Thursday, October 28, 2021

THE BODY OF CHRIST

The year was 1968, and I was a student at Southeastern Bible College, now Southeastern University. (I could hardly have known that I would, one day, teach at this same school.

I was enrolled in a New Testament class, and my professor was a light-hearted English woman named Ruth Breush; (who interestingly enough was married to a light-hearted Australian man named Percy Breush).

If I live to be a 103 I will never forget one day in particular. Mrs. Breush began the class with, to say the least, an unusual story.

“Last night I had a dream. In the dream I was somehow transported to heaven. And I stood beneath the throne of none other than our Lord Jesus Christ.

His brown eyes were piercing to behold. Every strand of His auburn hair was in place. His countenance was radiant. And then,

… then I looked downward.

And what I saw horrified me. For you see, His chest was sunken. His arms were emaciated. Every rib shown through His parchment skin.

And then it occurred to me.

… The Body of Christ.

While the Head is fine and wonderful to behold, thank you, the Body is unhealthy, and in need of attention.”

Christ’ Body. His believers on earth, at least a great many of them, leave much to be desired.

Fickleness, In-fighting, Temptations, Immaturity, Abject Sin.

As scripture reminds us. “These things ought not to be.”

I have often wondered if I am, by chance, my professor’s last surviving student who has recalled and passed on this story to the generation who will follow after me.

If so, I count it a distinct calling, honor and responsibility to do so.

 by William McDonald, PhD

 

 

Friday, October 22, 2021

THOUGH DEAD YET HE SPEAKS

 

My wife and I began listening to “Night Sounds” on a local radio station a couple of decades ago, and we either got busy, and forgot about it, or the broadcast was dropped from the station schedule. In the meantime, years passed and the host of the program, Bill Pearce, passed away (in 2010).

 

About a year ago, I discovered that archival segments of this wonderful radio broadcast are available on the internet. Of course, I was elated.

 

Night Sounds is a Christian radio production, and consists of a half hour format, with Bill Pearce monologing a particular topic; interspersed with Christian musical selections.

 

I know this sounds somewhat like an advertisement, but as I previously implied, I absolutely LOVE this broadcast, so much so that I have “saved” over a hundred of the daily segments on an attachable hard drive.

 

Bill Pearce was an accomplished trombonist and an extraordinary bass vocalist. He occasionally played his own music on the Night Sounds broadcast. He produced and narrated the Bible on cassette tapes, and regularly introduced his music at various venues throughout the United States. Mr. Pearce was also a member of “The 16 Singing Men” group which often appeared live, and made numerous video and audio recordings.

 

While at a high school graduation exercise I noticed a poignant phrase on the screen.

 

“My students are living messages to a time that I will never see.”

 

As a former university professor, and current counselor and formal mentor, I can relate. We simply cannot stay here, but we have been given the inestimable privilege, while we still live and move and breathe, to impact those who will “pick up our mantle” and carry on in our place.

 

Bill Pearce was like that. Even as he neared the end of his days, he was thinking about his impact on future generations.

 

It seems that one of the producers of Night Sounds once stopped by the nursing home where Mr. Pearce resided. And in the course of his conversation with Bill, and knowing how important humor is to good emotional health, especially to someone in a skilled nursing environment, he decided to tease him a bit.

 

“You know, Bill, some of our accomplishments, some of what we gleaned while we were here, and what we meant to leave behind for future generations just aren’t meant to outlive us.”

 

With this, the former radio host frowned, and the furrows in his brow seemed suddenly deeper.

 

“You mean, you mean…”

 

“Mr. Smith” immediately set Mr. Pearce at ease and relieved his anxiety.

 

“Now, now Bill. I’m just teasing ya. You needn’t be concerned. Those hundreds upon hundreds of radio broadcasts which you narrated over the course of half a century are meant to outlive you. And we have made arrangements for those broadcasts to live in perpetuity through means of recording, radio and internet. Never fear. What you have painstakingly created and given your best efforts to will go right on impacting the next generation, and countless generations to come.”

