- Be still, my soul: the Lord is on thy side.
Bear patiently the cross of grief or pain.
Leave to thy God to order and provide;
In every change, He faithful will remain.
Be still, my soul: thy best, thy heav’nly Friend
Through thorny ways leads to a joyful end. - Be still, my soul: thy God doth undertake
To guide the future, as He has the past.
Thy hope, thy confidence let nothing shake;
All now mysterious shall be bright at last.
Be still, my soul: the waves and winds still know
His voice Who ruled them while He dwelt below. - Be still, my soul: when dearest friends depart,
And all is darkened in the vale of tears,
Then shalt thou better know His love, His heart,
Who comes to soothe thy sorrow and thy fears.
Be still, my soul: thy Jesus can repay
From His own fullness all He takes away. - Be still, my soul: the hour is hast’ning on
When we shall be forever with the Lord.
When disappointment, grief, and fear are gone,
Sorrow forgot, love’s purest joys restored.
Be still, my soul: when change and tears are past
All safe and blessed we shall meet at last. - Be still, my soul: begin the song of praise
On earth, believing, to Thy Lord on high;
Acknowledge Him in all thy words and ways,
So shall He view thee with a well-pleased eye.
Be still, my soul: the Sun of life divine
Through passing clouds shall but more brightly shine. by Katharina A. von Schlegel
Musings
Monday, February 9, 2026
BE STILL MY SOUL
Monday, February 2, 2026
THE HAMMERS AND ANVILS OF MY LIFE
4495
Pt. 1
In recent weeks, I have been handing out New Testaments to store clerks, bag boys, and others I meet along the highways and byways of life. (And, interestingly enough, given the 75 or 100 I have distributed thus far, every single one of the recipients have accepted these sacred volumes, and thanked me for them).
As I prepare to hand these volumes out, I always say something like,
"I have a little gift for you."
(or)
"Let me leave this little book with you."
My favorite little preface, however, is a bit more elaborate.
"Let me leave you a copy of a small volume my first grade teacher gave me... 70 years ago."
And, as you might imagine with this their eyes widen a bit.
Now, I pull the New Testament from my pocket, and lay it down; with the untitled back of the book "looking" at him or her; (in the unlikely possibility he or she might refuse it, if they see the title).
Pt. 2
Speaking of 70 years ago, and the decade which transpired thereafter, I have often reflected on my grade school, junior high, and high school teachers; (all of whom by now have, as far as I know, gone on to their reward).
Mrs. Sampson, my first and second grade teacher. (It was common in those days for the teacher to follow the class, to which he or she was assigned, for two years). I don't recall just how it came about, but she suggested that I perform the part of The Wizard; (the first two words in the four word title by which that famous book, play, and movie is known).
I will always remember having portrayed the fiery incarnation of the Wizard in which my cheeks were smeared with rouge. As I walked out onto the stage, the small incarnation of my current self was greeted with laughter. I will always recall my embarrassment, as I realized the audience found something humorous about my otherwise horrific manifestation of the little pretender.
And then, there was dear Mrs. Waters; (who I knew from church before I knew her in the classroom). And though I wasn't the best behaved of all her students, (I melted colorful crayons on the warm radiators which lined the walls, and dipped the pigtails of the girl in front of me into the inkwell on my desk), I seemed to be one of her favorites, nonetheless.
I will always remember Mr. Ball, or at least one experience which occurred in his sixth grade classroom. In January of '61, he pulled a little portable TV to the front center of the room, pulled the rabbit ears up a couple of notches, selected one of the three available channels, and turned a round knob, bottom front.
Our class was afforded the opportunity to view all two hours of the President John F. Kennedy inauguration. I will never forget his, "Ask not what your country can do for you...," (nor have I forgotten the preliminary poem, by Robert Frost). Our national Poet Laureate had written a poem he titled "Dedication" for this prestigious event. However, when the bright sunlight prevented the aging man from reading it, he quoted another poem which he'd relegated to memory, "The Gift Outright."
(Little could we have known at the time that our young president would be assassinated just short of three years later).
Pt. 3
Then, there was my 8th grade English teacher, Mrs. Belflower. She made her students aware that she was Runner Up Miss Georgia, 1949. (Interestingly enough, the majority of her students that year were born in 1949). But, in spite of the old fashioned signature clothing, shoes, and hairstyles of that period, having done the math her pupils correctly deducted Mrs. Mary Duncan Belflower was a comparatively young 34 years of age at the time. (She would be just short of the century mark were she still with us today).
