Dad:
Today is your 74th
birthday. Happy Birthday to you, happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear
daddy, happy birthday to you. That song seems much longer when you sing it,
doesn’t it? Anyway, the reason I am writing this is I have decided to see what
is in my heart on your birthday.
As I have
told you before, the life you are living is a classic. When you were still a
young man, you dramatically converted to serve Jesus and over the years your
dedication has come to inspire not only those around you, but I suspect even
you. By that I mean, I bet when you look at fifty years of dedication to the
same master, your respect for the master is renewed and your sense of who you
are, the servant of one master, comes clearer than ever to you. You are steeped
in riches of the soul, one of the richest men I know, in that way.
This piece
I am writing is about you, but inevitably, me as well; in fact - you and
me. Sometimes in life the opportunity
arises to do what we believe to be the right thing and ever so often, doing it
makes us feel better about ourselves too. So, yes this is being written as
something of a thank you letter to the man most important in my life, but I
must admit, it is also being written in part because I believe it will make me
feel better about me and maybe especially you and me. I also think I am trying
to tap a little of your inner strength for myself, through this process. So you
see, I am not doing this strictly out of the goodness of my heart. In fact, it
might be more apt to say, I am doing it to see what goodness is in my heart;
thanks in no small part to you.
Several
years ago when Earl and I were playing tennis on one of his visits to
Knoxville, where we lived at the time; it was hot and we were giving each other
a real struggle. Neither of us is a great tennis player, but we are both
old-fashioned competitors - I wonder where we got that? Anyway, we were
sweating and pounding the ball back and forth at one another in the hot summer
sun and I was beginning to consider giving up and letting him win or at least
just not trying so hard, after all what did it really matter in the long run
which one of us won this tennis match.
But then it
occurred to me all of a sudden - this was what life comes down to. We are
repeatedly faced with challenges and obstacles causing us to have just such
inner conversations and one of the voices always seems to want us to give in or
take it easy and the other says no, stand up and fight, give it all you have.
These exact words may not have come to me in that instance, but the
conversation goes sort of this way.
A voice said, “look at you out here
about ready to pack it in and say, you’re a better man than me, you win. Look
at you, you’re just another creature in the universe, your life does not matter
any more than the millions of others that have come before it or the millions
that may come after it. It is all for no reason. Nothing you ever do will
matter for eternity, so why do anything? These moments you are stringing
together are as inconsequential as all the other moments of time, the universe
smiles and frowns equally on every particle of matter and ultimately rules them
all equally inconsequential.”
But as that voice was having its
say, the other voice was preparing its response. This other voice can be quite
persuasive too, when it takes a mind. The second voice said, “Get thee behind
me Satan or whoever in the hell you are, but before you do, I want a word with
your butt. What do you mean it all means nothing? Not only are you wrong, but
the truth is exactly the opposite. Everything I do is profound, for when I
think, it is the only time in history that anyone will ever think exactly that
way, and when I talk, it is the only time in history anyone will ever talk
exactly like that, and every time I look at a sunset, it will be the first and
last time anyone ever comprehended it in just that fashion.
So, look how wrong you are. Everything
I do, and everything anyone does is spectacular and unique, and it goes
together with all other phenomena, all other matter, to comprise this beautiful
system that makes me and yes, even you Satan, possible; even necessary. So,
don’t talk to me about eternal uselessness.
You see that strapping young man
over there on the other side of this tennis court? That’s my brother. He is
important. Every breath he takes is precious, not just to him, but to me, to my
sisters, to my mother, to my father and all those who know and love him. That
connection we all have, that passion for our own lives and for the continuation
of the lives of others we become acquainted with on this planet, is the realest
thing in this universe. Yes, realer than you Beelzebub. And I have another
thing for you to think about. You see these hands and feet and you hear this
voice and you see and feel the results of the workings of this mind? Well, you
ain’t seen nothing yet. Before I leave this planet I plan to show you a few more
things. If you are going to hang around me, you might want to bring a pencil
and paper because I plan to show you the difference between useful and useless,
what is needed and not needed. For starters, what is useless and not needed are
your words of discouragement.
Some day
within the next several decades, I will cease to occupy this old body and at
that time, whatever new process begins then after living is done, will take
over and my current way of being will be finished. But between now and the end
of this living process, I am going to give every tennis ball hit in my
direction a quick ride back across that net and if it comes back I will swat at
it again. There will be all of eternity for the next process, for these old
bones and this flesh to intermingle again with the other living things. But
right now by virtue of whatever accident or cause there may be, I have breath,
I have strength, I have desire and I am going to give an account of myself on
this planet.”
Needless to
say, that first voice turned his tail and ran and I did not hear from him again
for some time. In case you are wondering about the tennis game, your favorite
never-can-do-any-wrong son, Earl, broke the wooden racket he was using, Tanga’s
by swinging it forward and stopping it too quickly – not even hitting the ball-
so we went in and got ourselves something cold to drink. He was apologetic as
they always are.
Of course all the apologies in the
world were not going to bring back poor Tanny Bea’s Tennis racket. Remember
that time you got to feeling guilty about taking toilet paper from the men’s
room at J.P. Stevens and went in and made restitution? I keep hoping Earl will
get under similar conviction about that tennis racket, but it’s been over
fifteen years now.
Perhaps the
greatest miracle any of us will ever be part of is our own birth. Life, that’s
what Viennie Mae James and John Wesley McCullough gave you and that’s what you
and Joyce Elizabeth Spearman gave me. This gift is not one that we need worry
about repaying or compensating anyone for, it is too valuable to ever be able
to do that anyway. However, there is
something we can do, I believe, and that is to seek as much as possible to
create an understanding between ourselves and those who gave us life and between
ourselves and those who come after us. This understanding should be sought not
to perpetuate myths or provincial attitudes toward people or ideas, but rather
to line up vertical time with horizontal wisdom, remembrances of yesterday,
hopes for tomorrow, united in the rich community of the present.
My earliest
recollections are of you reflecting back to me my worth as a person. You expected
grown action, lofty thoughts, fast feet, a true heart, respect for authority
and I tried my hardest to meet your standards. Remember the time we dropped
mama off to get her hair fixed and I asked you how fast our ’57 Plymouth would
go and you said, we could find out and so you had me get down in the floorboard
beneath your feet and mash the gas with my hands. I guess you figured that if
you let me mash the gas with my hands, any disappointment in how fast the car could
go would not be because we did not give it everything we had. You steered and I
pushed with both hands on the foot feed, gritting my teeth, trying my best to “mash
that dal thing plum through the floorboard”. It was a two-lane road, the one
that runs in front of Rehobeth Baptist Church.
Of course,
looking back, a man wonders how he survived sometimes, doesn’t he? I mean I
doubt very seriously if the lord would have had much sympathy if we had wound
up wrapping that thing around a tree or something, acting like pure fools that
way. My guess is if we had prayed and asked him to stop the bleeding in our
necks after our terrible accident, he would have just smiled and said, “Come up
hither, my children, before you kill somebody else.”
Happy Birthday, Dad.
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