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Archive for the ‘Jail’ Category

September 11, 2002 – II

In Blessings, Encouragement, Jail, Love, Mail Call on March 19, 2009 at 7:43 am

On that fateful day for America – September 11, 2001 – I was fresh out of jail and sitting at my brother’s house, thanks to some friends who bailed me out.

As my Dad wrote this letter a year later, I was back in the bowels of the county jail beginning my prison term.


9-11!!!!

Dear Son,

I hope you are OK!  Haven’t heard from  you yet, but maybe they moved you – maybe I’ll hear something today….

This is a day of remembrance for the arrack on America.  Big ceremonies at New York and Washington.  So man killed and now we are on the brink of another war with Iraq.

I have written “Thank You” cards to your brother and sister-in-law and your aunt for their help and generosity while I was down there.  Also, a birthday card to my brother.  He’ll be 72 this Sunday.  His wife is in France with her children which has left my brother alone.  He doesn’t do well alone.  I worry about his wife flying with the nation on “high alert” for terrorist attacks.

I’m anxious to hear from you, Son.  Whenever it’s possible.  I weep day and night over you and your Mother….and your boys.

Gotta run get these cards in the mail.  I love you, Son.  No matter what!!!

Dad


A father’s love is an amazing thing!!!!!


For more of the Prodigal’s Mail, click here.

Back to Prison – Part I

In Choices, Confusion, Control, Deception, Deliverance, Doubt, Encouragement, God's Love, God's Provision, Jail, Paranoia, Peace, Perseverance, Prayer, Prison, Thanksgiving, Worship on March 6, 2009 at 6:31 am

We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed but not in despair; persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed.  (II Corinthians 4:8-9)

 

Dejected?  Surely!

 

Confused?  Probably!

 

But doubting? Never!

 

Joseph maintained his faith and started over again. Those were days and weeks and months of idleness, made all the worse coming from his place of responsibility. His nights were consumed with wondering what was going to happen and why he had been removed from usefulness and productivity.  Surely he remembered the meals in Potiphar’s house (meals he had planned) as he ate the prison gruel.  Certainly, lying on the straw mat, he thought of the soft bed he so recently had had.  He probably asked God more than once why he was being punished when he had done nothing wrong.  And Potiphar’s wife?  How long before forgiveness replaced the resentment?

 

But he waited on and trusted in his God.  And God did not disappoint—God made him a success.  A successful inmate; now there is an apparent oxymoron.  But God caused the jailer to take notice of Joseph, and, before you know it, Joseph was running the jail! Read on here!

September 10, 2002

In Blessings, Encouragement, Jail, Mail Call, Prison, Thanksgiving on February 21, 2009 at 1:00 pm

September 10, 2002

Dearest One,

I have prayed for you today and have asked the Lord for His wisdom and His words to be transmitted via this letter.  One feels so helpless in any human effort to offer a ray of hope and encouragement when a loved one is going through the “dark night of the soul”.  My prayer is that you will be able to view whatever you must face with words or Joseph ringing in your ears: “Satan meant this for evil, but God means it for my good.”

Our painful experiences can reveal God to us in new ways.  God’s love doesn’t guarantee us a shelter from difficult experiences that are necessary for our spiritual growth.  Love permits pain.  We don’t want it that way, but love and delay are compatible.  When we fail somewhere along the way to trust in God, we often get ourselves in places of difficulty and impossibility.  When a thing is impossible, then we who are so prone to move things by the force of our being can say, “Lord it has to be You.  I am utterly helpless and absolutely nothing.”  At that point of complete surrender, releasing all that we are, ever have been, and ever hope to be, we can trust His love.  We can come through difficult experiences stronger in faith and hope as we learn that God is there for us in our loss and our deepest sorrow.  What we allow Christ to do in our situation makes the difference.  When we have the right priorities, God will enable us to do what needs to be done.  Ask yourself, what am I struggling with?  Whatever it may be, give it to Jesus.  Trust in His timing and His previsions.  This may require giving up dreams and aspirations, being crucified with Christ, and learning the fellowship of His suffering, but Jesus must be Lord of all or He can’t be Lord at all.  If there is even one thing we are holding as more precious than He, anything which is outside the approval of His character and His Word, then we are still that far from His being able to bless our lives with His abundance and power over evil.  He will never over-ride our will, but our will sometimes over-rides His ability to bless us. Read the rest here!

