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Monday, April 27, 2020

FIRST SUNDAY

When the Haire family arrived in Akron in late February, 1997, we knew that we would probably attend the Cornerstone Church where Charlie Young had been pastor for many years.  He had since been elected Conference Superintendent and Brenda (his wife) was now the Lead Pastor.  The church had exploded with growth from 200 to 400.  So, upon arriving in Cuyahoga Falls, I called for time and directions.

Sunday morning, we arrived early and waited at the side of the foyer.  The first service was already meeting.  The longer we waited, the more people arrived.  Finally, it started to become uncomfortably crowded.  Now, we were being pressed into the corner where the entrance to the office suite was located.  Troy (17 at the time), being a head taller than most, leaned down and said, “Dad, I think I’m gonna like this church!  There are some gorgeous girls here!”  😉  Finally, the foyer was packed.  I wondered how the people would get out of the service!  Then, Dave Potter, an usher, opened the sanctuary doors and the people started flooding out!  It was one of the most amazing moments of my life!  Everyone in the foyer made a hole and the crowd passed through – high-fiving us and telling us what to expect when we got into the sanctuary!  The excitement was higher than what you’d find at an NFL football game!  People were pumped!  We couldn’t wait to get into the sanctuary.  People literally ran to get good seats and save them for their friends and family!  I had never seen a church like this before!  Things couldn’t start soon enough for us!  Every seat was filled!  

David Haydu and the worship team came out and he started leading us in worship.  I had never heard these songs.  Here’s one that I remember:

[Verse 1]
Down the mountain, the river flows
And it brings refreshing wherever it goes
Through the valleys and over the fields
The river is rushing and the river is here

[Chorus]
The river of God sets our feet a-dancing
The river of God fills our hearts with cheer
The river of God fills our mouths with laughter
And we rejoice for the river is here

[Verse 2]
The river of God is teeming with life
And all who touch it can be revived
And those who linger on this river's shore
Will come back thirsting for more of the Lord

[Verse 3]
Up to the mountain, we love to go
To find the presence of the Lord
Along the banks of the river, we run
We dance with laughter giving praise to the Son



I'll never forget it!  I later learned that seventy-five percent of this congregation were first-time believers!  They didn't know the rules!  They were dancing in the aisles!!!!!  This music made you want to dance!  Did you know that the Aramaic word for 'dance' and 'rejoice' is the same word?  There probably ought to be a lot more "rejoicing" in most of our churches...

Everything was WONDERFUL and the excitement was off the charts!  Then, came the prayer time and people seemed to rush the altar.  Others came and crowded around them to pray WITH them!  There was weeping and genuine sincerity!  It was hard to take in!  And finally came Pastor Brenda and her message and we were mesmerized!  What an incredible teacher!  Her passion shines through and she points you to Jesus!  The worship team came back with an invitation.  And finally, we sang the ‘river song’ again and were dismissed!  IT WAS AMAZING!  We knew we’d found our church!  

We talked briefly with Pastor Brenda after worship.  They were saying 'good-bye' to an associate pastor that very Sunday.  She asked if I was available and so we quickly told her about our new job.  I told her I would ask our new employer.  Shelter Care gave me permission to work part-time, so Brenda hired me.  By June, another Associate Pastor left and she asked me to become the Lead Associate!  I was honored and privileged to be part of this amazing movement of God for nearly six years!  When I left, it was a growing church of over 700!!!!! with three services every Sunday morning!  I learned so much and was so impacted by so many including Charlie Young, Brenda Young, Jim Stetler, and a group of staff members who were deeply committed and sacrificial!  They were highlight years of my forty three years in ministry!  God was SO GOOD!

