Thinking About The Musk Ox
The ox knoweth his Owner; and the ass his Master’s crib… Isaiah 1:3
A typical full grown musk ox can weigh over 400 pounds; a big bull can weigh close to 800.
At dawn yesterday our friend Barbara White suffered a nasty fall.
Earlier in the week she’d undergone her first cancer chemotherapy treatment.
Barbara pulled the emergency cord. A staff member at the old folks home got her up off the bathroom floor and back into her bed.
During warm summers, musk oxen live near rivers or marshy areas where they feed on grass or ground reeds; in winter, musk ox dig through snow to find buried food.
Frightened, bruised, hurting, with cuts on her knees, Barbara called Ginny. Since Ginny was not wearing her hearing aids, she handed the phone to me. Barbara said she was scared and asked if my daughter-in-law, Helen, could come over to assist her.
I called Helen, who had to work, but she told my son, Donald, who offered to drive our daughter, Jennifer, a nurse, over to see about Barbara. Donald and Helen’s daughter Maggie had taken the car and drove off with her mother’s cell phone inside.
Ginny and I relayed calls.
Musk oxen are considered to be social animals; they normally live in herds of between ten and twenty; but sometimes as many as 400 gather in one group.
Ginny and I considered going to see about Barbara ourselves but since we have trouble driving on expressways, it takes us almost two hours to make the trip to Barbara’s (Have I ever mentioned that Jacksonville is the largest city in the United States as far as land area is concerned? The city encompasses over 900 square miles and Barbara’s home is at the opposite end of the city from ours).
Who do we know that lives closer?
Randy and Lisa.
A phone call wakes them and Lisa “half-way” showers and leaves her home immediately. I tease her about being an unclean, dirty woman. Over the phone she sticks her tongue out at me.
Donald calls having made arrangement for Jennifer to go over later in the week.
Ginny and I plan logistics about how we can best fit in for hands-on help. I could go over; I ‘ve worked as a care-giver and know how to do what needs to be done, but the nature of Barbara’s problems and her natural modesty leads her to feel she’d be more comfortable with another woman’s assistance.
Lisa arrives and does what needs to be done.
Helen goes over after her work and Lisa goes back home.
The Latin name for Musk Ox is Ovbios Moschatus; biologically the animals are more closely related to goats than to oxen.
Then Randy, Lisa’s husband called me asking directions to Barbara’s house because Lisa was having him deliver some Agatha Christy Miss Marple dvd discs for Barbara to watch.
So, when our friend Barbara fell and had need, Ginny and Helen and Lisa and Donald and Jennifer and Randy—all jumped to help. Not one of these people attends the same church Barbara does, in fact, they all go to different churches from each other. People from Barbara’s own church will look in her today.
Jesus once said, “Where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I in the midst of them”.
Funny thing about musk oxen… when wolves attack, when one of the herd falls ill, when calves are threatened—the whole herd forms a circle around the endangered one. Shoulder to shoulder they press together in a formidable stationary ring, heads lowered, sharp horns pointed outward, ready to defend the endangered one.
As I sat around smoking my pipe and fielding phone calls and doing chores that kept me close to the phone, I thought a lot about what was going on.
On one level, the lot of us are responding to herd instinct. Like dumb oxen we circle when one of ours is in trouble. We too are social animals.
Besides, we all love to be drama queens, a phone call at dawn, emergency response, fluttering around, being useful, feeling important—powerful ego strokes.
Wow! They could make a tv docudrama out of such material. Brad Pitt could play the part of me…
Or maybe not.
And besides, were I not manning the phones, I’d have to be out mowing the grass. What fun is that?
Yes, even musk ox must get a charge out of staving off the wolf pack.
Makes the ox feel empowered and in control.
Heady stuff.
But on another level, I think a different dynamic also works.
As Jesus also said, “By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another”.
Please, visit my website for more www.cowart.info and feel free to look over and buy one of my books www.bluefishbooks.info
posted by John Cowart @ 5:55 AM
6 Comments:
Praise God for all you dear saints.
yay!! I'm a musk ox!
love it!
did you know that ox in Scotland are fitted with Hearing Aids so they can avoid dangerous predators and keep the numbers up.
Reminds me of a friends train trip through Germany. The train broke down and wouldn't be fixed for a few days.
A fellow traveler had a cousin in a town nearby so he called them. ((It was like 2 am) The cousin told him to come over right away...the the fellow traveler bought my friend and his traveling companions! :o) When they arrived the people had a feast laid out for them and beds for all! Talk about loving Jesus by feeding unknown travelers!! Amazing Grace!!
Love this story! Reminds us we are all part of the family of God! :o)
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