September 4, 2002

In Blessings, Encouragement, God's Provision, Jail, Love, Mail Call, Prayer, Thanksgiving on January 30, 2009 at 12:22 pm

This is the first of this sort of give and take.  I received another wonderful letter from my dad the very day after receiving the prior.  My response, included here, was to both of the letters.

Obviously, I wasn’t able to make a copy of this letter before I sent it from the jail.  I found this letter among my dad’s effects after his death last May.  What a shock to actually stumble across this box filled with my letters.


September 4, 2002

Dear Son,

I hope all is well today… Oh, mercy!  I can’t bear thinking of you locked up like an animal in a cage….

I was thinking of St. Paul writing his many letters from prison that the world is reading today, including Romans 8:28.  I was thinking of the “all things” in that promise.

I think of those wonderful biscuits that your Mamaw used to make for the family.  Her children and Papaw would beg her to make them (along with tomato gravy).

I used to watch her making them.  I have thought how terrible it would have been to try to eat each ingredient by itself.  But she added all the parts and “worked them together”, then heated them at just the right temperature for just the right amount of time.  The result was amazing!!  Everyone scrambled for them (even the eggs…HA!) when she called, “Biscuits are ready – get them while they’re hot!”  I can just hear her! Read on here!!

July 30, 2002

In Blessings, Encouragement, Jail, Love, Mail Call, Mother on January 7, 2009 at 1:55 pm

My precious mother passed away December 22, 2008.  The awful disease with which she suffered for so long finally claimed her life.  In many ways those of us that knew her best and loved her most mourned for her long before she finally breathed her last breathe and, while we gathered with heavy hearts to pay our last respects, our sadness was more for our loss than for her passing.  You see, we all know exactly where Mom is and we have faith that we will see her again.  The only requirement is that we “stay on track.”

This letter was written to her son in jail.  Her heart was broken even as Alheimers’ stole her physical ability and mental capacity.  But though obviously affected by this disease, the message rings true and the love shows through.

I love my Mother.  And the present tense is used there on purpose, for she lives on with our mutual Savior.


July 30, 2002

Dearest Son,

My thoughts and prayers are constantly with you.  I pray while I play the piano, I pray for you as I do my daily chores, I pray you will get your life back someday and I believe you will.  The way I look at this whole matter is that God had to bring to you your knees before He could pick you up and put you back in track.  God doesn’t waste anything. Read the rest here!

July 20, 2001

In Blessings, Encouragement, Generosity, Jail, Mail Call, Mother on November 14, 2008 at 1:32 pm

The days were moving so slowly.  Every minute seems a lifetime and there certainly were a lot of lifetimes.  Understandably, I was completely consumed by my own situation and problems.  They dominated my thought and prayer life.  I wondered where all my friends were.  I wondered why people weren’t being more attentive to me and my needs.

In short, I was self-absorbed and completely unable to grasp the way I had rocked everyone’s world.

A glimpse of this is seen in my mother’s letter.  Words like “constantly” and phases like “every waking moment” hit me hard and widened my vision a bit.


July 20, 2001

Dear Dan,

I have been thinking of you every waking moment.  You are constantly in my prayers.  I have been so concerned for you.

One day I called Mrs. V. H. Lewis (the widow of Dr. V. H. Lewis – General Superintendent).  She and I had a wonderful season of prayer and since that day I have had a peace that I really needed!   Mrs. Lewis is a prayer warrior and she has agreed to keep you in her prayers.

Nothing that you can do could change my love for you.  I still have great aspirations for you.

I understand from your brother that you need some money to get things from the store in the jail.  I’m sending this for that purpose.