 

With this, the little man managed a broad smile, and it seemed the weight of the world dropped from his shoulders.

 

We all want to leave a legacy. Bill Pearce left a legacy extraordinaire.

 

I would encourage you to tune in to his daily broadcast. As I implied, it is available on the internet 24/7/365, at www.nightsoundsradio.org

 

Bill’s listeners are living messages to a time that he will never see.

by William McDonald, PhD

Sunday, October 17, 2021

SACRIFICIAL SUICIDE

 

Speaking about using wisdom in choosing in whom we invest our love, (see Introduction to the foregoing book) the following story is a case in point. I have never read an account in which more love was invested, and a more significant degree of courage and action was required.

The Tampa Bay area has experienced more than its share of wrong way drivers the past few years. And I think it confounds the average driver how such a thing could possibly happen; especially on well-lit, adequately-signed thoroughfares, such as interstates and parkways.

On March 12, 2016 another tragic accident occurred on the parkway in Tampa. John Kotfila, a deputy with the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Department, responded to the incident in a virtually unprecedented manner, and his quick thinking and the actions which followed go far beyond charitable.

The newspaper report conveys it well.

“Deputy Kotfila's final moments were spent trying to help someone else. Sarah Geren and her boyfriend were driving home from Ybor City on the Selmon Expressway Saturday morning, when she spotted the wrong way driver.

‘I was flashing my lights crazily at him like a strobe light. Click Click Click Click because I couldn't think of any other way to say 'Stop driving at me!  Please don't hit me!'” Geren said.

“But before she knew it, Deputy Kotfila, who was driving right behind her, passed her, taking the impact in the crash that ultimately killed him and the wrong way driver.”

What kind of man is this?

It occurs to me that the two word phrase, “Sacrificial Suicide” says it well, and says it all.

I can only imagine the momentary decision and emotional dynamic it took to purposely pass the would-be victims, and place one’s self “in the line of fire;” realizing that in the space of a few moments he would almost certainly be ushered into eternity.

In the New Testament, John 15:13, we read,

“Greater love has no man than this that a man lay down his life for a friend.”

Deputy Kotfila did one better. He sacrificed his life for someone with whom he was altogether unacquainted.

And as a result, two precious young people were provided the wherewithal to continue living, and moving and breathing and loving; whereas, both would have almost certainly lost her lives that day.

May God hold this sacrificial law officer in the hollow of His loving arms, and reward him for having given the last full measure of devotion.

 by William McDonald, PhD. Copyright pending

 

A LITTLE BOY & A BIG ROLLER COASTER

 

I am including the following story since it speaks to the issue of chaos and confusion, not unlike the events of the Book of Revelation, a volume which cannot be easily understood, but which, when it is “all said and done,” (very much like this story) will result in a very favorable conclusion.

Having been a participant in the story I’m about to share with you, and having come away from it alive, at that time in my life I might have admonished anyone who would listen,

“If this is all there is to family fun, you need to avoid it at all costs!”

For on a given day, month and year, my dad and mom packed me into the family automobile, (I can’t tell you the make or model this far along) and off we went. Had I any inkling what “lay in wait” for me, I would have definitely avoided that excursion in favor of something a bit more mundane.

I can imagine my response when my mother made me aware of the “golden opportunity” which lay ahead of me that day.

“Mommie, where we be goin? Daddy plomised me a I-creme cone, if I be good.”

To which she may have replied.

“Yes, he told me. We’ll pick it up on our way home, Royce… if you’re good. But if you’re not, then…”

Well, I guess we drove 5-6 miles, and pulled into a busy parking lot. I looked around, and then upward. We were surrounded by tall buildings, and I could smell the salt air. It turns out daddy had laid a roof on one of these massive structures, and had discovered a little known attraction; at least little known in our little corner of the world.

“Royce,” daddy spoke. “We’re gonna do something super fun today. Look up at the top of that building,” (and I followed his finger to the sky).

“Son, watch this.”

