Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say,
rejoice. Let your reasonableness be known to everyone. The Lord is at hand; do
not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication
with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God,
which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in
Christ Jesus. Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable,
whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is
commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise,
think about these things. What you have learned and received and heard and seen
in me—practice these things, and the God of peace will be with you. (Philippians 4:4–9 ESV).
For today’s devotional thought I need to take you back with me to 1971, long before Faith and Logan were born. Though they have a role to play in the recognition of how God was faithfully leading me into His provision of good for our lives all along. I began my Master of Divinity at Southwestern Baptist theological Seminary in January of 1971 immediately following my graduation from Texas A&M. Those were very difficult years with lengthy stories that I cannot share with more than bullet points in the space available through this medium. Before my graduation from A&M Mary and I needed to reveal to my parents the change from Catholicism to Southern Baptist and my call into vocational ministry as a pastor. That did not go well. We were literally banned from their presence and told never to return home again. Hurt is much too small a word to describe the pain of that experience.
Over the coming months we honored their
demand, though I called each week to check in, often receiving a cold or
indifferent response. At the same time Mary and I began to pray for the Lord to
grant us peace and calling to what we believed was the best possible place of
service. We dreamed of serving somewhere in Middle Tennessee (close to our beloved
Smokie Mountains) where I could pastor a small rural church and practice pastoral
care and counseling full time. Over the next three years we were able to
restore some relationship with my parents as they began to see the joy God had
given us in preparing to serve in this calling. I graduated in December 1973.
Two weeks before graduation I had not received any invitation to interview for
any position. I began to wonder if I had made a mistake. It was at that time
that I recognized that perhaps I simply didn’t trust the will of God working in
my life. Mary and I determined that we would go wherever and whenever God deemed
good. I applied for further studies in the doctoral program and was content to
prepare more while we waited on the Lord. Just days later I received a call
from the Texas Baptist Student Division to interview for a position as a
college student minister. That was certainly never on our radar!
However, it was the first step God
needed us to take in the journey that would take until March, 2011 for us to
receive what we asked God to do forty years earlier. We went to Tyler Junior
College as the BSU Director, which led to associate pastor at FBC, Tyler. There
I came under the guidance of one of my three mentors, Bill Samburger, who was a
great friend and mentor. Two years later I went to University Heights Baptist
Church as pastor; then to FBC, Mt. Pleasant; then to Southern Oaks Baptist
Church, Tyler, then finally to North Side Baptist Church, Weatherford. All of these
were large churches in Texas. None of them matched our prayers of seminary
days, though each played a significant role in God’s granting of my heart’s
desire.
Health issues resulted in my resignation
from North Side Baptist and a year of recuperation. Needing to stay in
Weatherford so that our youngest son could finish high school where he started,
I took a job offered by the owner of a large auto group. I still preached often
in other churches and across many denominational lines, while at the same time
learning much more about those things that would be essential for the next steps
in our journey. When Faith and Logan were born these steps made it possible to
make the move to North Carolina.
It still was not a “small rural church
in Middle Tennessee with a full-time counseling ministry”; but, it was full of
joy and purpose. A few years passed and Kyle made the decision to move to a position
at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. Of course, we followed. That
led to the formal development of Grace Restoration Ministries and a call to
Santa Fe Baptist Church in a small community just east of Columbia, Tennessee.
God had answered our prayer of forty years past! You can see from the Easter
Sunday picture I’ve attached with the church in the background that church I Mary
and I prayed for all those years ago. God was working that good in His time all
along. All of the places I served were great places, but this church became our
last church and the fulfillment of our heart’s desire.
This journey was not without pain and difficulty;
however, it was also full of grace. If grace reveals that joy is a gift, then
prayer is the Lord’s gracious means through which he daily sustains that joy. We
sometimes believe we are independent, self-sufficient people. Our tired minds,
aching backs, and callous hands that produced a successful career and a
comfortable home seem to affirm that myth. But what if corporate restructuring
takes away the paycheck, or terminal illness robs our strength and vitality?
Anxiety, worry, and fear set in, taking the place of our pride.
Life comes from the Lord, and so does
daily help. We come to the Lord through prayer, and the fruit of prayer is
peace. Yet prayer is not a mantra, and we can’t use it to try to manipulate
God. Prayer is a divine gift to strengthen the bonds of love between us and
God. The act of prayer itself affirms our dependence on him for peace and joy.
That’s the prompt for Thanksgiving. Rest in the assurance that God is working
His best good in your life, no matter how strange each turn looks like! Listen
to the Apostle Paul again:
Finally, brothers, whatever is true,
whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely,
whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything
worthy of praise, think about these things (v. 8).