I will always remember that poignant line from the Scottish prayer which she taught us.
"From ghosties and ghoulies and long-legged beasties, and things that go bump in the night, good Lord deliver us!"
I will never forget a couple of lines she wrote in longhand on the back of one of my report cards.
"Royce has a significant amount of potential. If he invests the time and effort, he may find he likes English literature!"
(She must have been something of a minor prophet since in the last couple of decades, I have written several, (thus far yet), unpublished volumes).
And perhaps the most indelible memory of my entire 12 years in the public school system also included her; (though I only learned the details from my wife a few years ago).
For you see, just weeks after the Kennedy Assassination, an errant driver left the street in front of our school, and ran over eight or ten of our students. Several were seriously injured. One died. I would have been among them, but I managed to step aside; while also pulling a friend out of the path of the automobile.
And as I have inferred, in recent years my wife made me aware that she witnessed Mrs. Belflower running down the hallway towards the scene of the accident.
And stopping next to her, she asked,
"What happened? (and) "What did you see?" before disappearing out the hallway door.
Pt. 4
And finally, at least in terms of this story, there was the elderly, unmarried matron named Margaret Clark. By the time I arrived at Summerlin Institute in the mid-60's, she had been teaching in the county schools for a quarter of a century.
She was a choral teacher par excellence.
Miss Clark's choral classes consistently earned all Superior ratings at state contests. The highlight of the school year was her students' performances of Handel's "Messiah" during the Christmas season at the local Baptist church. Sadly, our beloved teacher developed cancer, and passed away during my senior year of high school; having been replaced by a much younger version of herself.
Post-script
I would not, could not be, who I am today without their presence in my life.
How inestimably blessed I have been to have been shaped by these all too impactful, but all too human hammers and anvils.
As I find myself nearing the end of a third of a century of purposely, and desperately following their lead, and run with the proverbial baton which they have passed off to me, may those who I leave behind do the same.
by Bill McDonald, PhD
FOLLOW ME
4494
Pt. 1
The year was 1968 and I was a new Christian; having accepted the Lord Jesus
Christ as my Savior the previous year, (and the summer after my high school
graduation). Not one to waste a great deal of time, I had enrolled at a nearby
Bible college; (which in the intervening decades metamorphosed into a Christian
liberal arts university in which I was subsequently privileged to teach).
As the student body sat in chapel one morning, whomever happened to be
charge of the service stepped forward and instructed the sound person to play a
pre-recorded song. Suddenly, the strains of an unfamiliar hymn filled the
auditorium, and a baritone voice began to sing the most poignant words,
“I traveled down a lonely road and no one
seemed to care
The burden on my weary back had bowed me to
despair,
I oft complained to Jesus how folks were
treating me
And then these words He spoke so tenderly…”
There was just something so compelling about the words of the old song;
which went beyond the rhyme, content and meter. The expressiveness and
experiential tenor of the words lent such an eloquence to the theme which he
attempted to express to his audience.
It seems to me the student body sat spellbound, as the three verses to the
hymn played themselves out. As I reflect on it now, an almost ‘holy hush’
permeated the building that morning.
As the closing notes of our unseen guest and accompanying piano echoed
across the chapel, and silence permeated the room, our college president walked
to the podium, and provided the students a bit of information to which they had
not been privy, ‘til now.
“The voice you just heard was owned by a missionary named J.W. Tucker. He
is no longer with us, but died at the hands of Simba rebels in Africa just four
years ago.”
Well, you could have knocked me over with a feather. There was just
something so personally poignant having just been exposed to the song, and
having just connected with the man who sang it; and to be informed that he had
lain down his life for the Gospel of the Lord whom he had so dearly loved.
Almost half a century has come and gone since that day, and I have often
reflected on the words of that old hymn by Ira Stanphill, and its relevance to
every Christian who ever lived and moved and breathed upon this planet. And
over the course of the past few decades I have often sung it as a solo, and
never fail to relate the story behind my personal association with it.
William McDonald, PhD
Pt. 2
A HERO OF THE FAITH
Originally Posted on March 11, 2014
It
was November, 1964. J.W. and Angeline Tucker had returned to Paulis, Belgian
Congo for their fifth term as Assemblies of God missionaries. Not long after
their arrival, Simba rebels overran the area, slaughtering hundreds of people.