I strained to see what my dad was referring to. Suddenly I saw it. A flash of orange and green color moving like a swift caterpillar along the edge of the roof. And then it was gone, but the noisy clatter continued and cut the surrounding air like a razor. Daddy told me to keep watching, and again a speeding flash of color, and as quickly as it appeared, it had vanished again.

My father’s voice was tinged with expectation and a bit of humor.

“Well, my boy. Do I have a surprise for you today!”

Judging from the speed of the whatchamacallit, and its proximity to the edge of the roof, I wasn’t sure I wanted to be surprised.

I’m sure I looked at my mother, and no doubt, her face wore an anxious, “I don’t know how smart this is, but I guess we’ll give it a whirl” sort of expression.

As we closed in on the building, I could no longer see IT, but the sound of the machine grew louder with each step. Now we found ourselves in what I later learned was a revolving door, which brought us face to face with the ground floor of a vast department store, filled with everything from blue jeans to light bulbs to pogo sticks. While my attention was diverted, (I may well have been looking at the latter of the three afore mentioned items) my dad navigated his small family up to a set of two massive double doors.

Suddenly, I heard a thump that seemed to shake the floor beneath my feet. I think I felt it more than I heard it, and the vibration startled me. Then, the large metal doors parted like Moses and the Red Sea.

I was so transfixed by it all that my mom almost dragged me into the elevator. This was a first for me, (but considering my tender age, almost everything was a first for me). And as I soon discovered, the “firsts” for that day were far from over.

I recall a feeling of being suspended in mid-air as the elevator lifted off, and I found myself holding onto my mother’s left knee for dear life. As I glanced up at my dad, it seemed he was a veteran of this little floating room with no furniture. As a matter of fact, a mischievous smile played about his lips, and somehow this comforted me. I turned loose of my mom’s knee, and as much as a four year old can manage it, I tried to act nonchalant. But I could only wonder what terrible surprise awaited me on the roof top.

The buttons on the control panel were labeled 1-14, and when we drew to a stop, I noticed there was a circular pattern of green light around button #14. Mama had been teaching me to count, and I realized there was no #13. I vowed to ask her about the absence of this number later.

The elevator “stopped with a start” and the doors parted again. My parents and I stepped out, and I was surprised to find we seemed to be in the midst of a garden center. Rakes, and sprinklers, and work gloves filled bins of all shapes and sizes. And then I noticed the sound, the same sound I’d heard outside the building, but now it was almost overpowering. And if sound can be perceived as a circular motion, these acoustic vibrations had such an impact on me.

Mama allowed daddy to lead the way since he had first told her about this place. It seems my dad had come home all excited talking about this cool ride on the roof of the Webb City Building. It was only years later that I learned the details.

Daddy led us to an open doorway, and as I stood directly in front of it, I noticed a short flight of stairs. It was about this time that mama leaned over, and considering the decibel level, almost shouted in my ear, (in a tone of voice that was anything but reassuring).

”Honey, I think you’re really gonna like this.”

I was led like “a lamb to the slaughter” up that short flight of stairs which seemed to grow progressively longer with each successive step.

And then… we were there.

As I stared in awe at the colorful, but foreboding piece of machinery, I almost mused aloud,

…“You want me to do what?”

Though my childish mind was immature and incapable of formulating such a phrase, with the passing of years I think the previous six words are as close as any to describing my perception of what greeted me that day.

“Royce, you’ll absolutely love it.”

“What daddy?”

I had been so transfixed with the scene before me that I hadn’t grasped what he said to me.

“Your mother and I will wait. Go ahead and get in line behind those other boys and girls.”

“You mean… all by myself, daddy?”

“Yes son. Of course.”

I hesitated a moment to see if he was joking. Apparently, he wasn’t. And so, I dutifully obeyed.

Even at this age, I could do the math. There were seven children in front of me, and I noticed that the metal ogre was slowing to a stop. It wasn’t enough that the machine emitted creaks and groans and whistles, as it sailed along the circular track, but the boys and girls who rode that iron horse of a thing were even louder. I watched them as they stepped out of their respective cars. Smiles lit up the faces of a couple of eight or ten year old’s. But without exception, the younger kids seemed as pale as ghosts, and a little girl, (she might have been 5 or 6) first stumbled, and then “lost her cookies” on the boarding platform.