Oh, hey, by the way, Cornerstone Church is still there and still giving out great ministry!  Along with many of you, I'm now worshipping online as a result of the Co-Vid 19 virus.  I now "go to church" about three different places every Sunday morning.  One of my stops is always Cornerstone.  It's cutting edge, vibrant, relevant and won't let you change channels!  😁  If you'd like to join them, they worship at 9 AM, 11 AM, 5PM & 7 PM - you can find them here: https://www.cornerstonechurch.info/

Friday, April 17, 2020

FIRE DRILL

Our kids grew up in several different homes as a result of my pastoral role.  Travis was born while we were still in Kentucky - attending Asbury Seminary.  Troy and Tracie were born while we lived in McClellandtown, Pennsylvania.  None of them would remember these homes.  Their memory would begin with Hill Boulevard in East Liverpool.  From there, we bought a house on Thompson Avenue and lived in it for seven years.  When I was told I was being moved, we sold it.  Then, I wasn't moved.  We had to pack everything up and moved three blocks to Bradshaw Avenue.  After a year, the owner sold the house and we had to pack it all up and move again - this time about six blocks to Fifth Avenue.  We affectionately called this home:  Maniac Mansion.  After a year there, we moved to Spencerville, Maryland, where we lived in a parsonage again.  Travis had left home for the Navy before this move.  After two-and-a-half-years, we went into a season of limbo that ended with us living in Akron, Ohio.  Ah, the life of a pastor's family...

Our kids learned over the years to attach themselves to us and not necessarily to a house.  Debbie is such an amazing home-maker.  Every place we've lived has been 'home' for them!  

When they were young, we played games, had treasure hunts and played on the trampoline for hours! We also had fire drills.  At unexpected times, I would set off one of our smoke alarms and we would all run out of the house.  I even did it after they had gone to bed a few times!  :-)   The instructions were made quite clear - especially when we lived on Thompson Avenue while they were young.  In case of a fire, we'll all meet across the street and under the big tree.  That way, we'll know quickly if anyone is missing.  

Fire drills were fun!  We laughed and I timed us.  Of course, we never really expected to have a fire.

But then, one day we did have a fire.  I was at the Oakland Church holding a Board Meeting.  I got a call that simply said, "Come home!  It's an emergency!"  I adjourned the meeting and raced home.  As I turned onto Thompson Avenue, there was a ladder truck parked in front of our house with the ladder going into the attic window - Travis' bedroom.  Smoke was rolling out of that window.  This is the kind of sight that makes your stomach sick!

A fire had begun in the attic and our neighbor, Dan Dietz, had run in and tried to extinguish it with our fire extinguishers.  Someone called the fire Department - thankfully - and our home was saved.  If my memory is correct, we had about $8,000 of damage.  The fire fighters had done their best to respect our property and we went to bed that night feeling very grateful!  The Red Cross was quickly on the scene with money for clothing replacement and an offer of lodging.  

When the trucks (and crowd) had left, we finally calmed down.  As we did, Debbie reported to me that she found all three kids under the tree across the road from our house - just the way they had been trained!  

Fire Drills - might be something you want to start in your own family!  
 

Sunday, April 12, 2020

AN EASTER MESSAGE



Today, we celebrate the life of Christ. Today we celebrate His resurrection from the dead. It is a day of victory and triumph over death! It is a day of hope! It is a day of joy! I love the words of one of our hymns:

I serve a risen Savior, He’s in the world today.
I know that He is living, whatever men may say.
I see His hand of mercy, I hear His voice of cheer
And just the time I need Him, He’s always near.

He lives! He lives! Christ Jesus lives today.
He walks with me and talks with me along life’s narrow way.
He lives! He lives! Salvation to impart.
You ask me how I know He lives:
He lives within my heart!

One Easter Sunday while we were in China, Debbie and I arrived a good bit early for our International Church service. As we entered the tiny windbreak entrance to the church, we found that it had just let out. We were trapped in the tiny room as an army of Chinese worshippers flooded past us for the next fifteen minutes – well over five hundred of them! We smiled and used a universal word to greet these many brothers and sisters in Christ: “Hallelujah!” We received smiles and “Hallelujahs” and “Amens” from these joyful Christians! It was one of my favorite experiences from our time in China! Many extended their hands as they passed us! And smiles were contagious! It was a vivid picture of the joy of the Lord!

This joy is to be the defining quality of the church and of God’s people throughout the year. However, we find, at least in our culture, that very often Christians live short of this joy! Why is that? Why do we find it so difficult to live a consistently joyful life?

