Wednesday, April 23, 2025

41

 4383

41

*In the Bible, it rained for 40 days and 40 nights.

Day 41 came and the rain stopped.

 

*Moses committed murder & hid in the desert for 40 years.

Year 41 came, and God called him to help rescue Israel.

 

*Moses went up on the mountain for 40 days.

On Day 41, he received the Ten Commandments.

 

*The Israelites wandered in the wilderness for 40 years.

 

On the dawn of Year 41, the Jews walked into the Promised Land.

 

 

*Goliath taunted Israel for 40 days.

 

Day 41 came, and David slew him.

 

 

*Jonah preached a message of repentance to Ninevah for 40 days.

 

On Day 41, God renounced His plan to destroy them.

 

*Jesus fasted and was tempted for 40 days.

 

Day 41, and the devil fled.

 

 

*After His resurrection, Jesus appeared to His disciples for 40 days.

 

On Day 41, He ascended into Heaven.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Sunday, April 20, 2025

OLD TOM

 4382

My wife and I visited the Polk County Heritage Museum today; a genealogical library we have often visited in the past, and which my father frequented in his prime.

 

And it so happened that while we were there, I came across a large binder of photographs taken of my hometown of Bartow; over the course of the past century and a half. And among the hundreds of pictures in the collection was one which peaked my interest, like few photographic images have ever done.

 

A small, brown mule hitched to a cart with the following caption: (my paraphrase)

 

“Old Tom was a working mule; sired in Polk County, Florida about 1883. He was brought to Bartow, Florida in 1889 to help lay the first paved streets in that city. These early roadways were made up of white phosphatic clay.

The attached photograph was made on March 26, 1918 when ‘Old Tom’ was approximately thirty five (35) years of age; having worked for the city for 29 years at the time the picture was taken. How much longer the old mule worked or lived is unknown. The photo was given to Mrs. Vesta Blood by Chester Wiggins, Polk County Judge. ‘Old Tom,’ the mule, was named after Judge Wiggins' son.”

 

“Old Tom” remains an amazing example of animals which served. And as I completed the previous sentence I was tempted to use the pronoun, “who” prior to the final word; since domesticated animals possess emotions so much like our own, and they become so like family to those who are privileged to know, and love them.

 

In my mind’s eye I see Old Tom, as he is awakened for the thousandth time by “Billy Sims,” a burly man, and as comparatively young as his faithful mule. And having hitched the four-footed creature to a two-wheeled cart, he climbs aboard, and gives the reins a loud crack, and they’re off.

 

And having rolled along for the space of ten or twelve minutes, they arrive at a vast pile of white clay. Billy immediately dismounts, and proceeds to shovel the phosphatic earth into the bed of the wagon. And while the morning is new, Old Tom is already sweating in central Florida’s sub-tropical, summer heat, and as he waits on Billy to complete his task, he dips his head from time to time to snatch a blade of grass, or a succulent weed.

 

A quarter hour passes, and the cart is filled to capacity; a great pile of clay threatening to splinter the wheels on which it stands. Billy jumps into his well-worn seat, snaps the reins, and they’re off again. In short order the familiar duo arrive at a place in the road where white clay gives way to gray sand, and the poorly paid city employee puts his previous efforts into reverse.

 

Spade after spade of chunky white clay adds foot after foot, yard after yard, mile after mile to the expanding network of what at that time passed for pavement. And as Billy toils, and glistening beads of sweat fall off the back of his faithful mule, and sprinkle the ground under him, other teams of men and animals may be seen in the distance, and multiply their progress.

 

And as the clock hands slowly spin, Billy and Old Tom repeat their circuitous trek to the clay pile, and back, to the clay pile and back (and) to the clay pile and back; while the strong young man and the sturdy brown beast realize an ache in every joint, and weariness in every step.

 

… And they hope for the night.

 

There exists in modern times a song which aptly characterizes the laborious toil of Billy and his faithful mule.

