Sunday, March 20, 2016

Once A Knight ...: Richard Peek: A man for many seasons

Today I am going to take a break from blogging, but would like to share with you a blog recently written about my father Richard Peek.  The blog was posted and written by Nico Van Thyn, you can click on the link to get the original post or read the copy pasted below.

In Christ alone,
Mike Peek

Once A Knight ...: Richard Peek: A man for many seasons:        One cold March day in the mid-1970s, Richard Peek was off duty from his fireman's job and went fishing with a buddy on the banks of the Trinity River in Dallas.
Richard Peek (44): A big man who could play
in the mid-1960s (photo from Louisiana Tech
sports information office)
 
      Within their sight, a boat overturned, and two men and a little boy went under the water.
      Peek had trained as a paramedic at the start of his 33-year career with the Dallas Fire Department. He saw the danger; without hesitation, he dove in the water.
      He saved one man and the boy. Unfortunately, the other man -- the boy's father -- drowned.
       Richard came home still wet and disheveled. His wife, Carole, asked what happened. "He was real quiet about it," she remembers. He said, 'I had to go in the water.' No further details.

       Three days later, Carole found out what had happened. The story had been reported in the papers and friends of the Peeks were calling.
       President Gerald Ford soon sent a letter of commendation. The Carnegie Foundation offered a financial reward. Richard refused to accept it.
       "Anything he did as a fireman or as a person, he didn't talk about himself," Carole said.
---
       We're here to write about him. We remember Richard Peek as a basketball player, the 6-foot-11, 230-pound center who played two seasons for Louisiana Tech University, the second as one of the "Triple Towers" of the 1966-67 conference championship team coached by Scotty Robertson.
       That was his senior season and he was -- my view -- the quietest, most steady player on that team and perhaps its most important player, a skilled and tough inside force.
       He was the only one of those Bulldogs to play professionally, one season with the Dallas Chaparrals.
       Beyond basketball, he was a man of many interests. He lived a full life -- as an outdoors person, an adventurer, an achiever, and particularly as a family man.
       Richard Peek died on Feb. 16, 2014, in Tyler, Texas, at age 70, after a steady, debilitating health decline -- Parkinson's and then Lewy body dementia.
       It was a tough and challenging last few years, physically and emotionally, for Carole as she had to try to move his big body when he was unable to do so on his own.
       They had moved after his Fire Department retirement and three decades of living in Garland, Texas -- east side of greater Dallas -- to a place in the country near Chandler, just outside of Tyler. That was to be nearer kids and grandkids, but the difficulty of his illness forced another move even closer, to Whitehouse.
     He and Carole -- friends since junior high days in Pensacola, Fla. -- were married for 49 years, with three children (Michael, 47; Julia Ann Cole, 45; and Jeffery, 41) and seven grandchildren. Jeffery is the tallest of the kids, at 6-7.
---
      Richard came to Louisiana Tech following two years in the University of Florida program. After sitting out a year as a transfer, practicing with the Tech team along with 6-10 Bob Watson (who became eligible a half-season earlier than Peek), it was easy for his teammates to be impressed.
      "He was a very good player, a pretty polished low-post player," said Leon Barmore, one of the guards in those years. "He had post moves that a lot of guys in that time didn't have. He'd leave guys guarding him in the post just standing there."
      Jimmy Pruett, the other starting guard: "Richard Peek was a very good player, steady, dependable. All-[conference]. Could score, defend, rebound, and was all about winning. ... Not particularly outspoken. ... He wanted to do the right thing and win."
      Tommy Gregory, a reserve forward who often teamed with Peek and had to guard him in practice: "I remember him as a hard-working player, good around the hoop and a good rebounder with a good mid-range shot. He was a tough, unselfish player."
     Peek led Tech in rebounding both of his seasons, and averaged 17.4 points a game as a junior and 14.1 the next year on a balanced team that went 20-8 overall and 11-1 in the conference (Gulf States). 
     As a senior, he was the steady center who could be dominant, but sometimes it was excitable 7-foot freshman Charlie Bishop who had the big games.
     Part of Peek's role was as a mentor to Bishop, working on moves around the basket for the inexperienced rookie.
     "Coach Robertson told Richard when he came to Tech that he hadn't coached players that big," said Carole, "so Richard was sort of an assistant. He helped devise some of the drills for the center.
     "He really loved playing for Scotty Robertson."
        He did not love playing for Norm Sloan -- "Stormin' Norman" -- at Florida. 
     Richard had starred at Pensacola's Escambia High School (later Emmitt Smith's school), and his size and ability made him a prime recruit for the Gators, who'd never had much success in the sport.
     After a year on the freshman team, he lettered on the Florida varsity as a sophomore -- a 12-10 team, 6-8 in the SEC (tied for ninth in a 12-team league). And he wasn't happy.
     Sloan was the coach and, said Carole, "Richard didn't like the players he was with. He was his own person, and there was so much mischief going on." So he looked to transfer.
     The connection to Tech was Escambia coach George Hill, who was friends with Tech first-year assistant coach Don Landry. Escambia, in Peek's years there, had played against Landry's St. Aloysius (New Orleans) teams two years in a row.
     So when Hill called Landry asking if Tech might be interested in a 6-11 center, the answer was "sure." "I knew what a good player he was," said Landry, and Robertson had Peek come to Ruston for a visit.
     "They wined and dined him at a ranch there," Carole recalled, "and he was a big hunter and fisherman. He saw that area was good for that."
     It was a fit, along with Robertson's promising program.