I’d like to suggest today that we receive a failing grade when it comes to living the victorious Christian life. Most of us think of a failing grade as an “F”. So, I’d like to address three “F’s” that we migrate toward as a result of living in our culture!


FUTILITY

The first “F” we’ll look at stands for futility!

Few things can weary you as the fast pace of the human race. Too many days of doing whatever it takes eventually take their toll. At one point or another, most of us wind up asking ourselves the question: Is it worth it? When I get what I want, will it be worth the price I paid?

Perhaps those were the thoughts of a San Antonio lawyer I read about recently. Successful, well-paid, new wife, remodeled house. But apparently it wasn’t enough. One day, he came home, took a gun out of his vault, climbed into a sleeping bag, and took his life. His note to his bride read, “It’s not that I don’t love you. It’s just that I’m tired and I want to rest.”

And it’s not just lawyers! The same thoughts pervade the minds of people from all walks of life:

· the self-made business man who’s made the fortune but finds the rewards less than gratifying;

· the mother-of-three who is weary of the regimen of nursing, washing clothes, preparing meals, and being sucked dry by the needs and demands of her family;

· the middle-aged machinist who works hard every day but can’t seem to make enough to support his family the way he’d like to;

· the lonely, elderly person who longs for a relationship with their children who’ve long been alienated and don’t seem to care enough to stop by for a visit;

· the divorced person who lives life alone and has little hope of the joy he or she sees others enjoying;

· the middle-aged person who realizes that they haven’t made the mark they expected to make, but who also feels trapped by the pressures and demands of life and can’t act in the freedom that they long for to pursue their dreams;

· the person with the addictive personality who has thrown their life away trying to find pleasure in a bottle or a pill – but, instead, found only temporary escape and a reality void of meaningful relationships;

· the determined person who pushed and shoved and cheated to get to the top – only to find out that when they made it, they had no friends, no family, and no respect;

· the chronically ill person who can’t seem to stay healthy and wonders if it wouldn’t just be better to end it all;

· the person who feels that God has abandoned them or been unjust to them; perhaps they’ve lost a loved one, or their own health, or experienced a divorce, or failed to succeed in their work – and they blame it on God and His lack of caring for them;

And the list goes on…

I read this week of a pastor who decided on an impulse to stop and walk through a small cemetery in the center of the downtown district where he lived. He took thirty minutes to walk through the cemetery reading epitaphs. He read many and felt the sorrow of lives lived and mourned. He came to one that read: Baby Boldt – Born and died December 10, 1910.” Then he came to another that caused him to stop and linger. It read:

Grace Llewellen Smith

“Sleeps, but rests not.
Loved, but was loved not.
Tried to please, but pleased not.
Died as she lived – alone.”

There it is: futility at it’s best!

How many Grace Llewellen Smiths are there? How many people will die in their loneliness? How many are out there wondering if anybody cares?

I’m so glad that we have a story of Jesus meeting one of these people. She was a Samaritan, so she knew the sting of racism. She was a woman in Bible times, so she knew the limitations of sexism. She’d been married to five different men, so she knew the pain of rejection. Her current mate wouldn’t even give her his name. If there is a Grace Llewellen Smith in the bible, this is she!

She came to the well for water at noon to avoid the rejection and ridicule of the other women. She expected solitude and enjoyed it. But this day she encountered a man at the well. To make matters worse, he was a Jew. To her surprise, he asked her for a drink. They talked. He treated her with respect. He told her about a spring of water that would quench, not the thirst of the flesh, but of the soul. When she asked for some of this water, he suggested that she go home and bring her husband, too.

Did she consider lying? Did she fear that rejection would now come? She chose to be honest in a deceptive kind of way. And you know the rest of the story. I wish you didn’t! I wish you were hearing it for the first time. She must have thought that, if he knew, this stranger would reject her. He would think she was worthless.

But Jesus didn’t reject her. He didn’t criticize her. Rather, He revealed Himself to her.