 

“And So It Goes”

 

For you see that formerly young man and formerly young mule continued doing the same thing they’d been doing, while years dropped like sand into the proverbial hour glass. Billy’s hair grew gray, and he developed a bit of paunch about his belly. While Old Tom aged a bit less gracefully, and with the passing years his back slumped, and his ribs shown through his tough, brown hide.

 

I like to believe that old mule’s involuntary servitude was accompanied by kindness, (rather than the standard fare to which beasts of burden were so often exposed), that Billy’s words were gentle and full of appreciation, that Old Tom’s wounds were tended, and his illnesses were treated, and that his last days were better than his first;

 

… as the harness was removed from his tired, old body for the last time, and he was afforded a lush, green pasture, and plenty of trees to while away his final days on the earth.

by Bill McDonald, PhD 

Monday, April 14, 2025

STAY ENCOURAGED

 4381

At 21 I was married, the father of a young son, and a member of the United States Air Force.

My wife and I attended a relatively large church in Tampa, Bethel Temple, during my tenure as a personnel clerk at MacDill Air Force Base. We had taken advantage of several nightly revival meetings, and as the final service concluded Pastor Matheny invited the congregation to ‘q up’ and say our ‘farewells’ to the visiting evangelist.

While I have long since forgotten the name of the itinerant preacher, I will never forget one especially peculiar trait which he displayed on a recurring basis. For you see, at times he would get ‘so wound up’ that it seemed he needed to release his emotional mainspring. And thus, after this admonition or that bit of spiritual insight he’d kick out his right leg like he was punting a football, and shout, ‘Hallelujah.’

Be that as it may, as I finally neared the somewhat quirky evangelist, and reached out to shake his hand, he looked me in the eyes, and offered me what was perhaps the two most singular words in all of my life.

“Stay Encouraged!”

Though almost half a century has come and gone since that evening, and though this dear man may have, by now, passed from the earth, I have never forgotten his words, and they have buoyed me up, and afforded me courage when I might have, otherwise, simply given up.

And I think there is no more fitting manner in which to conclude what I have begun, nor anything more crucial I could offer than to pass that proverbial baton on to you; the one I received when I shook the preacher’s hand.

“Stay Encouraged!”

by Bill McDonald, PhD 

 


Friday, April 11, 2025

TWO PEOPLE DRIVING ONE CAR

 4380

It was mid-afternoon, and Jean and I were on our way home from church, (or some other place long since forgotten.) She was driving our old green 1980 something Oldsmobile; a somewhat larger and heavier vehicle than one generally sees on the road today. We were traveling at 50 MPH, or more, and as we neared an intersecting road on our right, which was marked with a stop sign, a small blue car pulled into our pathway.

I could plainly see a man and woman in the front seat, and a little boy and girl in the back seat. I will never forget those precious little human beings as they sat there, eyes wide open, peering helplessly out the window, as our car swiftly approached them.  Less than 50 feet separated our two vehicles, and Jean proceeded to lock up the brakes. An accident was inevitable. As with so many traumatic events, time seemed to slow down. (Interestingly enough, I have read that this syndrome occurs because the brain is processing more information than usual in a miniscule amount of time.)

It was obvious that my wife had every intention of plowing headlong into the smaller car, (and no doubt, all the occupants of that vehicle would have been seriously injured or killed.) And though we were driving a much larger automobile, we also would not have been spared, since foolishly we weren’t wearing our seatbelts.

Suddenly, I just KNEW what I had to do.

I reached over with my left hand, took the steering wheel from Jean, and began steering it in a direction that would take us around the rear of the small vehicle. Amazingly, we cleared the back bumper of the little car by a foot. Both my wife and I found ourselves leaning hard in the direction of our passenger window. (As a result of that event, I can easily relate to the G-forces astronauts endure as they reach maximum acceleration.)

But our wild ride was only beginning. Our ungainly old car began a 180 degree slide. Suddenly, the back end was where the front end was just seconds before. Now we were sliding backwards. As the car lost momentum, we neared a wooden fence to our left which paralleled the side of a house. We finally slid to a stop in a grassy area, a few feet from the fence, very shaken, but not a scratch on either of us. 