The attendant could only shake his head and groan. I felt something welling up inside of me, and I was close to emulating the behavior of the little girl. The seven of us, who had previously formed a perfectly straight line, had by now backed into a cluster. Had Mr. Nielsen been there that day, his rating would, no doubt, have revealed an utter contempt for this mechanical beast, and a very strong desire in all our hearts to simply… go home.

Now the attendant was cleaning up the mess with a mop and bucket. I turned around, so I didn’t have to watch the least favorite part of his less than professional vocation.  And I noticed my daddy and mama were watching me from the sidelines.

Henry McDonald’s son wasn’t about to chicken out at such a God-awful moment. “No way, Jose.” I didn’t have to ask. I knew what the answer would be. And as much as everything inside of me screamed for a way out,

… I knew it didn’t exist.

Then I did something that I would soon live to regret. As the young fella was putting away his mop and bucket, I stepped up into the number one boarding position, (but only three of the original seven children stepped up behind me). I turned to look, and it was then I noticed two girls and one boy walking towards the staircase; hand in hand with their mothers and fathers.

But I had made my choice, if indeed a choice existed, and as the frustrated attendant opened the door of a brightly painted car… I stepped in and sat down. The young man buckled my seat belt and pulled it tight around my waist. I was committed; come Hell or high water. (At least it was a good theory).

The metal monster picked up some momentum now, and my parents’ faces whizzed past at dizzying speed. I felt that old familiar queasiness in my belly and rising up in my throat. Someone nearby was screaming loudly!

And then I realized that someone

… was me!

I was on the back of a raging tiger. I was riding the crest of a hurricane-driven wave. I was a hapless bowling pin in the hands of a giant juggler.

Somehow, I caught the eye of my mother, and she knew what she had to do. She rushed over to the little booth where the attendant sat with his hands on the controls. And as my vehicle completed yet another circle, I added words to my previously unintelligible tirade,

“Mommy. Mommy. Help me. I want off. Now!”

Suddenly, the forward motion of my vehicle slowed, and I dared to believe that I had been granted a reprieve from certain death. My agony abated and it seemed my salvation drew near.

As the car slowed to a stop, I remember looking over at my dad. He was still standing in his original spot near the staircase; looking slightly embarrassed. How could a son of his, no matter how young, sacrifice an opportunity to prove his fearlessness, and wrest victory from defeat?

(Well, perhaps the foregoing implication is reading a bit too much into the scenario. But nonetheless, daddy didn’t appear to be a “Happy Camper”).

No one had to beg me to get off the THING. I found myself helping the guy as he fumbled with my seat beat. I couldn’t get back on terra firma fast enough. I must have felt rather like the military veteran returning from combat duty; (though I wasn’t savvy enough at the time to bend over and kiss the ground).

For the moment, no one was in line to ride, and the hideous sound of metal against metal had been stilled. Suffice it to say, I made a quick departure from “the scene of the crime.”

I think my dad was smart enough not to verbalize what he might have considered cowardice. After all, I had my mother to defend me. And she had cooperated in my unexpected pardon from the throes of a fate worse than death; (or so it seemed at the time).

I never returned to that place, with or without my parents. At this juncture in life, the attendant would be my parents’ age, and my fellow patrons would, like me, be living out their early golden years. Amazing, how quickly six decades can fall through the sandy hourglass of time.

But I can assure you those two minutes that I “rode the whirlwind” impacted me far beyond their comparative brevity in terms of the expenditure of time.

For as a unbending rule, I simply do not

… ride ROLLERCOASTERS.

Don’t, Won’t, Can’t, Shan’t, Nada

Now, I am altogether cognizant that the rollercoaster on the rooftop was a pitifully small affair, and in the scheme of things, no more than a kiddy ride. But they say everything is relative, and at least to me, I would have sooner climbed Mount Everest, than finish the ride that day. And to be fair, that tiny piece of equipment could not have climbed much higher than a man’s head, nor shadowed a piece of ground much larger than half a tennis court.