And do you remember what happened? She left her water bottle and ran back to the city to report to the people: “Come, see a man who told me everything I ever did. Could this be the Christ?” She’s overwhelmed! She’s caught up in amazement!

You can’t help but read between the lines: “God is here! God has come! God cares…for me!”

Now I know that not all of you are caught up in this first “F”. But some of you are. You wonder if God cares about you. You’re blaming Him for the bad things that have happened in your life. You’re wondering if life is worth it.

The answer is: God hasn’t lost track of you. God cares for YOU

Say it as a testimony to God’s grace: “My life is not futile!”

Let’s go on to the second “F”.


FAILURE

This second “F” stands for failure!

A note was received by the U.S. government dated February 6, 1974. It read:

“I am sending ten dollars for blankets I stole while in WW II. My mind could not rest. Sorry I’m late.” It was signed, “an ex-GI.” Then there was a postscript, “I want to be ready to meet God.”

This note is one of literally tons of letters that have been sent to the U.S. government since it began collecting and storing letters in 1811. Since that time $3,500,000 has been deposited in what is called the Conscience Fund. An average of $45,000 is received per year!

· One Colorado woman sent in two eight-cent stamps to make up for having used one stamp twice (which for some reason had not been canceled).

· A former IRS employee mailed in one dollar for four ballpoint pens she had never returned to the office.

· A Salem, Ohio, man submitted one dollar with the following note: “When a boy, I put a few pennies on the railroad track and the train flattened them. I also used a dime and quarter in a silver-coating experiment in high school. I understand there is a law against defacing our money. I have not seen it but I desire to be a law-abiding citizen.”

These may sound like silly struggles to you, but they were serious enough offenses that real people took the time and effort to make their wrongs right. What do you do with your failures? Don’t they have a way of growing on us when we fail to deal with them in appropriate ways?

As a counselor, I’ve had people drag their failures into my office:

· Unfaithfulness

· Homosexuality

· Division

· Immorality

· Addiction

· Shame

· Regret

· Poor judgment

· Impulsiveness

Most of us look back longingly. We wish we could do it again. We’d do it differently! We’d be a different person. We’d control our tongue. We’d be more patient. We’d finish what we started. We’d turn the other cheek. We’d get married first. We’d resist temptation. We’d run with a different crowd.

What hope is there for people like us? For failures? We’ve screwed things up. We live with the reality that things can’t be undone! When we think of our past actions, we flinch! The distant pain becomes present again!

How did Jesus deal with such people? We don’t have to look far to find out. Jesus is speaking to a small crowd of people in a courtyard one morning. It’s a typical day. We don’t know what He was teaching about that morning because He was rudely interrupted.

A mob of religious leaders drags a scantily-clad woman into His presence. Only moments before she had been in bed with a man who was not her husband. Perhaps this was how she made her living. Perhaps she had been lonely and accepted the warm touch of an interested man. We’ll never know.

What we do know is that the door burst open and she was dragged from the bed to the presence of the Teacher. What went through her mind as she struggled to cover herself and felt the shame of staring, lustful eyes? A crowd quickly began to gather.

The religious leaders pitch her to the foreground where she stumbles in front of Jesus. “We found this woman in bed with a man!” the leaders said. “The law says to stone her. What do you say?” They are cocky.

The woman searches the faces for a hint of compassion. She finds none. Only cold, stony hearts that condemn without feeling. She sees that some of them already have rocks in their hands. She’s terrified. They mean business!

She looks at the Teacher. His eyes don’t glare. His eyes seem to say, “Don’t worry, it’s OK.” For the first time that morning she sees kindness.

What did Jesus see? He saw feet that were bare. Her arms were folded over her chest. Her hands were clenched under her chin. And her heart: her heart was ragged. It was torn with guilt.

He begins by diverting the crowd’s attention. He begins to draw on the ground. Their eyes leave her now for what the Teacher is drawing. But they are persistent! “What do you want us to do with her?”