---
      More from his teammates:
      "Richard and I were close; we were roommates [on the road-game overnight stays]," said Barmore, the future Hall of Fame women's basketball coach. "We umpired kids' baseball games together one summer. Can you imagine a 7-foot guy squatting behind home plate?"
      "He knew how to handle the ball, and knew how to pass it," said Jon Pat Stephenson, the starting small forward in Peek's two seasons. "He could handle a lob pass than the other two [centers, Bishop and Watson]. We beat a lot of teams with those lobs."
     Barmore and Stephenson each remembered one Peek move with the ball in the low post. "He would dip his left shoulder and spin back the other way," Barmore said. "He'd leave guys guarding him just standing there."
      "He made that look easy," Stephenson said, "and he'd have a layup or a dunk." 
     Pruett: "As I recall, his points were mainly in close, certainly inside 10-12 feet, although he was not a great leaper. An excellent college player, but maybe not quite agile enough or strong enough for the NBA.
     "Kind of the classic big man of that era -- and our best big guy while he was there. I only got to play with him one year. He was definitely the key player added -- from outside our area -- in making us a championship team.
      "He was really a nice person, kind of quiet, easy to be around, although I was only around him (and his wife) at basketball-related times."     "He was a very mild guy, he was very coachable," said John Whitmore, a sophomore on the 1966-67 team. "He fit in perfectly with the guys who had been around for a couple of years, and he was a very skilled post player."
     "Richard was a great player -- strong, focused and could do it all," said Terry Ewing, a reserve forward who played one season with Peek and practiced against him two years. "He was very much a team player, but when he got the ball around the bucket he knew how to finish.
    "I got six stitches in practice when I wasn't quick enough to avoid his powerful elbow. Richard was a true gentleman who played hard but always played clean."
    Ewing recalled that he worked with Peek "one summer painting land lines around tracts of timber for Ewing Timber. The men who worked for my Dad laughed that they had never seen markings on the trees that high up. We became very close during that time and he was a special friend." 
     Gregory: "I think it was [Southwestern Louisiana's] Elvin Ivory that dunked on him one night. Next trip down the floor, Richard returned the favor with that quick spin move down low that he had.
     "... He was a great teammate and I really enjoyed playing with him. Won't ever forget seeing him folding up into his green VW bettle that he and Carole drove."
---     
Richard Peek (33) with the 1967-68 Dallas Chaparrals;
in front are Shreveport's Charles Beasley (12) and player-
coach Cliff Hagan (16); beside Peek, John Beasley (44).
     He was drafted by the NBA's Baltimore Bullets ... in the 15th round, 148th player picked in 1967. Slim chance, so he opted to try the new American Basketball Association, the new team in Dallas.
     The first Chaparrals -- forerunner to the now San Antonio Spurs -- were led by former University of Kentucky and St. Louis Hawks star Cliff Hagan (who was the player-coach) and included two players named Beasley -- Charles, from Shreveport (Fair Park) and SMU, and John, from Linden, Texas (near Texarkana) and Texas A&M.
     Peek was a reserve, averaging 4.6 points and 3.9 rebounds a game in 51 games. His averages were 5.4 and 5.3 for eight playoff games.