J.
W., along with about sixty other Europeans and Americans, was taken hostage to
the Catholic mission in Paulis (later named Isiro). (Angeline and the three
children were rescued by Belgian paratroopers and flown to safety). While being
held at the mission, J. W. and several others, with hands tied behind their
backs, were mercilessly beaten to death. Their bodies were loaded on a truck
and taken about forty miles to the Bomokande River. There they were fed to the
hungry crocodiles. Truly a Prince and a great missionary had perished, and it
all seemed such a waste. But there is more to the story.
For
many years J. W. had tried, with little success, to reach the Mangbeto tribe
with the gospel. But the tribal king refused to allow him to preach to the
people, saying, “We have our own gods.”
During
the Simba rebel uprising, fighting spilled into Mangbeto territory. In
desperation, the king requested help from the central government in Kinshasa.
The government responded by sending them a man of powerful influence from the
Isiro area. They called him “the Brigadier.” Just two months before J. W. was
killed he won this man to the Lord.
When
the Brigadier arrived in Mangbeto country he quickly realized they were pagans.
So he determined to win them to the Lord. Being a new Christian, he shared the
gospel with them as best he could, but with very little success. Being somewhat
discouraged, he began to pray, and the Lord gave him an idea. So he sent word
to the king to bring his tribal elders and meet with him.
When
the tribal delegation arrived, the Brigadier said, “From time immemorial you
have had a saying: ‘If the blood of any man flows in our river, the Bomokande
River, we must listen to his message.’ A man’s blood has flowed in your river.
He tried to give you a message about his God Who sent His Son to die for your
sins, so that all who believe on Him will have eternal life. And I am bringing
his message to you. This man’s blood has flowed in your river, so you must hear
his message.” As the Brigadier spoke, the Spirit of the Lord began to move in
their hearts, and many received the Savior that day.
Today
there are thousands of Christians in the Mangbeto tribe, and between forty and
fifty Assemblies of God churches. How true the saying: “The blood of the
martyrs is the seed of the church.”
My
wife and I stood on the bridge over the Bomokande River, only a few feet from
where the rebels threw Brother Tucker’s body. We were both gripped by a great
sense of awe as we stood on that sacred ground. Our hearts were challenged by
the memory of a great, but humble, man of God who believed that being in God’s
will is more precious than life itself. And though dead, his message is still
bearing fruit.
Harold Walls
(Manna for the Journey Devotions)
Pt.
3
FOLLOW ME
Ira Stanphill
“I traveled down a lonely
road and no one seemed to care,
The burden on my weary back had bowed me to despair,
I oft complained to Jesus how folks were treating me,”
And then I heard Him say so tenderly,
"My feet were also weary
upon the Calv'ry road,
The cross became so heavy I fell beneath the load,
Be faithful weary pilgrim, the morning I can see,
Just lift your cross and follow close to me."
"I work so hard for Jesus" I often boast and say,
"I've sacrificed a lot of things to walk the narrow way,
I gave up fame and fortune; I'm worth a lot to thee,"
And then I heard Him gently say to me,
"I left the throne of
glory and counted it but loss,
My hands were nailed in anger upon a cruel cross,
But now we'll make the journey with your hand safe in mine,
So lift your cross and follow close to me."
“Oh Jesus if I die upon a
foreign field someday
'Twould be no more than love demands, no less could I repay,”
"No greater love hath
mortal man than for a friend to die,"
These are the words he gently spoke to me,
"If just a cup of water
I place within your hand
Then just a cup of water is all that I demand,"
“But if by death to living they can thy glory see,
I'll take my cross and follow close to thee.”
Thursday, January 29, 2026
A DANGEROUS KINDA GUY
4493
A DANGEROUS KINDA GUY
I served as a counselor in a local
ministry called House of Hope, a residential ministry to women newly released
from prison, for about three years.
One day a new House Mother reported
for duty, and I volunteered to take her duffle bag to her second floor bedroom.
However, in doing so, I made a crucial mistake. I threw the bag over my RIGHT
shoulder, and began climbing the first flight of stairs; (leaving me without a
free hand to hold onto the banister). Step 1, Step 2, Step 3, Step 4.
Now, I reached the landing, turned and
began to mount the longer flight of stairs. Step 5, Step 6, Step 7, Step 8...