There are so many things He could have said. He could have asked why they didn’t bring the man. He could have asked why they were suddenly interested in a law that had been ignored for centuries. But He didn’t. Instead, He raised His head and offered an invitation: “I guess if you’ve never made a mistake, then you have a right to stone this woman.” He looked back down and continued to draw.

No one spoke. They watched Him draw. Eyes fell. Feet shuffled. Rocks dropped. One-by-one, they left.

Jesus told the woman to look up. “Is there no one to condemn you?” He smiled as He raised her head and looked into her tear-stained eyes. Did she expect a scolding? What will He do?

He spoke: “Then neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more.”

This is the eternal message of our Lord. Even while hanging on His cross, He was concerned about the lives of those who put Him there: “Father, forgive them; they don’t realize what they’re doing.”

Jesus always offers us forgiveness and a fresh start! Always! His lesson for us failures today is that our failures are not fatal!

Say it out loud: “My failures are not fatal!”

And now for the third “F”.


FINALITY

The third “F” stands for finality!

The scene repeats itself thousands of times every day. Folding chairs on fake turf. Nicely dressed people under a canopy. Kleenexes. Tears. Words. Metal casket. Flowers. Dirt. Open grave. Finality!

I don’t know how many of you have visited ‘The Wall’ in Washington, D.C., but it is a powerful experience that is not to be missed. Of course, I’m speaking of the Viet Nam War Memorial. It is a shiny, black, marble wall that extends for nearly two hundred yards that has the names of the dead etched into the stone. I have visited this spot many times and it is my favorite place to go in Washington. When I go, I always pause in front of the name of one of my best friends while growing up in New Brighton.

If you go, you will probably notice what I have noticed along with many others. Because of the shiny, black, marble surface, your eyesight will occasionally shift and you will see a clear reflection of your own face on the wall. It is a grim reminder that we all die. Someday, our names, too, will be etched into stone for a future generation to read.

Let’s look at the story of one more woman. She is walking through the streets of Jerusalem; she’s at the back of a crowd. It’s a funeral procession. She has walked this path before. It hadn’t been too long before that she walked behind the body of her husband. Her son had walked with her that day. Now she walked alone.

Today there is no arm around her. No shoulder for her to lay her head on. She will sleep in an empty house tonight. She will make dinner for one from now on and have conversation with none! Companionship has gone! She is alone!

Jesus and His followers stop and step aside as the procession passes. No one spoke. They thought what everyone thinks: “Someday that will be me.” It is one of those moments when our words are too long and our arms are too short. The only thing to do is to stand quietly and be respectful.

But not Jesus. He disrupted every funeral He ever attended! He knew what to say and what to do!

When He saw this mother, His heart began to break.

As the mother walked in front of Him, Jesus spoke to her: “Don’t cry.” She stopped and looked into His face.

Don’t cry? Don’t cry? What kind of a request is that?

In her silence and surprise, Jesus stepped toward the casket and touched it. The pall-bearers stopped. Everyone stopped. As Jesus stared at the boy, the crowd was silent.

Jesus spoke again – this time to the boy: “Young man,” He said calmly, “come back to life again.”

His fingers moved. His face took on color. He opened his eyes, and then sat up!

Luke’s description of what happened next is captivating. “Jesus gave him back to his mother.”

This event was a foreshadowing of Jesus’ own resurrection. It is the cause of our celebration this morning. It is the proof that there is something significant beyond the grave. It is real and it is stored up for those who have accepted Jesus as their Lord.

When the Apostle Paul was writing to the Corinthians, he became so excited about Christ’s victorious resurrection, that he blurts out: “Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?” Just before this exclamation, he explains what it will be like at some point in the future:

But let me tell you something wonderful, a mystery I’ll probably never fully understand. We’re not all going to die—but we are all going to be changed. You hear a blast to end all blasts from a trumpet, and in the time that you look up and blink your eyes—it’s over. On signal from that trumpet from heaven, the dead will be up and out of their graves, beyond the reach of death, never to die again.

Paul is so convinced of the reality of life-after-death that in another place he writes:

And regarding the question, friends, that has come up about what happens to those already dead and buried, we don’t want you in the dark any longer. First off, you must not carry on over them like people who have nothing to look forward to, as if the grave were the last word. Since Jesus died and broke loose from the grave, God will most certainly bring back to life those who died in Jesus.

