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Today's Bible Verse

Friday, July 24, 2020

My Life Story:

 


Two Worlds (realities) Crossed My Path


Prologue 

As I share my story be sure not to set your ears ready to hear of a messed-up life. That is, personalizing a familiar phrase of yesteryear:

“I never drank, smoked, nor chewed since a kid, Nor ran around with those who did." Thanks to my church-going upbringing, And my shyness even, Under emotional stress that may on me may press,

I give praise to Jesus—He keeps me singing.

I believe my story would not be aired on the Unshackled radio program. I lived a "good" life through the years, not a raunchy lifestyle. I don't even recall ever uttering a foul word. The worse I ever said, I believe… ah, um, was that word people would say when their dog got lost. But then, a mentor shared with me that word is a minced oath[i] at taking God’s name in vain; I never said it since.

Later, I learned that such a "good" life doesn't make one good before God. Since Genesis chapter 3, as was all humanity, I too was born a sinner, and in need of Jesus (Yeshua), our help in this temporal time and our only hope for our eternal future[ii].

Perhaps my story can be summed up as Psalm 40:2-3 (NASB) reads, personalizing, "[God] brought me [too] up out of the pit of destruction, out of the miry clay, [out of my own good life]. And He set my feet upon a rock, making my footsteps firm. He put a new song in my mouth, a song of praise to our God…"

And so I share my story in three parts: (1) My Formative Pleasurable Years, (2) My Misstepped Years, and (3) My Transformative Years.

 

My Formative Pleasurable Years: Birth thru the Eighth Grade

I was first born in Toledo, Ohio. And God has known all about me—my steps along my earthly way, even my missteps[iii].

I’m the youngest of four. (I have a brother, a sister, and a second brother). I don’t know too much of Toledo, as I was very young when the family moved east of Toledo to a rural area south of Cleveland and west of Akron—to the village of Chippewa Lake in Medina County.

I was quiet (a shy guy) through the years, speaking not much to anybody.

In my youth, perhaps too much of my time was spent watching television. A shy guy, perhaps my TV viewing could have been considered my "security blanket.”  (In today’s time, perhaps with some it could be likened to the internet, social media, or that smartphone.) In considering it now, however, much of my time, spent in front of the television, was my first misstep.

My siblings and I were blessed to have been born to parents who took us to church and Sunday school every week. We attended a Nazarene Church primarily. Going to church, we learned of the Bible and Jesus all our lives.

And then at an amusement park—Chippewa Lake Park, as it was called—within walking distance from where we lived, I met a Native American who in noticing the "double crown" (hair swirls) on my head with which I was born, predicted that I would see two worlds someday. I didn't give too much thought to that prediction through the years if it met anything. For some reason, I guess God wanted me to hear it anyway, and in His time, I had realized it again in my coming to an understanding of it all—a realization of the two realities: the temporal and the eternal.

Our church occasionally would have what was called "Revival Meetings." At such meetings, I recall hearing sermons of the world coming to an end. My young mind could not imagine such a thing. The world coming to an end—what would happen to all the trees, the tall buildings, and especially Disneyland[iv]?

 

My Misstepped Years: the Ninth Grade thru Lackland AFB

I did reasonably well through school, for the most part, but then into high school, came my second misstep: I had to repeat the ninth grade. For one, my failing the ninth grade was due to my introverted temperament—my shyness.

On through high school, but I never determined what I wanted to do after I graduated.

My dad passed away when I was a junior in high school.

My senior year, and graduation, and then what? My Uncle Sam had that all figured out. I received a letter from Selective Service ordering me to report for my armed forces physical exam. Afterward, I contacted my friendly Air Force recruiter; one of my brothers was in the Navy, the other was in the Army Reserve, I wanted something different, and not the Marines.

Shortly after my physical exam, I received my draft notice to be inducted into the armed forces. And so, it was off to Air Force basic training at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas—my introverted temperament followed me there as well. And also, there came my third misstep—I was set back to an earlier flight in basic training.

But a meningitis epidemic had broken out, and that returned me to my original unit and quarantined us. Having been set back and returned, I missed much of the activities of basic training. My flight even had to wait until the chow hall emptied of other units before we could go in and enjoy our meals.