And now... I suddenly lost my balance, and dropped the duffle bag; in a futile
attempt to grab the banister to arrest my all but certain fall.
And now, I felt myself falling
backwards. Like a vehicle in reverse. Step 7, Step 6, Step 5. Shoulders, arms,
legs, and rumpus bouncing down the unforgiving wooden stairs.
My momentum was, by this time, so
dynamic that, when I hit the landing, I navigated the 90 degree angle with
ease, and continued my short, but unforgettable journey down the staircase.
Step 4, Step 3, Step 2, Step 1. And
now, I bounced onto the hard wooden floor from whence I came.
As I lay there attempting to regain my
focus, and ascertain the damage to my body, I heard footsteps. Jana, the House
Administrator, ran up to me, and screamed,
"Don't get up! Don't get
up!"
(But, I did).
As far as I could tell, no broken
bones, and, at least for the moment, no significant pain. (The bruises and
somewhat less than moderate pain would become apparent in the next few days). I
realized how blessed I was to have avoided paralysis, or death.
The new House Mother told me later
that she had seen the whole grizzly thing. She said it was the most violent
fall she had ever witnessed in her entire life.
I learned a very difficult, I mean
HARD lesson that day.
Throughout my life, I have been prone
to accidents, most, sadly, of my own making. (However, as I reflect on it now,
at least I have rarely made the same stupid mistake more than once. It seems I
find new, more innovative, and more dangerous ways to get myself in trouble)!
Somehow, I have reached the grand old
age of the lucky double digits (77). God has been gracious... (in spite of my
knack for falling down stairs, sailing head first off my bike, running through
a glass door, falling off a ladder, finding myself in the middle of a crime
scene, nearly being wiped out by a ten ton dragline bucket, flipping my car,
etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.
by Bill McDonald, PhD
AN OLD MAN. A NEW EXPERIENCE
4492
AN OLD MAN. A NEW EXPERIENCE
I was thinking about a suitable title for the following
story, and then it came to me. As fitting a title, I think, as I have given to
any of my stories.
For you see, at this writing I am quickly approaching
another double digit. And I can only wonder how it is possible that I am on the
eve of the big “77”. (I mean, I was just 12 yesterday).
But allow me to provide you some preliminary information.
Recently, my wife and I were visiting with our daughter,
“Melanie” in Massachusetts during the Christmas holidays. And it just so
happened that one of our sons, “John”, and his wife, “Janet”, a husband-wife
cargo delivery truck team, were driving through the area, and they stopped by
for a few days.
One morning while John and Janet were with us, (and
unbeknownst to me), the latter of the two asked my wife a question, (but did
not elaborate at the time).
“Has Bill ever sleep walked?”
To which my wife replied,
“No, not that I am aware of.”
However, the story began to unravel during a late breakfast
the same day.
Janet began to tell us a story that I could hardly believe.
Looking at me, she said,
“Last night, well, actually just after daylight, you opened
our bedroom door, and walked into the room. Then, you proceeded to walk over to
the dresser. After this, you turned back towards the open door. However, as you
passed the end of our bed, you stopped and…”
(It is important to understand that this point I had been
chewing on half a small blueberry pancake, and I was in the process of
swallowing the same).
Janet continued.
“You reached down and grabbed both of my feet; one in each
hand!”
Now, I found myself choking on the pancake I had just begun
to swallow, and I felt it go down the wrong way!
Grabbing my glass of orange juice, I downed a third of it
before attempting to respond.
(Cough, cough) “Say what?”
Now, John spoke.
“I didn’t see you, but I heard you.”
(And I thought, “You certainly had a profound lack of
curiosity at a time like that”)!
I looked at Janet again, and shook my head.
“Surely, you jest!”
And my daughter in law assured me she was not joking.
She continued.
“After you held my feet a few seconds, you turned, and
walked through the door; leaving it open.”
As you might imagine, I immediately assured Janet that I
had never done anything remotely like that in the past.
Now, I reflected on the night before. It is important to
note that I had been sleeping in a recliner in the living room, as I do at
home. (It all began when I broke my ankle years ago, and could not get
comfortable in my bed, as I had worn a heavy plaster cast for six or eight
weeks after the surgery).
Be that as it may, I recalled waking up in the same chair
in which I laid down a few hours before my new experience, and with absolutely
no memory of having wandered into their bedroom. (And suddenly, it occurred to
me that had I chosen the door next to the bedroom door, I would have tumbled
down a long flight of stairs to the basement)!
