Pride Again

 

Prodigal:  I am about to have the perfect game!

Me:  Pride comes before the fall.

Prodigal:  I really want it to be perfect.

Me:  You should focus on just enjoying and leave perfection to Jesus

 

This is from the book So Long Insecurity by Beth Moore

Pride.  A root of insecurity if there ever was one.  We will never feel better about ourselves by becoming consumed with ourselves.  Likewise, we will never fell better about ourselves by feeling worse about others.  Superiority can’t give birth to security.  Neither, by the way, can the relentless pursuit of perfection.  Earlier in our journey, I suggested that perfectionism is insecurity in art form.  It never looks prettier and never acts deadlier.  Perfectionism is perhaps our culture’s biggest temptation.

 

You are no better than anybody else.  God has put you where you are and only Him.  It was not your doing so remember that pride has no place in what you are about to do.

 

Hebrews 2:11

Jesus is not ashamed to call them brothers.

 

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Needy Mankind

Me:  What are you doing?

Prodigal:  Watching the street performers.

Me:  He’s so slick he can sell water to a well.

 

This is from the book Beyound Our Selves by Catherine Marshall

 

How, then, can human nature change?  Men have demonstrated that they cannot change themselves.  Nor can men change other men.  We have seen that education does not necessarily achieve it, nor legislation, nor raising incomes, nor plying them with all the gadgets that money can buy.  That brings us to the crown of the Holy Spirit’s work among men.  Only Christ can change the human nature, and it is the Holy Spirit that makes Christ available to needy mankind.

That is what happened to Saul of Tarsus, to Augustine, to Ignatius Loyala, to St. Francis of Assisi, and to thousands through the centuries.  It is still happening to men and women in our day.

 

You never know how the Holy Spirit and who the Holy Spirit is going to change next….

 

Proverbs 3:7

Be not wise in thine own eyes: fear the LORD, and depart from evil.

 

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Wrestle with Doubts

 

Prodigal:  Do you like my mustache?

Me:  Yes, but I doubt that it is real.

Prodigal:  How did you know.

Me:  I took a real close look at it.

 

This is from the book The Reason for God by Timothy Keller

 

Lets’ begin with believers.  A faith without some doubts is like a human body without any antibodies in it.  People who blithely go through life too busy or indifferent to ask hard questions about why they believe as they do will find themselves defenseless against either the experience of tragedy or the probing questions of a smart skeptic.  A person’s faith can collapse almost overnight if she has failed over the years to listen patiently to her own doubts, which should only be discarded after long reflection.

Believers should acknowledge and wrestle with doubts–not only their own but their friend’s and neighbors’.  It is no longer sufficient to hold beliefs just because you inherited them.  Only if you struggle long and hard with objections to your faith will you be able to provide grounds for your beliefs to skeptics, including yourself, that are plausible rather than ridiculous or offensive.  And, just as important for our current situation, such a process will lead you, even after you come to a position of strong faith, to respect and understand those who doubt.

 

I have questioned my beliefs a thousand times and then took them in prayer to the Lord. What I know more than anything.  I am not crazy and my faith is real!

 

Proverbs 18:21

Death and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruit.

 

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Malady of the Heart

 

Me:  Have you been having a good conversation with your friend?

Prodigal:  He’s always talkin’ with his tongue out of his shoe.

Me:  You might not want to trust what he says then.

 

This is from the book Facing Loneliness by J. Oswald Sanders

 

Blaise Pascal, the noted French scientist, held that in every human heart there exists a God shaped vacuum.  Centuries before him, Augustine, Bishop of Hippo, put his finger on the root cause of loneliness:  “God created man for Himself and our hearts are restless until they find rest in Him.”

For this reason, the greatest need of the lonely person is to ensure that he or she is in a right relationship with God, the Great Physician.  He has a cure for every lack and malady of the human heart, whether it be spiritual or social.

 

God may not always answer the way you want but you will not be left alone.

 

1 John 4:7-8

Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God.  Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love.

 

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Vietnam

 

Me:  How is your friend?