As we ended our unexpected journey, I saw the little car as it turned left into the opposite lane of the four laned highway. The man didn’t even have the courtesy to stop and inquire about our well-being. The decent thing to have done, the only thing to have done, would have been to stop, especially since he had pulled in front of us, and caused a near fatal accident.

However, while this traumatic event was in the process of happening to us, another car pulled up to the stop sign. Having seen the spectacle falling together around him, I have no doubt that the driver watched in awe. The motorist asked if we were okay, and after we assured him we were, he drove away.

Only God. Only God. Nothing less than an abject miracle. The two occupants of our car and the four occupants of the other car might easily have died that day. And the spot which Jean fills in the audience tonight would be vacant, or filled by another, and I would be just as invisible now, and you would not be listening to the sound of my voice, nor been exposed to my obvious charm, or handsome face.

And I have no doubt He gave His angels charge over us that day, and when we needed a miracle, well, He gave us one. And I have no doubt, any one of you could step behind this podium and share something equally wonderful and amazing that our Lord has done in your own lives.

 by Bill McDonald, PhD 

 


Friday, March 28, 2025

A GOOD SERGEANT & A LITTLE MONK

 4379

*The following story is based on limited information, but is, given the absence of complete details, generally factual in nature. Some incidentals in the story line are included to provide dramatic effect. The characters in the story, except for Sergeant Otis Vaughn, have been assigned fictional names, since the actual names of these characters are unknown.

During the early 60’s, Le Duc Nguyen, a nine year old apprentice monk was walking through a thicket of bamboo on his way to fetch a bucket of water from a nearby stream. It was mid-morning and the air had begun to heat up a bit, and now and then he felt a vine or small branch brush against his sandaled feet.

However, what he felt next was anything but a vine or branch. For suddenly, he sensed a piercing wound to his right ankle. Looking down Le found himself looking at the largest snake he had ever seen in the short decade he had lived in this Vietnamese hamlet. His parents had often warned him about the multitude of poison snakes which inhabited their little corner of the world.

Le immediately recognized it. He had been bitten by a Chinese Cobra, one of the most venomous snakes on the planet. The little monk watched as the Cobra slithered away into the bamboo thicket, dropped his bucket, and immediately turned, and retraced his steps back to the Buddhist monastery. The compound was about two hundred yards distant, and by the time he arrived there, he was struggling to catch his breath.

Phen Doc Toe, one of the older monks, saw Le limp up to the compound, and knew something was very wrong. He had sent the boy for water, but he noticed there was no bucket in his hands now, and that Le’s cheeks were red, and that one of his ankles was badly swollen.

Phen asked Le an almost rhetorical question.

“What has happened to you, Le?”

Le struggled to speak.

“I was walking through the bamboo thicket near the river, and I was bitten by a Cobra.”

Pt. 2

Phen Doc was absolutely mortified. He knew that such a bite was almost certain death. He was also all too aware that the monastery was poorly equipped to treat anything, but the most minor of maladies and injuries.

Phen grabbed the boy up in his arms, and rushed him to the small Buddhist temple. As he walked into the sanctuary, he noticed that the chief priest and a few of his fellow monks were chanting their morning prayers.

As Phen barged through the door, six or eight priests turned from their prayers; with a momentary look of consternation on their faces. However, their consternation quickly disappeared in favor of shock and empathy.

The priest who held the suffering little apprentice shouted.

“Le went to get water and stepped on a Cobra. He is certain to die.”

The priests attending the altar turned from their prayers, and ran to the duo. Do Van Tien, the chief priest, took Le from Phen’s arms, and set him down on a bamboo mat. By now, Le’s breathing was shallow, and his neck and face were red and swollen.

The chief priest laid hands on the boy, and began praying. There was simply nothing else to be done. The priest’s subordinates hovered around the little boy, and did much the same thing.

