Sunday, August 4, 2013

When Severe Illness and Death Come




“Do not be anxious for anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God.” –Philippians 4:6 (ESV).

     I could have been younger than eight when I first experienced death of someone dear to me. But I remember several dear kin with serious illnesses that ended in death from the time I was eight and onward.  My first impression of a death that touched me deeply was that of my Great Uncle Dallas, my mother’s uncle, in 1938.  He was a kindly gentleman, wise and interesting to listen to as he told of life as it had been when he was young.  My family liked to visit him.  He became very ill, and although we prayed for him, we got the word of his death.  My mother went to help her cousin Aria, Uncle Dallas’s daughter, make all the arrangements for the “laying out” of the corpse and preparations for the funeral, including cooking for the large crowd of relatives that came from near and far.  My father helped Moody, Aria’s husband, make the homemade casket in which to bury Great Uncle Dallas.  As a young child of eight, observing all this activity at that mountain home, I became aware that, even though the people were sad, they set about the tasks before them with resolve and stoicism.  They seemed to find comfort in talking about the good life of faith Great Uncle Dallas had lived.  Very early, at age eight, I learned of belief and a very important adage that my Christian relatives lived by:  “Thanksgiving is the antidote to worry and grief.”
     Later that same year we learned that my Aunt India, my mother’s older sister, had cancer.  Although Grandfather took her to Downey’s Hospital in far-away Gainesville for help, the doctors at that time did not have adequate treatment for invasive cancer.  She lived a few months, in great pain much of the time.  She died on April 2, 1939, a little more than a month before I turned nine.  I was especially sad at her passing, for she had taught me already how to embroider, and helped me to make a “Dutch Doll” quilt top.  Poor as my beginning stitches were, and as much as I yet had to learn about sewing, Aunt India was a mentor to me.  I was bereft at her passing and wondered how I would ever overcome my grief at such a young age.  But I learned to remember Aunt India’s smile, her words of encouragement, the patience and devotion she extended to me.  I learned to give thanks for the loving life of this “old maid” aunt, sister of my mother, who had loved me unconditionally.
     The next death that affected me greatly came when I was eleven years old.  On December 17, 1941, shortly after Pearl Harbor was bombed on December 7, and the United States declared and entered World II.  My brother Eugene and cousins Clyde and others had volunteered to go into the Army Air Force.  Clyde, who had a car, came to tell us that Grandfather, who had also suffered with dread cancer for several months, had died.  When I saw Clyde’s car approaching our house, I knew that he was bringing news of Grandpa’s death.  Again I had to remember that “Thanksgiving is the antidote to worry and grief.”  During the time of Grandpa’s wake and funeral, I was just one of many of his young grandchildren and other relatives who heard accolades of his life.  Many talked of the good and progressive farmer he was, ahead of his time in progress by installing a Delco power plant to provide electricity for his mountain home; running a country store at which he allowed poor people to have things on credit and loaned money to those in dire financial straits;  having at mill and sawmill at which people ground their corn and sawed logs into lumber; of how well he represented his county as a state legislator.  Grandpa was gone, but his influence and memory lingered on.
     Then came that Valentine’s Day in 1945, with my brother Eugene wounded somewhere in an Army Hospital in Italy, and my mother very ill at our Choestoe home.   I was fourteen when my mother died.  This death was definitely the most devastating I had experienced so far.  Overnight, I grew from a young teenager of fourteen to an adult with more responsibility than my young years could seem to bear.  Since nine I had been a Christian, and already I had developed a strong faith, thanks to good teachers and good Christian examples.  Philippians 4:6 had gratefully become one of my life verses.  At my dear mother’s funeral, our pastor, Rev. Claude Boynton, read and expounded upon Proverbs 31:10-31 as a summary of my mother’s exemplary life.  At that point, sad as I was, I gave thanks for having a godly mother and determined that when I should come to the end of my own life, I would have lived, with God’s help, to be worthy of having the same scripture passage read at my funeral.
     Perhaps this “Insights and Inspiration” piece has been too sad, too personal.  My intention is for it to represent victory, the joy of living an overcoming life, of being able to release anxiety and adopt thanksgiving as a way of life.  A dear younger friend recently wrote, “My tears became prayers that only God could understand and answer.”  What joy can come, even in grief, if we but allow God’s power to shine through.  –Ethelene Dyer Jones  08.04.2013.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

The Days of My Years



“The days of our years are threescore years and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labor and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away.  So teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom.” –Psalm 90:10, 12 (KJV).