Prodigal:  She’s got the look of a sheep-killin’ dog.

Me:  Probably should stay away from her then.

 

Once the dreams began, they never stopped, but once they did I wished they would start up again.  They were always the same–an explosion, fires burning, an army tank overturned and my son Jimmy’s body lying on the ground.  Someone was taking his rings and watch off, and I would wake up crying, saying his name over and over; “Jimmy…Jimmy.”  I was afraid to close my eyes, even to take a nap.  The dreams kept coming and they were so real.

The strange thing was, Jimmy was still in basic training at Fort Knox, Kentucky.  He didn’t know about the dreams, and wouldn’t.  I was afraid to give voice to them to anyone.  Finally, from sheer exhaustion, I collapsed and was hospitalized.  Four days later I awoke to find Jimmy sitting by my bed.  It seemed, in my unconscious state I had repeatedly called his name.  The doctor had contacted him and Jimmy got a ten-day leave.  I told him it was just exhaustion, but the worried look on his face made me vow to myself that this would never happen again.  I assured him of that.  The dreams were never mentioned.  I was to see him two more times.

After Fort Knox Jimmy was sent to Fort Polk, Louisiana, for advanced infantry training (AIT) where he received word he was being sent to Vietnam, but would be coming home for three weeks before going.  Corky, my middle son, who had volunteered two months after Jimmy was drafted, and would also be going to Vietnam, was at that time stationed at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.  On Jimmy’s leave, Corky, my youngest son David, and I went there so we could all be together for four days.

After boarding the plane to come home, Jimmy looked out the window at Corky still standing at the gate and said, “That’s the last time I ‘ll see Corky.”

I said “Please don’t say that.” But he just said, “It’s true, Mom,” and never spoke another word all the way home.

After arriving back in Nashville, I had to take David back to the private school he was attending, but waited as long as possible so he and Jimmy could spend time together.  As I headed David for the car, Jimmy said, “That’s the last time I’ll see David.”

He saw the look on my face and said, “It’s true, Mom,” and went back into the house.

The next morning I awoke to the sound of the riding lawn mower.  Looking out the window, I saw Jimmy in cut off Levi’s and tennis shoes mowing the backyard.  I took him some lemonade and said, “You don’t have to mow the lawn.”

He looked around at the house, the yard, at me and his car sitting in the driveway, everything, then said, “I like to mow this yard, and who knows, it may be the last time.”

The next day, at three in morning on American Airlines, he left for Oakland, California.  Before boarding the plane he hugged me and said, “Promise me you’ll always sing “Where No One Stands Alone’ for me.” I promised.

Three days later he was on his way to Vietnam.  At midnight that night the phone rang.  The operator said, “I have a collect call from Wake Island.  Will you accept the call?”  Practically screaming, I said, “Yes!”  I will never forget these words. “Mom,” he said, “I know it’s a long ways and costs a lot of money, but i just had to hear your voice one more time.”  We both said “I love you,” then he was gone.  Sleep was a long time coming.

The nightmares continued.  Corky came home on leave before he was to go to Vietnam.  One day as I was writing Jimmy a letter, it turned into what I guess you would call a poem.  The beginning line was, “My son, my son, I pray that you’ll come home to me my son, my son.”  Finishing the whole letter, I read it to Corky.  He said I should put it to music and send it to Jimmy.  “He would be so proud,” he said.  My producer, Owen Bradley, and my friend and coworker, Bill Anderson, agreed.

Two weeks later I went into the studio but couldn’t sing without crying.  Owen said, “Jan, it’s just another song.”

“No Owen, ” I said, “It’s my son’s life.”  Gently, he said, “If you can get through it one time, we’ll take it.”  I did.  In my next letter to Jimmy I told him to expect a small package, but didn’t tell him it was a tape of the song.  I wanted it to be a surprise.  “My Son” was released two weeks later.  I tried to sing it in concerts, but the words couldn’t get past the lump in my throat.  Corky left for Vietnam exactly two months at the exact hour and minute after Jimmy left; the twentieth of August.