Hundreds of South Vietnamese men, women and children were bitten by the thirty-seven varieties of venomous snakes which frequented the area on a yearly basis. And since much of the countryside lacked proper medical facilities, the snake bites were almost always fatal.

Pt. 3

Sergeant Otis Vaughn was a member of an Army surveying team in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War. He and his team members were tasked with the preliminary work which went into laying in roads for the American forces to travel from one hamlet to another.

As they were “going about their business” one day, and had pulled their jeeps off the road for a smoke or water break, as the case may be, the young sergeant heard voices on a nearby hillside. While the survey team’s primary mission was surveying, they were equipped with M-16 rifles, and knew how to use them. They were, after all, soldiers first, and surveyors second. He knew the entirety of South Vietnam was rife with Viet Cong, and North Vietnamese regulars, and that they would just as soon shoot your head off, as look at you.

Otis yelled to the six privates who accompanied him.

“Get down!”

Everyone hit the dirt, and lay there pondering their next move.

It was then that Sergeant Vaughn realized what the sound was that permeated the jungle foliage surrounding them.

Prayers

As someone who knew him, I can tell you no one ever accused Otis of what might be referred to as a “depleted sense of curiosity.” He was going to find discover what the commotion was all about.

“Okay men, false alarm. Get up. Stay here, and keep your eyes open. I’m going to climb that hill, and have a little peek.”

With this, Sergeant Vaughn walked to the base of the hill, about fifty yards distant, and trudged up the five hundred feet which separated him from his quest.

Pt. 4

As the winded military man arrived at the summit of the hill, he lay on his stomach, and peered into the Buddhist compound. The voices were louder now, and they were obviously coming from a small bamboo temple a couple hundred feet away.

And while the young sergeant’s courage had waned a bit, and he felt a sense of dread rising in his chest, he stood, and began to walk slowly towards the temple. Of course, Otis still cradled his M-16 in his arms, and was wary of any sound or movement from the small huts on his left and right.

Now, Sergeant Vaughn strode through the door of the little sanctuary, and witnessed several Buddhist priests surrounding what appeared to be a prostrate boy. At this juncture, the priests stopped their chanting, and greeted the foreigner with wary eyes.

Otis did his best to put the priests at ease. He smiled the friendliest smile he knew how to conjure up, and raised his arms in somewhat of a quasi-surrender.

Now, looking down at the man whom he surmised was in charge of this motley crew, and speaking slowly, he asked,

“I heard your voices. Can I help you?”

The American looked innocent enough to the chief priest, and it just so happened that Do Van Tien knew some rudimentary English. He responded,

“The boy. He been bitten by, by Cobra. He dying.”

Pt. 5

The good sergeant’s mind raced, and he thought,

“Well, not if I have anything to do with it. Not on my watch.”

And he said much the same thing to the chief priest.

Indicating he was a whole lot more than words, and intended to take action, Sergeant Vaughn nearly shouted at Do Van Tien.

“Trust me. Let me have the boy. I’ll take him to an Army field hospital.”

By now, Le was drifting in and out of consciousness, and the chief priest realized that there was absolutely nothing to lose. He slowly nodded his head, and the would-be savior stooped down, picked up the little monk, and gently placed him over his left shoulder.

“There now. It’s going to be okay.”

And all the while he must have been thinking,

“At least, I hope it’s going to be okay.”

Now, retracing his steps, Le’s rescuer hurried down the hill to where his six team members and two jeeps were waiting. Sergeant Vaughn laid the almost comatose little monk in the back of the nearest vehicle, and informed his crew that their mission had been temporarily suspended.

“The boy has been bitten by a Cobra. There’s a field hospital a few miles from here. Let’s go!”

Pt. 6

I will allow my niece to finish this wonderful story for you.

“After my dad carried the little monk down the mountain, and managed to get him to a field hospital, the Army doctors administered an antidote for the Cobra bite, and the young man began showing signs that the chief priest’ prognosis was a little hasty.

 “After he told me this story, I exclaimed,

‘Dad, you saved that boy’s life!’”