The Psalmist, in talking about length of a person’s life span, seemed slightly pessimistic as he considered the promised “threescore and ten,” or maybe “by reason of strength” one’s years might extend to fourscore. He still considered that many of those days were filled with “labor and sorrow.”  You will note in this passage, too, the “fly away” phrase, one made popular by the words of the gospel song written by Albert E. Brumley in 1929 and said to be one of the most-recorded gospel songs written.  To “fly away,” to escape this present life with its hardships seems to be the aim both in the Psalmist’s message and in Mr. Brumley’s gospel song.  But  it is as if the Psalmist, in retrospect, reconsiders and determines to listen to God’s teachings (and obey them implied) so as to “number…days and apply…heart to wisdom.”  Being somewhat in a contemplative (and poetic) mood, I share with you here a poem I wrote on this theme entitled “The Days of My Years”:

When I grew up on my father’s farm
The years ahead stretched long;
But soon I was gone from the mountain farm
To follow my calling, my song.
Year turned to year with living and work;
A balance of sorrow and joy I found.
Hardly did I realize how short is life
Until fourscore years rolled around.

If I could in a verse tell the secret of years
That roll quickly to 80’s great toll,
I’d say that to travel with God as guide
Is the answer to reaching life’s goal.
For whether one dies in youthful years
Or lives to a great circle in time,
It’s not the number of years life accrues
But whether you’ve touched the Divine.

Let us thus learn to number our days
That God’s love emanates from the heart;
And the work of one’s hands is established
To make a difference before we depart.
Thank you for sharing in my life,
Your love and friendship I treasure;
Consider that the very best lies ahead:
God’s plans for eternity without measure.                 -Ethelene Dyer Jones  02.14.2013

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Exaltation



“For you shall go out in joy and be led forth in peace; the mountains and the hills before you shall break forth into singing, and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands.  Instead of the thorn shall come up the cypress; instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle; and it shall make a name for the Lord, an everlasting sign that shall not be cut off.” Isaiah 55:12-13 (ESV).

Isaiah Chapters 40-55 were addressed to God’s people in Babylonian exile in the sixth century B. C.-Isaiah used predictive prophecy to give the people hope that God will act to bring His blessings of restoration in a powerful way and so that all people will be aware of His actions.  It is stated thus in Isaiah 40:5:  “And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall see it together, for the mouth of the Lord has spoken.”  Isaiah gives the promise of restoration in 55:12-13 (quoted above) and signifies a time of joy, great rejoicing, and even production again from the land that had been laid waste.

So far in my life I have not experienced exile like the Israelites knew in the Babylonian exile.  But I can identify with the exaltation expressed in Isaiah 55:12-13.  I had great determination to go to college and get a good education.  As I have told before in my personal testimony, I grew up on a farm in North Georgia.  My mother died when I was fourteen and it became my obligation to assume the leadership of house and home so far as cooking, cleaning, laundry, keeping the garden, preserving foods for winter use, and often cooking for several farm hands that assisted my father with seasonal work.  These duties were heavy for a teenager and oftentimes I was tempted to weaken in my efforts, to desist from working so hard, to allow my dream for an education to die.  But somehow a spirit within me kept determination alive and propelled me to do the necessary work that fell to me.  I attribute much of my determination and persistence to becoming a Christian at an early age.  Prayer became a vital and necessary part of my life, and as I set goals for myself, I would pray earnestly that I might work toward reaching them.  I was able to stay in school enough to make each grade successfully and even to excel.  Perhaps hard work at home helped me in the same manner to work hard at school, even though I could not always attend regularly, especially in “syrup-making” season in the fall when my help was sorely needed on the farm to cook for the work hands.

When my high school graduation time came, I was told by my teachers and principal that I was first honor graduate—valedictorian.  I could hardly believe it, for there were several with very high grade point averages in my class.  Then I began to have offers to colleges.  My pastor was instrumental in helping me to secure work and honors scholarships that virtually paid my way.  As I left my mountain home to realize this next journey in my life, higher education, it was as if the “mountains and the hills broke forth into singing, and the trees of the field clapped their hands for joy!”  I felt I could identify with the thorns of defeat being replaced by opportunity and the briers of disappointment being uprooted and replaced by goals that could be accomplished.  I learned to be thankful for every opportunity, determined with God’s help to seek His way and follow His path.  Yes, there have been times when I wavered and had to redirect my efforts, but I have found without a doubt that the words of Isaiah 40:29 are true:  He gives power to the faint, and to him who has not might He increases strength.”  Praise be to God. –Ethelene Dyer Jones 07.07.2013