And I have stood below some rather substantial roller coasters, and marveled at their width and height and length and breath. And I have wondered whether I could strap myself into one of those contraptions again; if my very life depended on it. (And it is amazing for me to consider how ten and twelve year old children find the wherewithal to ride such awesomely larger versions of the tiny machine that I rode so long ago. It is simply beyond my comprehension).

Well, I am pleased to report that on such and such a day, perhaps six or eight years ago, I summoned up whatever one finds to summon up, and for at least the space of a few moments, I conquered those old, enduring fears which had limited me, and held me back in ways too numerous to count.

My wife and I live near the now defunct Cypress Gardens. There, on the grounds of this famous tourist attraction once sat two ancient torture devices; (or so it has ALWAYS seemed to me). Once, when we were visiting there, Jean suggested I conquer my age-old fears, and step into a line of perhaps twenty people; waiting to board the smaller of these two “torture chambers.”

But there was nothing remotely small about this one. Oh, of course it was a “David” compared to the “Goliaths” I have seen in some theme parks, but it was still plenty big, easily thirty feet from ground to crest, and covering the space of almost half a football field.

I admit standing there, waiting to board, and I sensed a sure and abiding kinship with that small, familiar boy who once stood in a line, not unlike this one, so many years hence. And as my wife, in essence, assumed the role of my mother, it was all so fresh, and new, and present again.

And perhaps in some not so explainable way, that little tyke, from a bygone era, stood with me, and once again abject terror filled his tear-filled eyes. And in some mysterious, but not so impossible manner he placed his hand in mine, and we steeled ourselves for a mission that neither of us had the wherewithal to complete

… alone.

Hand in hand we sat down together, and allowed a young attendant, (who looked remarkably like the one who had long since grown old) to buckle us in. And as our personal little “time machine” gained momentum, and we approached the steep incline of its first loop, I think that tiny, mirror-image of myself envisioned an opportunity where he might complete that which he had once begun.

And I think the older, heavier, balder version of that little man cast his thoughts backwards to a time, and place when he had summoned up all that was good, and true, and brave about himself; when he took his place at the front of the line.

And as our colorful, little vehicle mounted the first, yet highest crest of that small-gauged track, and proceeded to drop into oblivion, I thought I felt the tender grasp of a tiny hand in mine, and somehow the boy compelled me to join him, and so… we lifted our arms in unison.

And as my wife looked on, and as the coaster navigated first one crest and yet another ebb, I closed my eyes and contained a silent scream. And when I thought I heard a muted sound beside me, I turned… and the little fella rewarded me with a smile.

Time elapsing. Slowing now.

… Mission completed.

The friendly, young attendant unbuckles our seatbelt, and allows us to step out. My wife waves, and doubles her hands above her head, as if to say,

“It certainly took you long enough,

but you did it!”

And for the briefest moment I think I see him again, and his little hand slips from my grasp, and he steps away. And with his fading presence, I think I hear a voice, a familiar voice, but young and vibrant once again.

“See. I told you that you could do it!

“Now, …let’s go home.”

by William McDonald, PhD. Copyright pending

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

COMFORTING HIS 'FATHER'

A nurse took the tired, anxious serviceman to the bedside. “Your son is here,” she said to the old man. She had to repeat the words several times before the patient’s eyes opened.