     But one season was it. Before the next season, he was traded to the Kentucky Colonels, then traded again. Failing to make an ABA regular-season roster, he was asked to play in Italy. He refused. 
     And while he missed the game for a while, said Carole, "his knees were so bad; he hyperextended one knee three times, and his back hurt all the time. He was real unhappy [in the pros]."
---
     His basketball career done, he looked for a new career.
Tried stockbroking, but it was a bad time -- and he didn't have that much money to invest. Tried selling insurance; didn't like it. He then went to work in a sporting goods' store, in the guns department; he had hunting expertise.
     One day a few Dallas firemen came in, and he asked about their jobs. It was intriguing, and they told him the department was hiring.
     He applied -- and one problem: He was too tall; they didn't have clothes to fit him. He offered to pay for custom-made clothes; he wanted that job.
     They hired him, and he stayed for more than three decades. "He really loved that job," Carole said. 
     But not all of it at first. Trained originally as a paramedic, "he became insensitive after a while because he saw so many bad things," his wife said. "I told him he needed to ask out of that part of it."
     His height was a plus in that his reach sometimes was a great help in putting out fires. But, as you'd expect, the danger was great, too.
     "I don't know how many times he was in the hospital with burns and injuries," Carole recalled. 
     And there was a day when a Hunt mansion in Dallas was burning, and two of the men in Richard's company died. Richard was missing and his captain was about to head to the Peek residence to tell Carole ... when he was spotted sitting under a tree, overcome by heat and smoke inhalation.
     But he was always one to stay physically fit. "He loved to be very active," Carole said. "He was not lazy."
     He was a fisherman; he was in a bass-fishing club. He was a hunter -- duck hunting, quail, deer ("but mostly he liked shooting photos outdoors," said Carole). He liked mountain climbing, backpacking, rafting, skiing -- in southern Colorado; he was a runner (and convinced Carole to run with him). He lifted weights regularly.
     He was -- picture this -- a 6-11 rugby player for the original team of the Dallas Harlequins, one of the area's first and most prestigious clubs. "He was always beat up," said Carole. "I remember the keg parties; they sang all those songs."
     To help his ailing knees, his doctor advised him to get a bicycle, so he became an avid biker for a while. And then he was a real "biker" -- a motorcycle enthusiast who, with a friend, made numerous rides from Dallas to Daytona Beach, Fla., for the annual Motorcycle Week, and then continued on to Key West, and made the return trip. That's a long haul.
     Because of his length, "custom-made" applied, too, to his bicycle and his BMW motorcycle. His son Michael now has that BMW.
     Finally, in the years out in East Texas, he had a tractor to keep him busy on their piece of land. But the good times ran out with his health issues.
     Carole Peek still lives in Whitehouse and has some treasured souvenirs: A red-white-and-blue ABA ball, a ball from Louisiana Tech, and Richard's first fireman's helmet, an old-timer made of leather. 
     "He was very grateful (for his life) and very sweet," Carole said.
      He was, as those of us at Tech then knew in those days and today, a wonderful player and a wonderful person.