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Honoring Fathers



“Honor your father and your mother, that your days may be long in the land that the Lord your God is giving you.” (Exodus 20:12, ESV).
     The fifth of the Ten Commandments and the first with an expressed promise teaches us that we are to honor both our parents.  “Honor” involves love, respect, appreciation, looking up to and accepting the leadership of.  And, of course, parents are to lead lives “worthy of respect.” 
     Did you know that there are some 70 million fathers in the United States?  Many of these are responsible adults and are seeking to rear their children well.  But many, unfortunately, are “absentee fathers” who have abdicated—or never accepted—responsibility for children’s upbringing.
     A little history of Father’s Day shows that Sonora Smart Dodd of Spokane, Washington suggested a day to honor fathers in 1910.  She wanted to respect the memory of her own father, William Jackson Smart, a Civil War Veteran who reared six children, herself and five brothers, as a single parent after the death of his wife and their mother.  She suggested to her pastor that a day be set aside to honor fathers, much as Mother’s Day.  That was done first in Spokane in 1910.  The day was pushed somewhat by President Woodrow Wilson and by President Calvin Coolidge.  It was not until 1966 that President Lyndon Johnson signed a Father’s Day presidential proclamation. Then in 1972 President Richard Nixon made Father’s Day officially the third Sunday in June by proclamation.
     Like Sonora Smart Dodd’s father, my own dear father lost companions to death and reared two “sets” of children after their mother’s death.  He manifested great faith, love, patience, endurance and example, and I am the beneficiary.  I am so grateful for a godly father. 
     Dr. B. B. McKinney, noted hymnologist of the last century, wrote this prayer in his hymn, “God Give Us Christian Homes”:  “God give us Christian homes! /Homes where the father is true and strong,/Homes that are free from the blight of wrong,/Homes that are joyous with love and song,/God give us Christian homes!/God give us Christian homes!”  May his words be our prayer for this Father’s Day!  And Happy Father’s Day—all you wonderful fathers who might read this!  -Ethelene Dyer Jones  06.16.2013

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Light for the Journey



Many times in my life God has spoken to me through His Word.  Just when I seemed to need special encouragement and assurance from God, the Spirit led me to certain Bible verses that applied to the very situation I was facing.  Here I will give you three very personal examples.

The date was November 16, 1993.  My husband Grover had already received extensive cardiovascular tests and was in Atlanta Medical Center (formerly Georgia Baptist Hospital) awaiting bypass heart surgery scheduled for the next day.  I had a guest room in the old Georgia Baptist School of Nursing dormitory (the school being then closed out).  The dormitory was on the top floor, but reached from a sort of tunnel passageway  that went from the lower level of the hospital across and to the dormitory.  In 1993 it was a place for family members of patients to board.  Knowing that Grover faced serious surgery the next day, I was naturally concerned.  Settled into the room and ready for bed, I took my Bible to read and pray.  I opened to Psalm 118, the psalm with the recurring refrain:  “O give thanks unto the Lord; for He is good because His mercy endureth forever” (Ps. 118:1; see also verses 2, 3, 4, 29).  Then verse 17 seemed to stand out as a special message for the occasion:  “I shall not die, but live, and declare the works of the Lord.”  I felt the verse was a promise from God given in anticipation of successful surgery and recovery for Grover from the next day’s heart surgery.  After claiming that promise and praying, I slept well and awoke the next day very early, ready to see Grover before he was taken to surgery and to share with him the verse the Spirit had led me to claim for his health and well being.  The surgery was successful and he made a good recovery from it.

The date was August 28, 2007.  I was in Middle Georgia Medical Center, Macon, Georgia undergoing extensive cardiac tests and awaiting decisions about whether I would have heart surgery.  My daughter was a long distance away on vacation, as was my son.  My granddaughter, Crystal, had taken me to the hospital and was my “family member” standing beside me during this period of stabilization and decisions about surgery.  On August 30, 2007 I had five bypasses heart surgery.  Prior to the surgery, I remembered Psalm 118:17, and going through my mind, too, was all of Psalm 23, “The Lord is my shepherd…”  I was unafraid.  I knew that if anything went awry I would go immediately to be with the Lord, but if I survived it would be assurance that God “had not finished with me yet.”  When my daughter and my son returned from the places they were at the time of my admittance to the hospital, I was already through with heart surgery and up and taking those first halting steps to exercise in post-surgery therapy.  I shall not die, but live, and declare the works of the Lord.”

The dates were May 31 through June 6, 2013.  Son Keith was in Piedmont Hospital, Atlanta, with too-rapid pulse rate and other electrolyte imbalance symptoms.  Stabilization and tests occurred for several days and on June 3 he had heart catheterization and two stents.  Still there were episodes of too-rapid heartbeat and he was kept for observation and more tests.  On June 5 he had another probe, this time of the veins, and two ablations were performed to mend the areas where the heart’s “electrical” system was out of sync.  The procedure worked, and he was able to return to his home on June 6 after having been “an interesting case,” not the usual heart-attack, diseased arteries and other cardiac ailments with which the specialists deal.  Remembering Psalm 118:17, I read it and claimed its promise.  I read another and also claimed it for Keith’s recovery:  I believe that I shall look upon the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living!  Wait for the Lord; be strong and let your heart take courage; wait for the Lord.” (Psalm 27:13-14).

God provides light for the journey.  Search His word and find reassurance…and pray. 
                                                                                                            -Ethelene Dyer Jones  06.09.2013