Heavily sedated because of the pain of his heart attack, he dimly saw the young uniformed Marine standing outside the oxygen tent. He reached out his hand. The Marine wrapped his toughened fingers around the old man’s limp ones, squeezing a message of love and encouragement.
The nurse brought a chair so that the Marine could sit beside the bed. All through the night the young Marine sat there in the poorly lighted ward, holding the old man’s hand and offering him words of love and strength. Occasionally, the nurse suggested that the Marine move away and rest awhile. He refused.
Whenever the nurse came into the ward, the Marine was oblivious of her and of the night noises of the hospital - the clanking of the oxygen tank, the laughter of the night staff members exchanging greetings, the cries and moans of the other patients. Now and then she heard him say a few gentle words. The dying man said nothing, only held tightly to his son all through the night.
Along towards dawn, the old man died. The Marine released the now lifeless hand he had been holding and went to tell the nurse. While she did what she had to do, he waited.
Finally, she returned. She started to offer words of sympathy, but the Marine interrupted her, “Who was that man?” he asked.
The nurse was startled, “He was your father,” she answered.
“No, he wasn’t,” the Marine replied. “I never saw him before in my life.”
“Then why didn’t you say something when I took you to him?”
“I knew right away there had been a mistake, but I also knew he needed his son, and his son just wasn’t here. When I realized that he was too sick to tell whether or not I was his son, knowing how much he needed me, I stayed. I came here tonight to find a Mr. William Grey. His Son was killed in Iraq today, and I was sent to inform him. What was this Gentleman’s Name? “
The nurse with tears in her eyes answered, “Mr. William Grey………”
The next time someone needs you … just be there

Author Unknown

Monday, October 11, 2021

THE LITTLE LADY UNDER THE BIG PILE OF SHEETS

 My wife has been in the hospital twice in the past couple of weeks to have a kidney stone removed. The first time around wasn’t “a charm.” The surgeon could not retrieve the stone, and a second operation was scheduled for a week later. This time around the stone was removed. However, she has been required to stay a few days longer due to a complication.

Jean is located in the far side of the hospital room next to the window. As I walked into the room for the first time before the second surgery, I noticed a pile of sheets in the first bed, and thought nothing about it. However, it wasn’t long before I discovered the pile of sheets was more than a pile of sheets. For you see, as the result of my wife’s nurse having moved her IV stand in order to change the drip bag, I momentarily noticed the head and shoulders of a small, elderly African-American woman beneath a bundle of sheets in the next bed.

She was a pitiful sight. Her eyes were closed and she lay there in a fetal position. And each time I walked in and out of Jean’s room, it seemed the little lady lay in the exact same spot, in the exact same position, and wore the exact same grimace on her face. And for all the hours I sat next to my wife in that room, the precious woman was not only bereft of visitors, but I never witnessed a nurse or nurse’s aide speak to her, or for that matter do anything for her.

Pt. 2

Once I asked Jean whether the elderly lady was being properly attended to, and she assured me that she had seen the medical team do the things that medical teams do, and that the frail old woman was completely dependent upon them, as she was immobile and non-verbal.

I felt a great amount of empathy for “Josephine,” especially since she seemed to have no one in the world, that she had experienced a great deal of suffering, and she was scheduled to be moved to the hospice floor of the hospital.

As I sat next to my wife’s bed yesterday, I experienced what seemed to be a prompting to do something I wasn’t all that inclined to do. It seemed to be one of those “If you build it, they will come” sort of whispers in my own “spiritual cornfield.”

“When you walk out of the room today, stop by Josephine’s bed, lean over her, touch her shoulder and quietly tell her,

‘Josephine, may God help, bless and encourage you.’”

For anyone who knows me, they are aware that I am a public speaker, counselor, mentor, singer, and former university professor, and that I absolutely love to impact those whom God sets in my pathway. And yet, while I have spoken to hundreds, and counseled and mentored couples and individuals, it has always been in my own environment and on my terms.

However, only a few of my close family members and friends are aware that I display a bit of reticence and introvertism when it comes to certain environments, and the lack of my own terms.

This was one of those times.

Pt. 3

I would love to be able to tell you I did the exact same thing which I felt prompted to do at that moment, that I kissed my wife ‘goodbye,’ that I walked halfway out of the room, that I bent over the little lady’s bed, that I touched her shoulder, that I whispered the words, “Josephine, may God bless, help and encourage you.”

…But I didn’t.

When I called my wife this morning, she informed me that Josephine had been transferred to the hospice floor of the hospital.

