Sunday, December 30, 2012

The song of Mary Ellen

Guest blog by my husband, James, on our 45th anniversary.

I’ve known her for more than 56 years, but have been married to her for only 45. When I met her, she was 6 and I was 8. That first year, in the winter of 1955-56, we went bobsledding together, she sitting in front of me on a wooden sled crafted by my future brother-in-law, David, then a sophomore in high school. It was pulled by my future brother-in-law, Lorenzo, a senior.


We ice skated together on a vacant corner lot flooded for that purpose, but it wasn’t a date. In the center of the rink, in a warming house toasty from the fire of a wood-burning stove, Mary Ellen buckled on to the bottom of her rubber boots her little-girl, red-leather-strapped, double-runnered skates while I laced up my black and reddish-brown Size 4 hockey skates, a Christmas gift from my parents. I had helped pick them out and was pleased that the hard, rounded toes had been scuffed so little by the previous owner. Mary Ellen’s skates with their double blades, set about an inch apart, were brand new. Forty-nine years later, during the winter of 2004-05, our granddaughter Elsa would attend kindergarten in a schoolroom situated directly over what was once our skating rink.

We played house at Mary Ellen’s place, and we played marbles at mine, in a corner of the living room. On a hardwood floor, marbles tend to keep rolling. I don’t remember who won. It didn’t make much difference, because we didn’t play for keeps. All the marbles went back to the owner—me—when competition was over. We—I—didn’t believe in gambling.

I almost walked Mary Ellen home once. The ladies’ missionary meeting was at our house that month. Because her mother would be attending the meeting, Mary Ellen was supposed to walk home with me after school, but when she saw me surrounded by a bunch of girls, she turned, walked to her home, and her dad brought her to our house, instead. Mary Ellen must have been seeing things, because I don’t remember being surrounded by girls, on that day or any day

She turned me down for what should have been our first date. I was a senior that year and Mary Ellen, a sophomore, had transferred to my high school shortly after Christmas break. In May, I asked her to go to the CYF banquet with me. (CYF stood for Christian Youth Fellowship, a student-led group that met at the school for about one hour a week, after classes let out on Friday.) Not knowing if she was permitted to date, I gave her an easy out, “I don’t know if it’s OK with your parents or not, but I was wondering if you’d go to the banquet with me,” I ventured. Flustered, she blurted, “Sorry, no, I can’t.” It was the first time I had ever asked anyone for a date.

Had she accepted, it would not have been her first date. She had met a guy at Bible camp a year or two earlier, who asked her to go to the end-of-camp banquet with him. Later, they corresponded by mail, dated some—she’s always been a little vague on that—and now, even though he lived some 40 miles away, this out-of-town carpetbagger had invited her to go with him to our banquet, and she had accepted.

Before that evening came, Mary Ellen told me the whole truth, not just that she couldn’t go to the banquet with me—I had concluded that her parents didn’t permit her to date yet—but that she had another date for the banquet. Later, after we started dating, she told me, with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight, that she would have much preferred going with me. Considering the seating arrangement for that evening, that was probably true, as I sat across the table from the lovely couple. My first date would come nine months later, after I finally got my courage up to ask her out again. She says she gave me all kinds of hints during those intervening months. Could have fooled me!

Mary Ellen and I were married on December 30, 1967, and God has blessed us with wonderful sons and daughters-in-law—Kevin and Debbi, and Kyle and Min Li—and five beautiful grandchildren—Jacob, Sarah, Libby and Sami (Kevin and Debbi), and Elsa (Kyle and Min Li).

Some men say of their wives that “She’s a keeper!” as though the spouse he chose was a qualifying species of fish that met the minimum requirements established by the Department of Natural Resources.

Me? I married a woman, a singer. I love gospel music, and when I married Mary Ellen, I also got an unending playlist of gospel music. Well, it’s not exactly a playlist, because she picks the songs—a few words here, a hum there, sometimes a whole verse—but I enjoy all of it. And whatever song she picks at a particular moment, that’s the song I want to hear. After all, it’s the song of Mary Ellen, and I wouldn’t miss it for the world.

Copyright © 2012

Friday, July 20, 2012

Under His Wings

Courtesy of FreeDigitalPhotos.net
I used to work in a large office building that was surrounded by an expansive parking lot. Frequently, my husband would meet me for lunch, and we would drive to the outer edge of the parking lot to enjoy our usual lunch of cheese and cold veggies. One day, we noticed a Canada goose sitting on her nest. The nest was located, not on the soft grass on the periphery of the parking lot, but on the median strip that separated two traffic lanes.

Day after day, we observed the mother goose as she patiently sat on her eggs, keeping them warm and waiting for them to hatch. Eventually, the little goslings did hatch and, despite cars going by just a few feet from the nest, their mother kept them, safe and secure, under her wings. They had no worries. Mom was protecting them from the elements and passersby.

Recently, I was praying for friends who are going through a rough time, and the thought came to me that our friends are under God’s wings. It brought to mind a story that my father-in-law, a pastor, used to tell about a woman who was abducted by a man who clearly intended to do her harm. Recalling the promise in Psalm 91:4, which reads, “He will cover you with his feathers, and under his wings you will find refuge, his faithfulness will be your shield and rampart,” the lady screamed, “Cover me with your feathers! Cover me with your feathers!” Her abductor, thinking she was crazy, immediately released her.

The woman wasn’t crazy, and, despite her inability to quote the verse perfectly in such a stressful situation, God answered her prayer.