Love you!

Mom

P.S. Please pray and keep in touch with God!


For more of the Prodigal’s Mail, click here.

August 13, 2001 (Part 2 of 4)

In Behavior Modification, Choices, Deliverance, Encouragement, Jail, Mail Call, Prison on September 17, 2008 at 4:51 pm

Dr. Willingham wrote, “God learned something new in human suffering when He stepped down on the battlefield of human suffering and sorrow.”

It was because of this the writer of Hebrews spoke of Christ, the High Priest who, “is touched by feeling of our infirmities, and who is acquainted with our grief.”

There is an understanding through identification once we have experienced the pain!  Only those who have been there are qualified to share!

It was Betty Ford who, after disgracing her office as First Lady through her alcoholic addiction, later confessed that she had to “step down” in surrender which included cleaning toilets and scrubbing floors on her hands and knees.  It was there she heard the cry of those, like herself, trapped in addiction.

She faced another day and the crowds of people, among which were her family, President Ford and their children…..  In a touching ceremony, she placed her foot on a golden shovel, and turned the first shovel of soil for the construction of the Betty Ford Clinic, where thousands of actors, politicians and congressmen and women have completed successful recovery from alcohol and drugs.

Charles Colson disgraced, indicted and sentenced to Federal prison for his involvement in the Watergate scandal finally heard the cry of suffering inmates and started prayer groups with them.  When released he organized the nationally known Prison Ministry, and Chuck has traveled for years speaking in churches and prisons and has written books that have gone around the world touching and blessing thousands.

*****Just got your letter of August 8th and have had a crying time and prayed and agonized for you.

Yes, Son, I am with you all way!  I understand your loneliness and the scorn you feel.  I know.

You mentioned your brother.  Not only is he neck deep in that business, as well as trying to be attentive to your boys and your wife, he has told me he has made a number of trips up to visit with you and the slot was taken by your girlfriend.  You have not mentioned her to me, but I can understand how you would hold on to her.  I’ve been there on that one, too.  They would come to the treatment centers and hospitals where I would be confined and visit with them and bring me things, etc.  I didn’t care that much about them but I felt they were all I had!  So I would hold on.  It was like a man floundering out in the ocean and reaching out to hold onto anybody or anything!  I held on to a lot of driftwood trying to stay afloat  - then when I would get to shore and collect my wits I would realize they were the last people I wanted to be with.  By that time they had run up my credit cards, etc.  (One Sears bill for $1000 for tires and shocks that took me a year or more to pay off.)

But if there is true meaning to the relationship and you really love her, then do it right.  Pray together and when you get out, marry her, and move to Little Rock or Jackson, TN, and start a new life together.  But I sure wouldn’t slap this in the faces of the family in Memphis.  They need freedom and you do, too…time to heal.

Call your brother and ask him to come and see you.  He can tell you what is going on with the business and your family.  You need him.  He loves you and is deeply indebted to you for all you have meant to him and done for him over the years.  But he does not have a good attitude about your girlfriend.  He feels she played a part in your downfall.  This is only natural for him to feel this way.  I understand, but he doesn’t.  He has never been “there” and hope he doesn’t get there.

But you need to stay close whatever you have to do.  You must realize that for the people that love you there is a “love/anger” stage they are going through.  You boys did it with me.  “If Dad loved us why did he leave mother and take off and leave us?”  Andy said his anger caused him to go on the ramble just like I did.  We vent our anger in different ways.

Your brother loves you but he’s hurting badly.  Only you can help this by being patient.


For more of the Prodigal’s Mail, click here.

August 13, 2001 (Part 1 of 4)

In Encouragement, Jail, Love, Mail Call, Pastor Bill, Prison on September 11, 2008 at 7:40 pm

This was the second letter I received from my Dad during those days of lock-down in the Shelby County jail, but it was – and is – one of those incredible and wonderful works of art filled with all the love and encouragement that a father could pack into one after he had traveled some of the very roads I had trod.