So, what is the message of the Bible for those of us who are living by faith in Christ? It is this: Our death is not final!

So, there you have it. Three statements to correct the fears of our lives. These three statements can become our declaration of confidence in Christ:

My life is not futile!

My failures are not fatal!

My death is not final!

Saturday, April 11, 2020

"I'M A RESURRECTION STORY! I'M A RESURRECTION STORY!"

The following is a story told by Shane Claiborne in IRRESISTIBLE REVOLUTION, pp. 247-249.

In the early days of our community, Michelle, a founding partner of the Simple Way, and I headed out to get a loaf of bread.  We walked underneath the El tracks just a block from our house, a strip notorious for its prostitution and drug trafficking, where the air is thick with tears and struggle.  We walked past an alley, and tucked inside was a woman, tattered, cold, and on crutches.  She approached me, asking if I wanted her services.  Our hearts sank, but we scurried on to get our bread.  Then we headed quickly home, nodding at the woman as we passed.  When we got home and opened the bread, we noticed the bag had a large gash in the side and the bread had gone bad.  We would have to go back, and we both knew what that meant.  We would have to walk by that woman again.  We walked by that alley and saw her in there crying, shivering.  We got our bread, and as we saw her yet again, we could not just pass by.  We stopped and told her we cared for her, that she was precious, worth more than a few bucks for tricks on the avenue.  We explained that we had a home that was a safe place to get warm and have a snack.  So she stumbled onto her crutches and came home with us.

As soon as we entered the house, she started weeping hysterically.  Michelle held her as she wept.  When she had gained her composure, she said, "You all are Christians, aren't you?"  Michelle and I looked at each other, startled.  We had said nothing about God or Jesus, and our house doesn't have a cross in the window, a neon "Jesus Saves" sign, or even a little Christian fish on the wall.  She said, "I know that you are Christians because you shine.  I used to be in love with Jesus like that, and when I was, I shined like diamonds in the sky, like the stars.  But it's a cold dark world, and I lost my shine a little while back.  I lost my shine on those streets."  At that point we were all weeping.  She asked us to pray with her that she might shine again.  We did;  we prayed that this dark world would not take away our shine.

Days, weeks went by, and we did not see her.  One day, there was a knock at the door, and I opened it.  On the steps there was a lovely lady with a contagious ear-to-ear smile.  We stared at each other.  We see a lot of people, so I was going to try to fake recognizing her, but she called my bluff and beat me to it.  "Of course you don't recognize me, because I'm shining again.  I'm shining."  Then I knew.  She went on to explain how deeply she had fallen in love with God again.  She said she wanted to give us something to thank us for our hospitality but sadly confessed, "While I was on the streets, I lost everything I owned.  Except this."  She pulled out a box and apologetically confessed that she smoked a lot and always collected the Marlboro Mile points from the cigarette packs.  "So this is all I have, but I want you to have it."  And she handed me the box bursting at the seams with hundreds of Marlboro Miles.  It's one of the most precious gifts I've ever been given, like receiving the widow's last pennies.  And they make good Bible markers.  Now, whenever I am speaking somewhere and open up the Word, I see a Marlboro Mile and am reminded of all the broken lives that have lost their shine a little while back.

Not too long ago, I got a phone call, and it was my friend!  She had heard a sermon of mine in which I told this story, her story.  And she got all excited.  "I'm a resurrection story!  I'm a resurrection story!"

That's what we get to do - love people back to life.
____________________________________

So, have you done it lately?  Have you loved anyone back to life?  It can happen in an alley, or a grocery store line (even with social distancing), over the phone, in your workplace, with your neighbor, in the hospital, - actually anywhere you happen to be and meet a broken person!  God wants to use you to help people get their shine back!  Why not tell Him you're willing right now?