Just as baby birds nestle under their mother’s wings, safe from outside intruders and dangerous storms, we, too, are protected by God, under his wings. So, like the woman in the story, I cry out to him for my friends: “Cover them with your feathers, Lord! Cover them with your feathers!”

Copyright © 2012

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Singing I go

Last week, at a party, a friend and I discovered that we both go around humming or singing as we go through each day. We laughed as we noted that one word said by someone in conversation is all that is needed to trigger emergence of another song. Although I enjoy some secular music and most musical genre, gospel songs have been food for my soul from the time I was a young child. In addition to learning great theology, the words of the music and the emotions they evoke have helped me develop a relationship with God, led me into worship of Him and given me hope and strength in times of struggle. Often, songs help me recall life lessons I’ve learned along the way and encourage me to continue trusting God.

For example, the song “God Will Take Care of You” brings me back to when I was just 5 years old. My dad was out of work and although, as a young child, I was unaware of it, the family food supply was getting low. One day, we came home to find bags of groceries in our enclosed porch. Initially, we did not know where the provision had come from, other than from God in answer to my parents’ prayer. Later, we learned that members of the church where my future father-in-law served as pastor had donated the groceries. Other than their awareness of my father’s unemployment, they had no idea of our pressing need, but God did.

When I hear the song “Consider the Lilies,” I remember another incident from my childhood that took place a few years later. Once again, our family experienced financial difficulty when my father had to stop working, for health reasons, and food was needed for our next meal. I was riding in the car with my parents and, just as we crossed a little bridge, Dad pulled over to the side of the road, stopped the car and took his fishing pole out of the trunk. As Mom prayed, Dad fished from shore. After only a few casts, a large fish struck the hook. It fought ferociously against the pull on the line, but Dad eventually landed the fish on shore. It thrashed back and forth trying to escape, but he jumped on top of it and was able to somehow get the fish into a pail. That night, we had a fish dinner, courtesy of God.

Then there is the song, “Higher Ground.” I vividly recall sitting on the floor at a women’s missionary council meeting I attended with my mother and listening as the ladies sang:

“I’m pressing on the upward way. New heights I’m gaining every day. Still praying as I onward bound, Lord, plant my feet on higher ground. Lord, lift me up and let me stand by faith on heaven’s tableland. A higher plane than I have found, Lord, plant my feet on higher ground.

“My heart has no desire to stay where doubts arise and fears dismay. Tho’ some may dwell where these abound, my prayer, my aim, is higher ground. I want to live above the world, tho’ Satan’s darts at me are hurled. For faith has caught the joyful sound, the song of saints on higher ground.”

The words planted a desire in my little heart to know God better, which has remained.

From early childhood, songs have motivated me to keep the faith during times of lack, challenged me to pursue difficult tasks and make right choices, and inspired me to draw closer to God. Music is a powerful influence that can and should be used to teach children about God and bring them into personal relationship with Him. Children will never forget the lyrics, melodies and lessons they learn. It will help empower them to navigate life successfully.

Photo by Tom Curtis

Copyright © 2012

Monday, February 6, 2012

The strength of the Lord

My mother died at the age of 91. She experienced much hardship, pain and sorrow in her long life but had learned how to live above the fray. During her later years, the song "The Strength of the Lord," sung by Larnelle Harris, was one of Mom’s favorites. I believe it was because its words divulged the secret she had discovered on how to live victoriously.  

Sometimes life seems like words and music
That can’t quite become a song.
So we cry inside, and we try it again
And wonder what could be wrong.
But, when we turn to the Lord at the end of ourselves
Like we’ve done a time or two before
We find His truth is the same
As it has always been.
We never will need more.



Chorus (two times):
It’s not in trying but in trusting
It’s not in running but in resting
Not in wondering but in praying
That we find the strength of the Lord

He’s all we need

For our every need.
We never need be alone.
Still He’ll let us go if we choose to
To live life on our own.
Then the only good
That will ever be said
Of the pains we find ourselves in
They are places to gain
The wisdom to say
I’ll never leave Him again. 



Chorus (two times) 
It’s not in trying but in trusting
It’s not in running but in resting
Not in wondering but in praying
That we find the strength of the Lord


Copyright © 2012

Saturday, January 14, 2012

I want childlike faith!

My husband and I are the proud grandparents of five exceptional grandchildren. One of our granddaughters, Elsa, who was born in Singapore, came into this world with two holes in her heart. During the first 16 months of her life, she was frail, had difficulty eating and cried frequently. In August 2000, she was scheduled for surgery at a hospital in Singapore to repair her heart.

Her parents requested prayer for her at their church. They also claimed the message of a song, written by Don Moen, “I Am the Lord that Healeth Thee,” for their little girl’s healing. Before surgery and during the recovery that followed, they played the song over and over for her to hear. When asked to sing it, she would close her eyes, lift her little head and arms toward heaven and begin to sway, as she sang in her toddler voice:

You are the God that healeth me.
You are the Lord, my Healer.
You sent Your word and healed my disease.
You are the Lord, my Healer.

Tears would come to my eyes when I heard little Elsa sing and worship God. Most likely, she did not understand all the words, but God’s presence was evident each time she sang. God inhabits the praises of his people (Psalm 23:3), and I believe He was enthralled by the worship of this innocent child, full of faith, love and joy. He honored her worship and answered her prayers. She is now a beautiful, healthy young lady!

We must all come to him as a little child (Matthew 18:2-6). Lately, I have been wondering: “What would happen if I worshiped God like little Elsa? Would I experience His presence more? Would I have more joy? Would I see more answers to prayer?” I want childlike faith!

Copyright © 2012