He knew better than anyone what I was going through and what was facing me in the short-term as well as the long-term.  The short-term would not be pretty or enjoyable, but the reward, if I stayed true to God and followed His plan, would be something beautiful that would be nothing short of miraculous.

Even now, with Dad gone on to Heaven, this letter still speaks to me.  I hope it will resonate with you as well.


Monday, August 13, 2001

My Dear Son –

I have written to you dozens of times – but just can’t get it on paper.  I bleed for you until there is no blood left.

I know I deserve all of this, but it doesn’t make it any easier.  After “preaching to others” I became a “castaway”.  I have lived with this torment, and will until my last breath.  Realizing that I have failed others – even my own family – has been more than I can bear.  (See?  Me, too!)

King David got caught in that powerful trap and fell to the bottom of shame and failure.  History states that he lived in a cave for years – so beaten and overwhelmed was he over his downfall.

Then he fell a second time, this time it was before the Lord!  The church and the world have been blessed ever since by the heartbroken cry of the 51st Psalm.  Millions have found their way back to God by reciting the words of that prayer.  That prayer would never have been written had David not failed.  “Where sin abounds, grace doth much more abound.”  David rose above his failure and helped millions through the ages, but the cloud of sorrow and suffering remained with him until he died.

His enemies never forgave him.  The Psalms written after his downfall breathe with his torment caused by the “back-biters” and “wagging heads”.

His own son organized a rebellion and fought against his father – later dying hanging from a tree limb shot through with arrows.  David cried out, “Absalom, would God I had died for thee!”

David committed adultery and murder yet God forgave him – he served again, perhaps in a greater way than had he not failed.  But he suffered as a result of his sin until his death.

The sins of the parents are passed on to the children.  “The parents eat sour grapes and the children’s teeth are set on edge.”  So true!

Then the parents grieve and weep!  We cry loud and long, “I wish I had done things differently!  What was wrong with me?  Why did I do those stupid, foolish things?”

Sadly there is no going back.  What has been done is final and fixed forever!  At least in that sense of the word.

There are not only 12 steps in recovery, but also 12 promises.  (I had no confidence or appreciation for the 12 steps until one day during a lull at the Harbor, I found a little booklet in one of the desk drawers in which someone asked Dr. Bob – a medical doctor and co-founder of AA – where they got the 12 steps, and if he wrote them.  He replied, “No, neither Bill nor I wrote the steps…”  They asked, “Well, where did you get them, where did they come from?”  Dr. Bob – now an old man – replied, “For years in the early days of AA Recovery, Bill and I would sit for hours through the night reading the Holy Bible – the Gospels, Corinthians, the Book of James, the Psalms – we didn’t have to GET the 12 steps.  We already had them!”)

WOW!  Did that ever make a difference in my attitude and thinking!  (I was 2 years sober.)

Then I discovered that the church has accepted the 12 steps.  It’s called “Overcomer’s Anonymous,” and is endorsed by Dr. James Dobson of Focus on the Family.

Anyway, they hit me with that first step: We admitted we were powerless over alcohol and that our lives had become unmanageable.

The first step is the only step where alcohol is mentioned.  The other 11 steps tell how to get out of the trap.

Other groups have endorsed the 12 steps and leave only a blank where “alcohol” is written.  So it’s “powerless over _______.”

For years while in the ministry, I would go out in the woods or cemeteries and scream out to God for deliverance.  I would pray, “Deliver me or kill me!”  Neither would happen.

Years into recovery it dawned on me – “God only works through people – Human instrumentality!”  God used physical demonstrations of His power in the Old Testament.  The parting of the Red Sea, the Bread and Quail from Heaven, the Burning Bush, etc.  People still rebeled and went astray.

Then God said, “I’ve got to go down there among them and touch them and love them and die for them.

So we had Bethlehem and Christmas and a young man that gathered the crowds of simple, hurting, discouraged people around him and spoke to them in simple language that they understood.  About the fields of flowers and the changing of the weather.  He ate with them and touched them;  He healed and blessed them and entered into their sorrows and pain.  He taught them a new way of thinking and living…..then He died for them!


