it? Be at peace and stop being afraid? That’s
the message? Okay, thanks. Very helpful,” he added, his voice tinged with sarcasm.
“There’s
more,” the man said.
Of course,
there was more. There was always more. He frowned but said nothing. And waited.
For a second.
“Later
tonight, get your father’s bull . . .”
“Are you out of our mind? I can't walk off with my father's favorite bull.”
“No,
not that one. His second favorite. I want you to take your father’s second
favorite bull, tie it to the altar your dad had built to honor the sun god, and
pull it down.”
Gideon’s
eyes were bulging. “You want me,” he began, breathless, “to use my father’s
very own second favorite bull to destroy his favorite statue?”
“Exactly.
And then chop down the other statue he erected right beside it when you’re
finished with that. The one he built to the moon goddess.”
“Asherah?”
Gideon asked, incredulous. “Do you have some kind of vendetta against me? I
mean, the people of Midian really admire their lustful goddess of seduction.”
The
stranger’s head tipped to the side and now it was his turn to cross his arms. “The
goddess they carved from a tree?”
Well,
he had a point.
“Let me
ask you something,” the stranger posed. “If you’re convinced the people in your
town are worshipping the true God, what are you doing hiding out here in a
winepress?”
Which,
Gideon had to admit, was another good point. He began to whine. Just a little.
“Why
can’t God just send a windstorm and blow them over? It would be an act of
nature that way instead of vandalism. Or he could just toss a few lightning
bolts down and explode those phony chunks of wood and rock. Nobody has to get
hurt—especially me. Wouldn’t that accomplish the same thing?”
The
stranger was silent. Waiting. There were crickets. The buzz of mosquitos. And
Gideon was positively certain he heard the loud splash of a drop of sweat as it
rolled off the end of his nose and splatted on his sandaled toes. Still, the
other man remained mute.
“I
guess I see your point,” Gideon finally said, even though he didn’t. “I have to
do it. Why do I have to do it?” he asked, trying to be honest even if he wasn’t
fearless.
“I
already told you. Because you are a mighty man of courage and the Lord is with
you.”
That’s
what I get for being an introvert and working alone, Gideon thought in self-reproach.
If I’d just brought a couple of the guys here to help me, maybe God could have
been with one of them instead.
The
stranger chuckled, as if he could read his mind. “You’re not alone.”
“Yeah,”
Gideon sighed. “You said that. So, just, borrow a bull, pull down some statues,
and then what? Don’t you think somebody might wonder where all the noise is
coming from?”
“Not a
problem,” the man replied, brushing off his anxiety. “With all those fallen rocks, build an altar to the
one true God right where the fake ones used to be. Then take the wood from the
moon goddess statue, set it on fire, and sacrifice that bull there.”
Gideon was speechless. For a second. Then he exploded. “There is a problem!" he exclaimed. "Let me get this straight,” he said in such a tight, tiny voice even he wasn’t sure it belonged to him. “Take my father’s second favorite bull—without permission—and tie it to a stone statue of the sun god. Yank it down until it falls in a million pieces, use all that shrapnel to build an altar. Then, chop down the moon goddess statue and pile all her wooden parts on the altar, torch it. Finally, to put the icing on the cake, kill my father’s second favorite bull and sacrifice it on the repurposed pile of broken gods.”
Gideon was speechless. For a second. Then he exploded. “There is a problem!" he exclaimed. "Let me get this straight,” he said in such a tight, tiny voice even he wasn’t sure it belonged to him. “Take my father’s second favorite bull—without permission—and tie it to a stone statue of the sun god. Yank it down until it falls in a million pieces, use all that shrapnel to build an altar. Then, chop down the moon goddess statue and pile all her wooden parts on the altar, torch it. Finally, to put the icing on the cake, kill my father’s second favorite bull and sacrifice it on the repurposed pile of broken gods.”
“In the
city square,” the stranger added. “Where no one can miss seeing it.”
Gideon’s
shoulders sagged. His heart sank. His mouth went dry. When he was a kid, hadn’t
his mother told him to never talk to strangers? He’d always wondered why. After
all, until you met a stranger, you couldn’t make a friend out of them. But
tonight, as the consequences of the strange plan overwhelmed him and kept his
sandals frozen to the ground, he realized his mother had been right. Talking to
strangers was a really bad idea. Even for a grown up.
“Holy
smokes,” he groaned.
With gratitude to Sabrina McKenzie for the great photo seen above. The original picture can be viewed at: https://www.flickr.com/photos/94543618@N02/14046601866/in/photolist-npfvmN-fyb77P-582fQc-8wvfsP-828DzP-ot73eg-27KsDhY-7NpztU-4pZrmV-6zYAxV-pLfHge-iiWhF-9hURq7-9hRKUR-ai62hj-9hRKCX-9hRJNg-ai3mTP-9hRKqK-ai3DwH-ai37dX-ai3EDe-ai5Zof-ai6qwb-ai2NqR-ai6kVQ-9hUQcm-ai2YE4-ai6gE1-ai5ve7-8crQXo-aXY5TB-eU69F-kTZw5R-2YP17-xTqrqY-cGoimW-5EjQvm-7LL62c-cGoi7o-xear4B-6zVHu-ogig6d-8gghmb-cbUr39-6quqtR-bunFMU-4QDFhp-caHGN5-4fQFpW
With gratitude to Sabrina McKenzie for the great photo seen above. The original picture can be viewed at: https://www.flickr.com/photos/94543618@N02/14046601866/in/photolist-npfvmN-fyb77P-582fQc-8wvfsP-828DzP-ot73eg-27KsDhY-7NpztU-4pZrmV-6zYAxV-pLfHge-iiWhF-9hURq7-9hRKUR-ai62hj-9hRKCX-9hRJNg-ai3mTP-9hRKqK-ai3DwH-ai37dX-ai3EDe-ai5Zof-ai6qwb-ai2NqR-ai6kVQ-9hUQcm-ai2YE4-ai6gE1-ai5ve7-8crQXo-aXY5TB-eU69F-kTZw5R-2YP17-xTqrqY-cGoimW-5EjQvm-7LL62c-cGoi7o-xear4B-6zVHu-ogig6d-8gghmb-cbUr39-6quqtR-bunFMU-4QDFhp-caHGN5-4fQFpW