The epidemic finally cleared; we were then personnel awaiting tech school. I was assigned to police tech school. But also came my fourth misstep—I was "kicked out" of that school. After waiting again for my next assignment, it came—ground transportation at Patrick Air Force Base, Florida.

 

My Transformative Years: Patrick AFB to the Present

There at Patrick, I consider my spiritual birthplace. Thanks to my church-going upbringing (for which I’m grateful) and my shyness even, I wasn’t a carouser—sticking pretty much to myself much of my life.

My second brother, who was in the Navy, had contact with a ministry called the Navigators. He had book one of their Bible study series—Studies in Christian Living—sent to me. A study on the person of Jesus. At the end of that study was an invitation to receive Jesus; I read, signed, and dated the invitation. I consider that my "second birth”[v]. I continued that series on my own alone in my barracks room. I continued attending base chapel services as well.

Some months later a Navigator representative moved into the area to begin a ministry among those stationed at Patrick. My name on the Nav mailing list he looked me up. We met in a cafeteria on base. He shared with me the Steps to Peace with God by the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. And again, I prayed the invitation gaining me assurance of my salvation.[vi]

For the remainder of my time in the military, I was involved with the Navigators—my then caring group—receiving help in my new/real life of faith, primarily through Bible study, prayer, and Scripture memory.

My first Navigator conference was an international happening, held over a Thanksgiving weekend, 1968, in Estes Park, Colorado—the "Whing Ding" as it was called. At the closing of the last message of the conference, the speaker gave an invitation to answer the call as Isaiah did, "Here I am! Send me,” Isaiah 6:8. I stood with several others in so responding. I had no idea then all that would mean.

Having received word from Uncle Sam that I could get out of the Air Force eight months early, I considered it. I could have re-upped, but I decided to get out. Having done so, I stayed in Florida for another year or so, still in fellowship with the Navigators. (I did have a cool job for a time—hmm, working for an icehouse along U.S. Highway 1 in Melbourne, Florida.)

In a room where I was then living, I recall a significant time in the Word one evening. Laying on the floor, I was reading from the book of Exodus. At Exodus 4:10-12[vii]God got my attention about my shyness in speech, as He had with Moses at the burning bush.

Shortly after my discharge from the Air Force, and two semesters at the then Brevard Junior College[viii], the Nav rep suggested that I apply to a Bible college[ix] in Columbia, South Carolina.  Three of us in the Nav fellowship visited the campus. We all three applied, but only one other, and I was accepted. 

And I realized why the Lord kept me in the military—for one, my expenses through Bible college were met via the G.I. bill.  I don't know how I could have afforded college otherwise— I hadn’t been raised in a “well-to-do” family.


The summer before the start of my freshman year of college, I was home in Ohio with my mom and sister; I did have a job to put away money for the start of school. In the summer of my sophomore year, I served a few weeks with the Missions to Military Servicemen’s Christian Center in Norfolk, Virginia. I worked at temp employment during the day and served with the servicemen’s center each evening; that was my home that summer as well.

During the year-end break of my junior year of college, I attended InterVarsity’s Urbana Conference, at the University of Illinois. Returning to school in January to continue my junior year, I learned of my mom's illness. I took some weeks off from school and returned home and visited her; she was in the hospital with leukemia. She had passed away a few days later.

After I graduated from Bible college in 1974, the Lord provided work for me with an office supply company in delivery and shipping. Going about that job, I was conscious of peoples' facesmy mind wondering if they knew Jesus.

My job had me in and out of offices making deliveries. As I exited one office one day, for some reason, my eye caught a plaque on a wall. It displayed a quote by Oliver Wendall Holmes that's been "forever" etched in my memory. It read, “Man’s mind stretched to a new idea will never return to its original dimension.” I have realized: my going-to-church upbringing, meeting the Navigators, and then on to Bible college, that my mind indeed has been stretched to the "new idea" of the immortal world—the eternal reality.

I was a candidate with International Missions[x] then in Wayne, New Jersey. From that experience, I had learned of Open Air Campaigners’ means of relating Bible stories via sketch board drawing. I had the opportunity to do such myself, sharing the story of blind Bartimaeus[xi] to neighborhood kids.