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Breadth & Depth

It is said that 90% of an iceberg is below the surface of the water.  The quote is by Christian author Jerry Bridges who went to be with the Lord this past week on March, 6, 2016.  Jerry Bridges was born on December, 4, 1929, in Tyler, Texas; the town that I live near to, work in, and attend fellowship at Sylvania Chruch.  The meme is by the Pastor and Christian writer Tim Challies.  I thought that both the quote and the iceberg were telling of what I would like to talk about today.
Jesus said, "My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me; and I give eternal life to them, and they will never perish; and no one will snatch them out of My hand." (Jn 10:27-28)
In the spring of 2003 I heard His voice and began following Him.  Jesus has ascended into heaven and sat down at the right hand of the Father.  So how have I been following Him since He is now with the Father?  I picked up the Bible and began to read it everyday, and I know that the Bible is true by the Holy spirit who dwells within me.

For many years now I have been reading the Bible, and have grown in much understand about the Lord from reading the text alone.  For sometime now I have had a growing desire to go much deeper in my understanding of the Lord by going deeper into the text of scripture.  So, Lord willing, on March 21, 2016, I will begin classes at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, working towards a Master of Theological Studies.  

The first 1/3 of the program will be the study of the scripture, and hermeneutics for deeper study of scripture.  1/3 of the program will be on church history and theology which cannot be separated.  1/3 of the program will be on practice; apologetics, evangelism  & discipleship, leadership, and missions.

So I invite you all to join me on this new journey as I follow my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  I expect that my writing will change as I grow in both knowledge and wisdom.  In whatever I do may I do it for the Lord and His church.




In Christ alone,
Mike Peek 


Saturday, March 5, 2016

Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death

I know as I write this some of you are going to think that I have lost my mind, but understand that this is coming from a person who served nearly 5 years in the Army on three different continents.  Have you ever wondered if the American Revolution was such a good idea?  I never did until this past week when the American presidential primary came to my residential state of Texas.  Something about it all just doesn't seem right and these three things entered into my mind.

First of all American politics are based on speaking evil against the other candidates.  Yet this behavior contradicts the entire sermon on the mount.  "In everything, therefore, treat people the same way you want them to treat you, for this is the Law and the Prophets." (Mt 7:12).

Secondly I noticed that American Christians seem to be preoccupied with politics.  This preoccupation with politics is contrary to the great commission.  "Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always even to the end of the age." (Mt 28:19-20)

Thirdly the apostle Paul wrote "Every person is to be in subjection to the governing authorities.  For there is no authority except from God, and those which exist are established by God." (Rom 13:1). The Virginia colony was the first British colony in the world.  In 1775 it was under the rule of King George III.  Patrick Henry is attributed with saying, "Give me liberty, or give me death!" From a speech he made to the Virginia Convention in 1775 at St. John's Church in Richmond Virginia.  His speech is credited with convincing the the Virginia convention to deliver Virginia troops for the Revolutionary War.  



Now I ask you, are the words "Give me liberty, or give me death!" Keeping with what Paul wrote in Romans chapter 13?  "Therefore whoever resists authority has opposed the ordinance of God; and they who have opposed will receive condemnation upon themselves." (2). The antics that we see from our politicians and the people of America are a direct result of resisting authority.

This is the country into which I was born and it is the political system that we have, therefore, I will be taking part in it as a voter.  But I urge all of my brothers in Christ not to be so caught up in this corrupt system, but instead; make disciples of Jesus Christ, treat all people the same way that you want them to treat you, and do not resist the governing authorities.




In Christ alone,
Mike Peek


Sunday, February 28, 2016

Wake Up


You have a disease that is killing you and here are the symptoms:
  1. Worshiping things other than God
  2. Creating for yourself false gods and bowing down to them
  3. Taking the name of the Lord your God in vain
  4. Not setting aside time to spend with God and His people
  5. Dishonoring your father and mother
  6. Anger, hatred, and murder
  7. Sexual immoralities
  8. Stealing
  9. Lying
  10. Coveting what belongs to your neighbor
These are symptoms of the disease called sin, and unless you repent, and believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God you will die in your sin.  Jesus died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and He was buried, and He was raised on the third day according to the scriptures; presenting Himself alive after His suffering to His disciples by many convincing proofs.  He ascended into heaven and sat down at the right hand of God and is presently making intercession on behalf of everyone who comes to God through faith in Him.  Jesus first coming was for redemption.  Jesus will return at a time of the Father’s choosing as King; salvation for His people and judgment for His enemies.  “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel.”



In Christ alone,
Mike Peek




Bibliography

The Holy Bible, Updated New American Standard Bible. The Lockman Foundation, 1995.

(Romans 3:19-20, Deuteronomy 5:1-21, 1 Corinthians 15:1-6, Acts 1:1-11, Romans 8:34, Matthew 24) 

Sunday, February 21, 2016

The Three Aspects of Faith

Faith is made up of three things: knowledge, belief, and trust…Faith is believing that Christ is what He is said to be and that He will do what He has promised to do. (Spurgeon, C.H.)

“Whoever will call on the name of the Lord will be saved.”  How then will they call on Him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe in Him whom they have not heard? And how will they hear without a preacher?..So faith comes from hearing, and hearing by the word of Christ. (Romans 10:13-14, 17)

When sharing the gospel publicly, and more specifically through open-air preaching you will likely be stopped from preaching by someone who claims to be a Christian.  Oftentimes when preaching in open-air, you will be preaching to a moving crowd.  Someone may walk by and hear you talking about sin and judgment.  Another may walk by and hear you talking about Christ redemptive work on the cross.  I use to think that there was the possibility that those who claimed to be Christian, who stopped the preaching of the gospel, were simply judging the snippet that they heard as being the whole message.  But then I began to preach in open-air the historical story about Jesus as witnessed by the apostle John and I noticed that I was still being stopped, when it was obvious that I was reciting a story.