Now, I laughed, and asked my daughter in law,
“When I was playing with your feet, did I quote the nursery
rhyme,
‘This little piggy went to market. This little piggy stayed
home…’”
Janet assured me that I was silent the entire time.
Now, my son laughed, and spoke again.
“If you had tried to get in bed with us, I would have
‘drawn the line’ right there!”
Now, we all laughed out loud!
As you might imagine, I thought about my new experience the
remainder of that day, and, for that matter, for days afterward. The story was
both humorous and humiliating at the same time!
Post-script
Remind me not to buy a summer home on the side of a cliff,
or set up a tent next to a four lane highway!
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
REQUIEM FOR A UPS TRUCK
4491
Monday, January 26, 2026
A VERY BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD Pts. 1-5
4490
Pt. 1
There is a new movie out with Tom Hanks called, “A Beautiful
Day in the Neighborhood.” And since I had previously written about Mister
Rogers, (a blog that is not included here) I had more than a passing interest
in seeing the movie.
Admittedly, I feel a little guilty going to a movie alone
these days, as my wife is staying with our grandson, while our daughter is
spending a month in Nepal, (yes, Nepal) engaged in doing social work with an
NGO there. (But, admittedly, the guilt wasn’t potent enough to preclude me from
following through with my plan last night).
Well, so I got dressed, and drove the ten or twelve minutes
which separated me from the local theater in time for the first Friday evening
premier showing. However, when I arrived, I discovered that the parking lot was
full to overflowing, and I surmised that I didn’t want any part of sitting
“bunched up” against a person on my left and one on my right, and a theater
packed out like sardines in a can. As a result, I had no sooner drove into the
“asphalt jungle” that I turned around and drove out of it.
Having arrived home, and put on my jogging shorts and muscle
shirt, I debated whether I would “take in” the 10:30pm showing of the movie. I
was tired, and I knew my ambition would, no doubt, progressively wane in the
two hours which separated me from the process of redressing, getting in the
car, and heading back to the theater.
However, as a counselor I tell my clients that there’s a great
substitute for ambition, since ambition is little more than an emotion. The
substitute? A decision. After all, anything good must be done “on purpose.”
Only wrecks happen by accident. (Sorry, I couldn’t resist that little
teaching).
Pt. 2
Thus, I made a premeditated decision to take in the late
movie. I realized that the theater would be “blown out” on Saturday, and I
would find myself in exactly “the same boat” as I experienced the first time
that I drove up to the theater.
Throwing my street clothes back on, I walked out the door at
9:55pm, and retraced my route of two hours earlier. Ten minutes later I drove
into… an almost empty parking lot, and, as you might expect, I wasn’t
complaining.
Exiting the car, I walked the twenty yards which separated me
from my quest; the box office window. And as I stepped up to the young lady in
the booth, and she looked expectantly at me, waiting for me to announce the
movie of my choice, I almost involuntarily began to sing.
(Yeah, I did).
“It’s a Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood…”
And then, the slightest bit self-conscious, I mused,
“I bet lots of folks have walked up to you tonight singing
that song.”
To which “Anna” replied,
“Ummm. Nope, you’re the first one!”
(Now, I really did feel like a fool. LOL).
Having purchased my ticket, I walked through the front door
and into the lobby, had my ticket punched by the attendant, walked to the candy
counter, asked for a senior popcorn and coke, paid for my goodies, and
proceeded to theater number three; down the hallway, second door on the right.
Pt. 3
Walking into the theater, I found it to be very dark, very
quiet, and …very empty.
As a matter of fact, I was the only human being in the whole
place! And, as I always do, I climbed the steps of the amphitheater to the top,
walked to the middle of the row of seats, and plopped down, dead center;
setting my drink in the right holder, and my wallet, and cell phone in the left
one. (I am one of those guys who doesn’t like to carry stuff in my pockets.
Even when I go to a restaurant, I immediately set the obtrusive items on the
table).
Be that as it may, I sat “all by my lonely” on the top row of
the theater, as the commercials for upcoming movies ran for 15 plus minutes.
However, finally, finally the opening credits of “A Beautiful Day in the
Neighborhood” flickered onto the screen.
And as you might imagine, the first scene had a fairly
believable Tom Hanks, portraying Mr. Rogers, walking through the door of his
“play room,” opening a nearby closet, exchanging his suit coat for a red
sweater, and taking off his street shoes, and replacing them with sneakers.