For more of the Prodigal’s Mail, click here.

August 10, 2001

In Blessings, Encouragement, Jail, Mail Call, Mother on September 4, 2008 at 6:57 am

Another sweet note from my mother to get me through another day.  At the time it certainly didn’t feel like my life was just beginning – it seemed as though all was lost and life as I knew it was over.  And that was not entirely inaccurate for the old life had been laid open for all to see and then stripped away.  What Mom knew then – and what I have since discovered to be true – is that the new life, a life of promise and fulfillment unlike anything I had ever before experienced, was, in fact, just beginning.

 


For more of the Prodigal’s Mail, click here.

Revealed Power

In Alone, Control, Deliverance, Devotions, Jail, Jesus' Words, John, Prayer on July 8, 2008 at 1:11 pm

     The hearing ended and the hearing officer turned off the tape recorder that had been silently but obviously witnessing the proceedings.  Parole had been denied.  Again.

     And he didn’t understand.  Certain that he would be out of prison in short order, plans had been made, jobs acquired, and the hopes of three little boys elevated to heights from which they would now free fall.  More damage to already tenuous relationships.  How was he going to explain another delay?  What was the reason for this latest setback?

     Raised by a wonderful set of parents who had hardwired a basic sense of fairness into him, his outlook had always been optimistic and upbeat.  Throughout his life, a life more characterized by blessings than merely punctuated by them, that sense of fairness planted by his folks had been cultivated into a mature organism.  It simply did not occur to him that there were others for whom fairness was a completely foreign concept.  And the thought of others acting, or, in this case, reacting, to him in any manner inconsistent with that basic idea of fairness never crossed his mind.

     Until now…

     The docket for today’s hearings had been full and, of the even dozen brought before the board for review on this rainy Monday, all had been recommended for the coveted prize except him.  Several had served a smaller percentage of their sentence and one man was working on his seventh trip to the penitentiary.

     He stood, slump-shouldered, and turned to face the small group of supporters in attendance.  A childhood friend who had graciously held a job position with his company on the assumption that freedom would be realized for his friend.  His eyes revealed something of the depth of the pain shared with his friend who would not be released, would not be allowed to return to society, would not be permitted to once again be productive and provide for his family.

     An uncle, estranged for so long, but who had been such a blessing and prayer partner during the previous months leading up to this day – a day that faith said would be the glorious day of release and restoration so long awaited.

     Finally, the woman he loved.  The one with whom he had promised to share the remainder of his life.  The one that he had planned to wed early the following month – a wedding that would now be delayed….again.  The look in her eyes broke his heart.  The look composed of hurt and love, pain and forgiveness, empathy and promise.

     It was too much to bear.  Embracing his loved ones, the man turned and left the room and the building, to return to his cell – the only home he had known for the past fifty-eight months.  He was discouraged, disillusioned, hurt.  He felt abandoned, alone and hopeless.

     He realized that a crime had been committed, a terrible act of selfishness and stupidity.  He knew he deserved punishment and had patiently and quietly served the last five years waiting for this day – a day he knew would be his day.  But that was not to be.  And his sense of fairness required a reason why.  If there was a reason – a tangible, “do this and you can go home” reason – he could have understood.  But for this new delay to be without purpose, apparently without reason, was too much for him to digest.

     He wandered aimlessly into his cell, avoiding any eye contact with the other inmates – there would be no solace there, no understanding, no empathy.  His failure only increased their chances of release, and though some would no doubt offer their condolences, they were hollow and obviously insincere.  Once behind his door, he broke down and wept, instinctively reaching for his Bible.  There had to be a reason, a purpose for this pain.  What was the purpose?

     They were so excited.  Their first-born was about to be just that….born.  Dad was hoping for a boy – a son.  An heir to whom he could impart all the collected wisdom handed down through the generations.  One to whom he could teach the trade learned from his father.  One to inherit the good business and the good name for which he had labored so arduously.