Suddenly, my dad’s eyes misted up a little, and he replied,

“No. No, I just got into a jeep with him and took him to a hospital.”

“My dad could have chosen not to help. He could have made a decision to do his military duty, and continue the mundane task of surveying a forlorn little jungle road in Vietnam. But he got involved. My father carried a 50 pound little boy, plus his own gear down a jungled mountain, and drove him to a field hospital.

But, instead of doing his good deed, and leaving the little guy, he remained by his side. He knew the boy didn’t know English, and that he would be scared when he woke up, and would need someone to look after him.

“You would have to know my dad. His mission was simply not over ‘til it was over. Daddy sat next to that little monk ‘til he recovered, and then drove him back home.”

I am happy to tell you that the little monk made a full recovery. I am equally happy to inform you that Sergeant Otis Vaughn was my brother in law, and that finished his tour in Vietnam, and returned home to the United States where he went on to live out the remainder of his life.

Otis impacted hundreds of family, friends and co-workers with a sense of humor and empathetic spirit as big as all outdoors. He was a man’s man, and one of those characters who when they are gone, it is as if they should have always been with us. The vacuum he left behind can almost be touched.

We were all born to fulfill a task bigger than ourselves. Sergeant Otis Vaughn was no exception. An old Vietnamese monk lives and moves and breathes today because a good man momentarily set aside his military duties, and took time to express love, and compassion towards a hurting little boy in a hamlet far off the beaten trail.

by Bill McDonald, PhD


Saturday, March 22, 2025

I WILL BE THERE - Song Lyrics

 I WILL BE THERE - Lyrics

(Author Unknown)
Where can you go that I can’t see?
On the highest of mountains
In the heat of the desert
In the life-consuming deep
and lonely heart of life’s seas
Where can you hurt that I can’t feel?
When you feel like you’re dying
Need a shoulder for crying
Come to me. I’m waiting here
with open arms that can heal
I’ll be a Father to the fatherless
A faithful Friend
when none are there
My heart of love is fathomless
and it reaches anywhere
I will be there through
the long lonely nights
never letting you go
I will hold. I will love you
with all my might
I will be there. I will be there. I will be there
I will be there, and I want you to know
I will never leave you alone
I’ll never go. I’ll never go. I will never let you go
I will be there. I will be there. I will be there
What can you feel that I can’t bear?
Any burden you’re bearing
Any sorrow you carry
Any heartache, any loneliness
or despair
What can you see that I can’t see?
Even death was defeated
all the work was completed
I’ve prepared a special place
here in my heart just for you
I’ll be a husband to the husbandless
A faithful Friend
when none are there
Inside my heart of love is faithfulness
and it reaches anywhere
I will be there through
the long lonely nights
never letting you go
I will hold. I will love you
with all my might
I will be there. I will be there. I will be there
I will be there, and I want you to know
I will never leave you alone
I’ll never go. I’ll never go. I will never let you go
I will be there. I will be there. I will be there

Thursday, March 20, 2025

THE END OF AN ERA

 4377

Pt. 1

The year was 1968. At the age of 18, I was a new believer. Granted, I grew up in the Methodist church with its "high" hymns, standing and kneeling, responsive readings, liturgies, etc. However, in spite of my involvement in Methodist Youth Fellowship, and three summer youth camps, it was not until I was on the verge of young adulthood that I came to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ.

I had hardly been "saved" when I met a young married man of perhaps 30 named John Westerman. John was married to a lovely lady named Vivien, they had two children, they hailed from Indiana, and they attended the same church as I.

Within months of my decision to attend Bartow First Assembly, John and I colluded together to co-found a local chapter (outpost) of the Assemblies of God boys program referred to as Royal Rangers.

I will always remember the weekly meetings, as, in my service as an outpost commander, I taught 9-16 year olds to tie fancy knots, took them fishing, and we once spent a summer's night on Sanibel Island.

Speaking of Sanibel Island. Having pitched our tents, eaten whatever we cooked on a campfire, and settled in for the night we heard an all too familiar buzzing, and began to feel an even more familiar assault on our collective skins.