Perhaps I allowed formality and conventionality to deter me from my inclination to reach out to the little lady under that big pile of sheets. Perhaps my inclination to touch her and speak encouraging words in her ear was more about my own personal persuasion than a spiritual one. Of course, either way the foregoing actions and words could have only encouraged the dear lady, and what thinking, caring person would have criticized me for reaching out to her?

Of course, I wish I were given the grace of a “do over,” but like all momentary opportunities to bless, help and encourage another person, there simply are no do overs. I can only hope that a team member, visitor or patient in the little lady’s new environment will do and say what I failed to do and say.

God give me the wherewithal to learn from my momentary omissions, allow me to be sensitive to my own sensitivities, and help me to listen to that still small voice in the spiritual cornfield of my life.

Afterward

As I neared the conclusion of this blog last night, I wrote the words,

“I can only hope that a team member, visitor or patient in the little lady’s new environment will do and say what I failed to do and say.”

When I arrived at the hospital today, my wife’s final day in D7 319, I sat down in the easy chair next to her bed and told her I had just written a blog related to my “if you build it, they will come” inclination to bend over Josephine’s bed and whisper a little encouragement on my way out the last time I visited, and how I neglected to do so.

My wife has been a nurse for the past quarter of a century, and she has served a multitude of people in a multitude of nursing roles; hospital, hospice, nursing home, elementary school, agency nurse, etc.

When I told her about my inclination and my blog, she made me aware that, well, I’ll allow her to put it in her own words.

“I spoke to Josephine’s husband. He said she had been very much like this for ten years, and that she resided in a nursing home before her latest hospital visit.

“I told ‘Frank’ that although I realized his wife wasn’t communicative, I knew she was aware of my presence and my words, and how that I had made a practice of speaking to her when I passed her bed on the way to the bathroom. I would often say, ‘God bless you’ or ‘Stay encouraged, my friend.’

“And a couple of nights ago, I woke up about 3am, and I just felt inclined to bring up ‘Amazing Grace,’ a piece by Aretha Franklin, on my phone, and I played it for Josephine. Frank seemed pleased, and he said his wife was a believer.”

I felt an invisible weight drop off my shoulders. Whereas, my wife had been completely unaware of what I believed was God’s small, still whisper in my spiritual ear, and the blog which I, subsequently, wrote, our Lord had been faithful to speak to her in spite of me, and He led her to bless, help and encourage the little woman lying beneath that big pile of sheets in next bed.

by William McDonald, PhD. Copyright pending


Monday, October 4, 2021

LET ME SHINE YOUR SHOES


Matthew 6:4 So that your giving may be in secret: and thy Father which sees what is done in secret will Himself reward you openly.

Zechariah 4:10  For who hath despised the day of small things? for they shall rejoice, and shall see the plummet in the hand of Zerubbabel with those seven; they are the eyes of the LORD, which run to and fro through the whole earth.


I came across this very powerful story about one of the most influential men of God in my life, D.L.Moody, in a book named A Call to Excellence by Gary Inrig.

A large group of European pastors came to one of D. L. Moody's Northfield Bible Conferences in Massachusetts in the late 1800s. Following the European custom of the time, each guest put his shoes outside his room to be cleaned by the hall servants overnight. But of course this was America and there were no hall servants.

Walking the dormitory halls that night, Moody saw the shoes and determined not to embarrass his brothers. He mentioned the need to some ministerial students who were there, but met with only silence or pious excuses. Moody returned to the dorm, gathered up the shoes, and, alone in his room, the world's only famous evangelist began to clean and polish the shoes. Only the unexpected arrival of a friend in the midst of the work revealed the secret.

When the foreign visitors opened their doors the next morning, their shoes were shined. They never knew by whom. Moody told no one, but his friend told a few people, and during the rest of the conference, different men volunteered to shine the shoes in secret.

Wow. I'm humbled, how about you? Many of us want to be great ministers for the Lord. We want our names and our works to be remembered. But let's never forget the true ministry of the Lord. Not only would have Jesus shined those shoes in secret, He would have returned to wash their feet too!

(From an online devotional site)