     Mom, with the love only a mother could have for the one carried for those long months, wished – no, prayed – only for a healthy child upon whom to lavish her love and attention.  She knew of her husband’s hopes, but, while never voiced, she didn’t really care about gender.  She just wanted to hold her baby in her arms that had been nestled in her womb.

     And then he was there – yes, he.  A baby boy, squirming and screaming.  Matted jet black hair and the ruddy complexion of their race.  Everything seemed perfect and the last remaining bit of prenatal apprehension common to parents the world over disappeared.  Only joy remained.  Mom was finally holding this bundle so long awaited.  Dad had his son and he stroked his wife’s hair, still damp from exertion, as he looked down at the boy and down through the years at all the wondrous days they would all have.  Hope was in full-bloom and their faith in their God had born perfect fruit.

     It was the next morning before they noticed the problem.  As his mother was nursing him with the early morning rays of sunlight streaming in the window of the room, he opened his eyes for the first time and his mother looked into to large white voids where beautiful and dark irises should have been.  Her precious baby boy was blind and she wept quietly has he drew nourishment from her.

     Her baby boy would never see her face, never gaze in wonder at creation, never know the joy of play with friends.  He would be alone in the crowd, afraid in the light and judged from a distance.

     And the questions began to bombard her mind and heart.  Why did this have to happen?  How was this even remotely fair?  Who caused this tragedy?  Was it some sin she had committed?  Had her husband transgressed somehow and brought this judgment upon her baby boy?

     What is the purpose of it all?  How could a just God, a loving and merciful Creator, cause something so awful?

     And the questions, unanswered, continued.  Month after month and year after year.  Festering.  Dividing.

     The boy grew, adapted and became all that he could be.  A beggar.  Sitting outside the gate of the city, he “earned” his living by the kindness of strangers and friends.  His only talent, his one gift, was engendering pity of passers-by, and, through the exercise of this gift, he brought a small sum into his parents home each day.  Enough for a small bit of barley, for wheat was too expensive.

     And as the years passed, unknown to him, his parents, in those quiet moments during a meal or through an evening spent together, would ask the same old questions, not expecting an answer anymore.  It was more of a habit now.  Why?  For what purpose is our son blind?  Life had held such promise, but he had been sentenced to a life of humiliation and degradation.  Why?

     One day as he was plying his trade at the city gate, a group of strangers observed him from across the way.  They were new to town and were standing to the side, allowing the foot traffic to pass them as they watched and listened.  One of the group, always an inquisitive sort, ask another, the apparent leader, “See that blind beggar over there?  Who sinned to cause his condition to be such as it is?  Him or his parents?”

     The prisoner could trace it back years and years.  Enslaved at the age of twelve, the addiction grew, a malignancy in his soul, until he was helpless to extricate himself from it and powerless to avoid it’s lure.

     Years past – years of broken vows, both to himself and to others.  Resolutions did not make a difference.  Pledges were empty.

     Sitting on the edge of a metal prison bunk, the prisoner realized that he had been imprisoned long before the shackles were affixed and the iron door slammed for the first time.  His whole life had been one of deceit and concealment.  His existence characterized by a fear of the terrible secret becoming known by those around him.

     A façade was maintained successfully for years.  Outwardly successful, respected and honored as a man of God, he carried his secret with him, never far from exposure but separated from a life of victory and purpose by a gaping chasm.

     He remembered the day, only a few short months before, the secret went public.  He could still see the hurt in the eyes of his loved ones as they realized the depth of his depravity.  A full thirty years after his spiritual imprisonment began, the physical incarceration commenced.

     Family became estranged, friends withdrew and total strangers made snap judgments about him.  And the world was watching…

     Watching to see how this man of privilege and prestige would cope with the loss of every single worldly possession, all position and his respectability.

     Watching to determine whether God would judge and discipline this man who had so successfully juggled his double-mindedness and his double standard for so long.