Pt. 2

Mosquitoes. Large mosquitos. Florida mosquitoes. 

The six or eight Royal Rangers with me began to murmur.

"Commander McDonald, I'm being eat up by skeeters!"

(and)

"Commander McDonald, twenty of those pesky critters have bitten me in the last five minutes!"

And while the Royal Ranger motto is:

"Ready. Ready for anything...," I had neglected to bring one very essential item...

Mosquito Spray

I made a command decision.

"Okay, guys. Get your swimming trucks back on."

(and)

"Let's do something fun."

(and)

"How 'bout we take a nice little evening swim?"

As it fell together, we spent the majority of that long tropical evening amongst the foamy island waves.

A few years later, after having served a tour of duty in the Air Force, I moved my family to Virginia, we located a church, and I had the distinct privilege of co-founding another Royal Ranger outpost in that "neck of the woods."

Pt. 3

Fast forward just short of six decades...

In recent years I had been in touch with one of my former Royal Rangers, Joseph Smothers, who went on to serve in the capacity of commander in the same outpost which I had co-founded almost sixty years earlier. (Sadly, Joe passed away in the past couple of years).

Everything seemed to be going "swimmingly" for my Bartow, Florida and Woodbridge, Virginia Royal Ranger outposts until...

In the past year the old Bartow church experienced attendance and, (I believe), financial issues, and the decision was made to allow a nearby independent church to establish a satellite work on the property.

In the past week, I decided to message Access Church, and inquire about the status of the Royal Rangers ministry in Bartow; now that it would no longer be an Assemblies of God work. Of course, I made the pastor aware of the history of the boy's program there, including my having been involved in its formation, and the many decades in which it has existed, and impacted the local community.

Following is the response I received from the current pastor:

Dr. McDonald, 

Thank you for reaching out and for your many years of dedicated service in ministry, especially through Royal Rangers. Your impact on young men over the years is truly commendable.

As we continue our transition from Bartow First Assembly to Access Church, we have prayerfully considered our ministry programs. At this time, we will not be continuing the Royal Rangers program. While we greatly appreciate its legacy and the influence it has had on so many lives, our focus will be on other discipleship opportunities for the young people in our church.

We sincerely appreciate your passion for this ministry, and we pray that God continues to bless your work in counseling and mentoring the next generation. Please let us know if we can be of any further assistance.

Pt. 4

I immediately replied.

Pastor S.

As you might imagine, tears sprang to my eyes when I read your response. I am, admittedly, biased, but I hope you will reconsider your decision to discontinue the Royal Rangers program in Bartow.

I have struggled a bit this week as I have digested what I regard as not only bad news, but a mistake. (And who can say, perhaps it will all "turn around" in favor of retaining the Royal Ranger program).

And as I pondered the impact of this ministry, over the course of such a long period of time, I began to think in terms of "theoreticals." 

For you see, given the significant amount of time since John and I were privileged to co-found the Royal Ranger outpost in Bartow, it is altogether possible that four generations of boys have passed through that ministry. Amazingly, one or more great grandchildren of the original boys in our outpost could conceivably be attending the program at this time!

King Solomon, in all his wisdom, assures us that,

"To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heavens." 
(Eccl. 3:1)

His father, King David, dittos that sentiment.

"My times are in Your hands." 
(Psalm 31:15)

I think it helps at a time like this to consider not what we've lost, but what we've gained. Long after the tears dry, the smiles will remain.

Today I found myself opening my closet door, and moving several coats and shirts to one side 'til... I found that old khaki commander's shirt. At the top of one sleeve, some blue and gold patches. Pen. Florida 147. A bit small at this point, but looking surprisingly new; almost as if I might throw it on and pick up where I left off.

Yes, long after the tears dry, the smiles will remain.


I cannot help but smile when I reflect on that dark summer's night of 60 years hence when 10,000 skeeters drove a young commander and his six or eight young rangers out of our tents, and into the foaming surf of a small tropical island.

by Bill McDonald, PhD