So let me ask a series of questions to those of you who claim to be Christian, and yet do not think that the gospel should be preached publicly in open-air: 
  1. Are you trusting in Jesus Christ alone as your Lord and Savior? 
  2. Do you believe that whoever will call on the name of Lord will be saved? 
  3. How then will they call on Him in whom they have not believed?
  4. How will they believe in Him whom they have not heard?
  5. How will they hear without a preacher?

In order for someone to trust in Jesus promise of eternal life they have to first believe in Him.  In order for them to believe in Him someone has to tell them about Him.  Evangelism is simply imparting the knowledge that we have been given about the Lord to other people.  I cannot make anyone believe in Jesus, and I certainly cannot make anyone trust in His promise, but I can tell people about Him; so that is what I aim to do for as long as I draw breath.



In Christ alone,
Mike Peek

Sunday, February 14, 2016

The Lord's Ministry

            The Lord is Sovereign over all things.  The Lord has given me a ministry that is so incredibly simplistic.  We men try to make everything complicated.  I continually complicate what the Lord has given me to do, but when I capitulate, and do what He has given me to do I get to see the working of His hand.  The ministry that the Lord has given me is evangelism through preaching the Gospel According to John in open-air, passing out Gospels of John, and availing myself to talk with people about Jesus Christ our Lord.
            When I do this I see scripture unfold before my eyes.  I see a division between the sheep and the goats.  I will see those who curse the Lord and myself and I will see those who praise the Lord and give me kind words of encouragement.  When I speak, I am neither speaking for or against anyone, but simply giving the eye witness testimony of the apostle John.  Some will stop and listen, take a gospel of John, and rejoice.  Others will gnash their teeth and say horrible things.  Both reactions come from the same message, the Gospel According to John which is an eye witness testimony about Jesus.
            "But when the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the angels with Him, then He will sit on His glorious throne.  All the nations will be gathered before Him; and He will separate them from one another, as the shepherd separates the sheep from the goats; and He will put the sheep on His right, and the goats on the left.” (Mt 25:31-33)
            Most times this happens on a college campus, because I go to the local junior college, Tyler Junior College, one day each week.  I am always surprised when young people speak so abruptly to an older man, but then I remember what Jesus said, “Remember the word that I said to you, ' A slave is not greater than his master.  'If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you; if they kept My word, they will keep yours also.” (Jn 15:20)  Prior semesters I have had others with me, but this semester I have had much difficulty in getting other brethren to come along.  Nevertheless, I will continue to go, because it is what the Lord has given me to do.

In Christ alone,
Mike Peek

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Jesus Died For US

(Picture Source Unknown)

            “I am the good shepherd; the good shepherd lays down His life for the sheep…My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me; and I give eternal life to them, and they will never perish; and no one will snatch them out of My hand.  My Father, who has given them to Me, is greater than all; and no one is able to snatch them out of the Father's hand.  I and the Father are one.” (Jn 10:11…27-30)

            The gospel is the good news that although we have all sinned against God and deserve death; Jesus died for us.  The “US” are His sheep and Jesus is the good shepherd.  His sheep hear His voice and follow Him.  Therefore, evangelism is telling the sheep the good news, and we do not know who the sheep are, therefore, we tell everyone.

            People often ask me after a time of preaching the gospel on campus or after an evangelism trip, “How did it go?”  I always feel uncomfortable with this question, because I do not have an answer.  Here is what I do know: I know that Jesus is the good shepherd and He laid down His life for His sheep.  I also know that His sheep hear His voice and follow Him, but as the apostle Paul said, they cannot hear Him without a preacher and they cannot preach unless they are sent (Rom 10:14-15).

            Jesus told His disciples to go preach the good news indiscriminately.  “Go into all the world and preach the gospel to all creation.” (Mk 16:15)  Although it is said differently in each gospel account, and also again in Acts.  It is a sending out of His church to preach the good news without regards for race, social standing, wealth, intelligence, or niceness.  Preach the gospel to everyone!



In Christ alone,
Mike Peek