     Watching to acquire proof that the decision made to surrender to the Will of God – a decision too late made, most would say – was yet another attempt to manipulate others and thereby avoid punishment.

     Watching to ascertain the strength of the man who had had it all and lost it so quickly and so tragically.

     Reflection birthed revelation.

     He was not in prison only because the parole board willed it.  Release was not delayed due to crime, time or the whim of seven people he had never met.  Freedom did not elude him to serve some perceived need of the people of the state for confinement to follow conviction.

     Sure, these all a temporally correct, but, as though the veil separating him from the solution of a grand mystery was slowly rent, a hint of the bigger picture – the underlying purpose – began to form in his mind.

     As he read the next words, sitting alone in his cell, it was as if the Master was speaking across the centuries and over the miles directly to him.  “He was born blind so that the power of God could be seen in him.” (John 9:3b – New Living Translation)


For more Ponderings, click here.

July 26, 2001

In Encouragement, Jail, Mail Call, Mother, Prayer on July 6, 2008 at 4:50 pm

     The days in the county jail passed slowly.  I was moved four times almost immediately within the jail and was eventually assigned to a cell on the medication floor due to the notation in my jacket that I was taking the mood stabilizer Celexa.

     I tried to fit in.  I tried to maintain a low – very low – profile.  I didn’t want to be noticed for those who were noticed got into trouble, whether from the officers from without or the other prisoners from within.

My new faith was there but I couldn’t help but wonder where this would all lead.

     I received divorce papers – I couldn’t blame her.  I didn’t hear from my children – and I couldn’t blame them either.  I heard from very few and I understood.

     But on the 39th day of my stay there in that hell-hole, my precious mother wrote:

 

July 26, 2001

My Dearest Son:

     Thank you for the letter you wrote!  I have longed to hear from you.  Your letter helped a lot.  I am so sorry for all the anguish you have experienced through the years about your addiction.  I wish so much that you could have been able to confide in your father or me so we could have gotten help for you.  We are praying for you many times a day.  I encourage you to read your Bible and feed your soul.  God does not waste anything and I am sure He has a plan for you.

      We have a man in our church who was in prison.  He was saved in jail – went to prison and came out with a burning desire to help prisoners.  He established a ministry and is doing a great work helping people who are in prison. 

     God doesn’t waste anything!  Trust Him!  I know you are down tight now, but if you commit it all to Christ, He will bring you out and give you a ministry to help others.  You are my beloved son and I will never forsake you!  You are always on my mind and in my heart.  Nothing can keep me from loving you!

Mom

 

     Do I need to add anything to that?

     A mother’s love is truly a wonderful thing.  My mother continued to support me with her letters, her prayers, her love.

     And I believe, as my mother wrote those years ago, that God doesn’t waste anything.  I am continuing to search and pray for His will and His plan for my life.


For more of the Prodigal’s Mail, click here.

July 22, 2001

In Blessings, Deliverance, Encouragement, Forgiveness, God's Love, God's Provision, Jail, Love, Mail Call, Poetry, Prison on June 25, 2008 at 1:54 pm

     During the early days of my incarceration, shortly after I re-committed my life to the Lord and received His forgiveness, I wrote out my story.  It was in very rough form and was certainly nothing of admirable content or talent, but I felt the need to get it out.

     I sent this draft to my Dad.  Of all the people in the world, he had the ability to truly empathize with me.  He had already proven his love by driving a thousand miles to pray for and hug me in those first horrific days.  He had already expressed his forgiveness as we wept and prayed that day in the visiting room of the jail.

     Now he would know the whole story – the only one so far.

     I received this letter in return.

 

July 22, 2001

My Dear Son,

     I received the manuscript late Wednesday eve… What a story!  And what courage it took to write it!  No greater relief than to get totally honest – with yourself – others and God!  I, too, have been down every rocky, dead-end road and am acquainted with total failure and shipwreck.

     I’m sure my reaction to this is much different than your mother’s.  I have thought of her through this and can only imagine her shock.  I have prayed for her and Jerry everyday – also the others…..  According to your brother, your wife and children seem to be holding up, but they are all suffering a pain that will not go away for the rest of their lives.