Thursday, April 2, 2020

GROWING UP WITH THE JONES TWINS

I grew up in New Brighton, PA.  I think half of my life was spent in the rooms and hallways of the New Brighton Free Methodist Church!  During my young teen years, Reverend W. P. Jones was our pastor.  He was a good pastor and a good preacher.  One day, when I was quite young, my parents were having a conversation in the car about him on the way home from church.  They were talking - of all things - about his benediction.  He would always raise his hands as though blessing the entire congregation and pronounce his benediction.  I spouted out from the back seat:  "Reverend Jones has four benedictions!"  My parents turned and looked at me with questioning looks.  I proceeded to quote the four different benedictions that he consistently used to close our services.  I think they were shocked!  I guess I was an observant kid!

He and I had a sort of game that we played on Sundays.  As he stood in the foyer greeting people, I would try to sneak past him.  But he almost always saw me, grabbed me, hugged me, mussed up my hair and sometimes even kissed me!  If I did win the game and got past without him catching me - I suddenly realized that I had actually lost the game.  There might have even been a time or two when I went down through the basement and came up through the sanctuary again to give him a second chance!  He consistently let me know that I was valued and loved!  I will forever love him for that!

But the best part of having him for a pastor was his identical twin sons, Daniel and David.  Believe me, they had a reputation!  They defined the term PK (Preacher's Kids)!  They were mischievous and fun-loving!  They were one year younger than me and we thoroughly enjoyed our years together while they lived in New Brighton!

There are endless stories of their exploits.

One time Daniel had displeased his father.  His Dad told him to sit still while he went to get the paddle.  Meanwhile, David came through the room and Daniel talked him into switching places with him.  I'm not exactly sure how that turned out in the end, but it's characteristic of their antics.  I've heard them tell stories of switching places in classrooms over the years too.

We occasionally sat together in church on Sunday nights.  That never turned out very well.  I remember quite a few times when Reverend Jones stopped in the middle of his sermon and told the twins to go sit with their mother and me to go sit with my parents.

David and Daniel were very athletic!  They particularly loved going to Pirates games in Pittsburgh.  They would go early and buy the cheapest tickets.  Then, as the game proceeded they would gradually use their charm with the ushers to work their way down further and further into better and better seats.  They were infamous at getting baseballs and having them signed by the players.

We had tons of fun every year at Camp Meeting in East Liverpool, OH.  Ten days of endless pranks and fun!  I remember singing in the showers as we drained the last of the hot water out of the tanks!  Reverend Jones and his family ran the camp store in those days.  It was the gathering place for everyone on the campground after the evening services.  Hamburgers and hot dogs and milkshakes and lots of candy!

But, as adulthood arrived, the years and miles separated us.  They both ended up in the Indianapolis area.  The few times they made it back to visit at Family Camp, I was off somewhere and missed them.  It made me sick when I returned and heard that the Jones twins had stopped by for a visit - and I missed them!  They were good friends and we had a heart connection!

I haven't seen them in years - sad to say.  In recent years, however, I have reconnected with Daniel via Facebook.  We've exchanged greetings and items of interest many times.  It grieved me several months ago when he contacted me and asked me to pray for David.  He had been discovered to have a pretty severe case of cancer.  My heart has ached for David, his wife, Rhonda, and their three children ever since.  Yesterday, David went to his eternal home!  He's now rejoicing with his Dad and Mom and others who preceded him there.  But more important, he's with the Lord that he loved and served throughout his entire life!  How much better can that get?

Kind and Gracious God,

Thank You for giving me such good friends throughout my lifetime!  I've been a prosperous man when it comes to friendships!  Thank You specifically for Daniel and David Jones and the wonderful times we had together as teenagers.  Thank You that they shared a love for You with me and their families.  Thank You for their Dad and his faithfulness to You through his fruitful ministry!  

And now, I lift Rhonda and their children to You.  Provide them comfort in their loss.  Be an ever-present Provider for their needs.  Guide them throughout their lives and bring each of them close to Your heart.  Also bless Daniel, Debra, Mark, and Paula as they deal with the loss of this special brother.  Grant each of them a special peace that can come only from knowing and loving You!  

For the Kingdom's sake.  Amen.