October the twentieth I wen to Atlanta, where I worked the next week.  Worked and cried.  I called my attorney, who was in the National Guard, and asked him to please check on the boys.  His answer was, “Jan, they’re all right or you would know.”  I told him that was the problem…I did know.  At the end of the engagement I returned home and did not leave my house.

Wednesday, October 29, I asked a friend how I would be notified if anything happened to my sons.  I was told two uniformed officers would come to my door.  When I awoke Thursday morning I realized I had not had the dream.  I showered and dressed in a pair of blue jeans and a light blue shirt, but no shoes.  Ordinarily I would then put on makeup, but that morning I knew there was no use.  My friend Jeannie Bare called and asked if I was all right.  It was obvious she was crying.  When I asked what was wrong, she said, “Oh, it can wait. I’ll call you back.”  After that it was as if I was in a trance moving in slow motion.  Ordinarily I would have turned on the Today Show, but not that morning.  The phone rang again.  It was my hairdresser asking me to please open the door because “They had been ringing the bell for half an hour.  I had not heard the doorbell or anyone knocking.  “Who are “they”? “I asked and hung up the phone.  But I knew.  I don’t remember going downstairs.

When I opened the door, I saw two uniformed officers and my son David, who rushed forward and grabbed me and I began backing up, screaming, “No! No!”

But David, sobbing, told me the news: “Mom…Jimmy’s dead.” Over my screams I heard one of the officers say, “Mrs. Howard, we regret to inform you your son is dead.”  That’s the last thing I remember, but I understand David, all one hundred and fifteen pounds of him, carried me upstairs to my bedroom.  Five days later the plane arrived carrying Jimmy’s body, escorted by my son Corky.

Though I prayed to die, I knew I had to live for David and Corky.  But I had one request: “When Jimmy’s letter comes, I want it.”  They told me there would be no more letters, but I was adamant there would be.  Jimmy’s funeral was on Tuesday and his letter arrived on Saturday.  In it, he gave instructions like “Don’t get behind in your washing and ironing; you know that’s your downfall.  And promise you’ll take a vacation now and then.  You know you’re not made of iron.”  He also said, “I know Christmas will be there before you know it.  Please remember I’ll always be with you in spirit.”

Thirty days later I still had not left my bedroom and had done nothing but cry and read and reread Jimmy’s last letter.  It was the first time I had been alone.  Again, I was reading his letter just to see his handwriting.  Suddenly he was beside me on the bed, dressed in his stay-pressed pants, V-neck sweater and open-neck shirt, the clothes he usually wore to school.  He looked so sad.  “Mom,” he said, “I’ve been trying to get through to you, but I can’t.  Read the last chapter before the book of Ecclesiastes.”  I screamed, “Jimmy!” and reached to touch him, but he was gone.

At that moment Corky walked in.  I told him Jimmy had been there.  He said, “Now, Mom….” But I assured him I wasn’t crazy and then told him what Jimmy had said to me.  Corky got the Bible and turned to the last chapter of Proverbs.  It told about Lemuel, King of Massa, and how his mother taught him advice about life.  It went on to tell about the rareness of a capable, intelligent and virtuous woman.  “She is far more precious than fine jewels…her children raise up and call her blessed…many daughters have done virtuously, nobly and well, but you excel them all.”  I knew Jimmy had spoken to me through those words.  He knew the Bible, but except for Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, I didn’t.  I couldn’t have told you there was a book of Ecclesiastes in the Bible and he knew that.  And he knew Corky would know.

Jimmy could never stand to see me cry or hurt in any way and he knew I was literally grieving myself to death.  In my heart I believe God allowed him to return for just those few seconds to share words that would help me live.

When my sons went to Vietnam, I had prayed so hard for their safe return.  But when Jimmy was killed, I turned away.  One minute I would say I didn’t want to hear God’s name, but in the next I’d be praying for strength….which, through His Grace, I received.  The first time I went back to church, I was late and the minister was already into his sermon….The text that day was the last chapter of Proverbs.

Thank you , Lord.

Jan Howard

 

Galatians 5:9

A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump.

 

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org