To be fair, I thought the well-known actor’s attempt to
replicate Mr. Rogers’ voice was slightly contrived, (but perhaps only
slightly). At the same time, he looked enough like “the real McCoy” for this
audience of one to settle in, and absorb the plot and implications of the
movie.
And without absolutely spoiling it for you, suffice it to say
that the plot centered around a fella named Tom Junod, (though he assumes a
different name in the film), an Esquire magazine journalist, and his
relationship with Mr. Rogers; (which all began when the former contacted the
latter for an interview).
Ultimately, this interview was titled, “Can You Say…Hero?” and
became the feature story for the November 1998 issue of Esquire magazine, and
featured (there’s that word again) the beaming image of Mr. Rogers on the
cover.
Pt. 4
And again, without giving away anything, Mr. Rogers made a
profound difference in Tom Junod’s life, and for that matter, the life of his
entire family. He made a difference in many lives that God set in his pathway.
There was an exchange in the movie in which our “hero” is
speaking on the phone with the foregoing journalist, and he says,
“Do you know who the most important person in my life is,
Tom?”
And perhaps Junod merely responded with, “Who?”
And with a twinkle in his eye, and a slight catch in his
characteristic voice, Mr. Rogers replies,
“Well, at this very moment, Tom, you are the most important
person in my life!”
I think that’s how he made you feel. Yes, I think that’s how
he made you feel. As if for that moment in time, you were the only person who
really mattered to him.
I felt very much this way when I paraphrased the Book of
Philippians; (years before I paraphrased the entire New Testament). It was as
if I was given the wherewithal to walk into Paul’s Roman cell, and sit down
beside him, and talk with him about his life, and impact and suffering, to know
him as my friend and brother, and to realize his compassion and joy in spite of
the circumstances which surrounded him.
Following is a poignant reminiscence from an article about Mr.
Rogers.
“Every morning,
when he swims, he steps on a scale in his bathing suit and his bathing cap and
his goggles, and the scale tells him he weighs 143 pounds. This has happened so
many times that Mister Rogers has come to see that number as a gift, as a destiny
fulfilled, because, as he says,
‘the number 143
means I love you. It takes one letter to say I, and four letters to say love,
and three letters to say you. One hundred and forty-three. I love you. Isn't
that wonderful?’”
Pt. 5
And now, the movie finally drew to a close, and I hesitated to
leave. After stuffing my wallet and cell phone back into my pockets, I ambled
down the long flight of steps, and paused to see if any actual footage of the
“real” Mister Rogers would appear on the screen. And, in fact, it did.
There he was standing in his element, in his little “play
room” with his puppets, and lighting up his little world with that memorable
smile.
Now, I walked down the long hallway which led out of the very
dark, very quiet and… very empty theater. And as I walked out the door, and
into the lobby of the place, I could still hear the closing song as it trailed
off behind me.Top of Form
Bottom of Form
It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood
A beautiful day for a neighbor
Could you be mine?
Would you be mine?
Let's make the most of this beautiful day
Since we're together, might as well say
Would you be my, could you be my
Won't you be my neighbor?
A lone security guard greeted me, as I neared the exit of
the building. The lights were turned down low. No one was behind the candy
counter, and the ushers were, by now, heating up their TV dinners, or turning
in for the night.
And now, I pushed open the exit door, and stepped out into
the street. And a penetrating moment of sadness suddenly overwhelmed me.
I
can’t really account for why I experienced that fleeting emotion. Perhaps it
had something to do with the poignancy of losing anyone so singular as this man
happened to be, and who had impacted several generations of children.
Children
who ultimately became fathers and mothers, and subsequently, grandfathers and
grandmothers; while their own children and grandchildren continued to be
entertained by the same humble little man; who to children presented as an
adult, and who to adults seemed almost childlike.
So much like the journalist, I felt almost as if I had been
granted my own personal interview with Mister Rogers. After all, I had been the
only human being within fifty feet in any direction, and I experienced a
strange sensation that this man had set aside a bit of his valuable time, as he
did with countless other people during his lifetime… for me.
And perhaps during those few moments which he granted me, I
was, indeed, the most important person in his life.
*Tom Hanks was recently informed that he and Mister Rogers
are 6th cousins. No wonder they look alike.
By William McDonald, PhD