A few years later, I ventured out west to Pasadena, California, where I joined the then US Center for World Mission[xii]. There, I was pleasantly surprised to work as a staff writer for the Global Prayer Digest[xiii] , writing short vignettes focused on unreached people. That work helped me in developing my writing skills. On little support, however, I left that job after about five years. Still in Pasadena, the Lord provided paid employment with William Carey Library Publishers[xiv]. I continued there for about ten years. Those 15 years out west, having been employed in Kingdom work, possibly I can consider that my "career" through this temporal time.

 

Epilogue

From Ohio, God brought me out of my old life (a wilderness without Jesus), and roundabout my transient life, with thanks to the Navigators, God brought me to Columbia, South Carolina, particularly to Bible college where my life has been transformed, and continue so yet through these days. Perhaps I can consider my coming to Bible college my mortal “Promised Land,” and thus my continuing in Columbia through this temporal time. (Columbia has been my home since the summer of '73.)  But then came my fifth misstepmy hasty move back to Ohio. Perhaps as the prophet Jonah, so for me, I’d considered those days back in Ohio had been as eight months in a fish belly. (The story of Jonah has been in my heart, for some reason, ever since a message I've heard when I was in Bible college.)

The coming of my unemployment (07/11/2008) I believe has been the "defining moment" of my life; the Lord had turned my focus more on the realization of the "greater cause.” And less on the things of this temporal time[xv]. I have realized that I had seen two worlds (two realities), as that Native American in my youth predicted I would see.  Apart from the things of God, everything else here in this time has little or no meaning to me now, particularly my TV viewing, the Hollywood craves, and sports fanaticism.

Here now, until my eternal home-going, continuing my trek along this temporal way, I desire my life to be that of a light-bearer and salt-spreader of God’s eternal truth[xvi]I having been spewed out of that “fish belly”[xvii]

Any other money-making job should the Lord yet have for me in this temporal time, I pray that I won’t get hooked again that it’s primarily for the making of money—the supplying of my livelihood, even the fattening of a financial portfolio. As any job or career should be, for the Christ-follower, as God's provision to enable us to carry on the more real work for this time, in so realizing God, our Provider, and that’s the greater pleasure in this temporal time.[xviii]

How that greater pleasure is to be, particularly now through these most unnatural changing times. The prayer of my heart these days seems to be, since 2016 (and maybe even since the coming of my unemployment), as the apostle John expressed it recorded at Revelation 22:20, “Come, Lord Jesus.” Reflecting upon Revelation 21:1-8, I can only try to imagine that greater day in history—no greater joy will there be than that day of Jesus’ return when everything will be made new.

And so, I cannot see now how I can live my life as I had done through my pleasurable youth years, without regard for the immortal. (See Colossians 3:1-3.)

As 1 John 2:16-17 (ESL) reads, “For all that is in the world—the desires of the flesh and the desires of the eyes and pride of life [or pride of possessions]—is not from the Father but is from the world. 17 And the world is passing away along with its desires, but whoever does the will of God abides forever."

I had noticed a book titled Your Best Life Now. Reflecting on that title. it occurred to me that in Jesus it’s the better life now until our eternal home-going (our upper taking) and then it’s the best life forever. And thus, I composed the following poem: 



Discover for yourself the Steps to Peace with God




[i]A minced oath is a euphemistic expression formed by deliberately misspelling, mispronouncing, or replacing a part of a profane, blasphemous, or taboo word or phrase to reduce the original term's objectionable characteristics,” Wikipedia

[ii] See Romans 3:9-23; Psalm 14:1-3; 53:1-3) John 3:16-17; 14:6

[iii] See Psalm:139:16

[iv] Disneyland was a fun time in the years of its founding—the Walt Disney show, Disney movies, the Mickey Mouse Club—but with the changing of times and my heart, too, brought a new thinking to the purpose of it all.

[v] See John 3:3

[vi] See John 1:12-13; 1 John 5:11-12

[vii] See also Jeremiah 1:7-8; James 1:19; 2 Corinthians 12:9

[xi] See Mark 10:46-47

[xiii] Now a part of Joshua Project

[xiv] Now William Carey Publishing—publishing books on Christian missions

[xv] See Acts 20:24

[xvi] See Matthew 5:13-16

[xvii] See Jonah 3:1-4

[xviii] See Matthew 6:25-34; cf. Luke 12:22-34








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