     I know your feelings of isolation, desolation and desperation.  Five lockups in treatment centers and general hospitals, halfway houses, and rescue missions for periods of from 30 days to 6 months.  Six months in Rick’s church basement.  Six months in a boarding house, etc.  After staying in the Hyatts and Hiltons and Embassy Suites over the years and driving plush cars and wearing new clothes and eating the best food – what a disaster!

     I felt like filthy, greasy rags on the floor of an old abandoned garage, forgotten and worthless.

     But someone was there all the time.  I just didn’t know.  The Lord had me surrounded by His special instruments.  “God works in mysterious ways His wonders to perform.”

     I was bottomed out in an intensive care unit in Nashville Veterans Hospital – borderline brain convulsions – tubes, wires, etc.  I kept thinking of you boys – how I had hurt and disappointed you.  My pillow was soaked with tears and I was all alone.

     I started quoting the words (out loud):

          “God uses best the broken things

           The contrite heart – the battered wings

           Of our poor selfish pride –

           Ah, yes, and even scars we hide,

           He blesses for His own.

           If in the breaking I might be

           A better vessel Lord for Thee

           Then crush my stubborn will,

           And all of self that lingers still;

           Anoint my eyes that I may see

           A vision of Your plan for me

           ‘Til Thou shalt call me home.”  (one of Mother’s poems)

     A nurse was standing nearby and heard me – she rushed to my side and asked me to quote those words again.  She got a piece of paper and wrote them down and exclaimed, “It’s just what I needed.”  And left the room.

     I’m thankful He led me into AA with people with my problem that could identify.  God used those people and I was not alone.  Five years at the Harbor and four years teaching at the hospital enabled me to help others which helped me stay on track.   September 8th will be 11 years of freedom from that addiction that destroyed my ministry, my marriage and the trust of all who have ever known me.  I owe it all to God’s love working though people.

     I’ll write you again.  I have been very sick.  I love you….always!  Always!  Always!

Dad

 

     He had been there and he knew.  By God’s power working through him, he had overcome his addiction and had lived to help others and further the Kingdom of God through his work.

     That was my father’s prayer for me over the next seven years and was one of the last things on his mind as he died.

     He is in Heaven and my prayer is now that his prayer will be answered – that I be used of God and that this ordeal through which I have come will not be in vain but be beneficial to those who need to find their way to their Savior.

July 18, 2001

In Forgiveness, God's Love, Jail, Mail Call, Salvation on June 19, 2008 at 2:24 pm

Two days after those beautiful and heart-healing words from my mother, I received two letters.  Both were straight to the point and written from the hearts of the authors.  Both were candid and free of pleasantries.  But they were written from very dissimilar points of view.  One was constructive and redemptive.  The other destructive and caustic. 

The writer of the first has a firm grasp on the limitless capacity of a Heavenly Father to forgive the sins of His children.  The other sadly confused on that point.

Read them for yourself and you’ll see what I mean……….

 

July 18, 2001

 

Dan,

     I am writing this letter to you to tell you something and to ask you something.  The only time I visited you while you were in jail was the day after your arrest.  Since they would only let two people in, I deferred to Lynn and Tim and waited on them outside.  It has taken all of this time for me to come to grips with everything that has happened, and I suppose that is why I have stayed out of touch with you.  I hope you will understand when I say that I was very angry when I learned what you had done.  It was all revealed that day at my home when they arrested you.  I don’t think I will ever forget the look on your face as you were sitting on my deck.  Because of all the police cars, I had quite a bit of explaining to do to my neighbors.  Neighbors who thought that Sue and I had been fighting and had to be separated with so many police further added to my anger.  What you did ultimately brought shame to me and my family.  My friends and neighbors understood and all is well.  Another thing that I gave considerable thought to was the fact that all the time I knew you, I did not really know you.  You see Dan, I always looked up to you.  You were the one constant solid rock that I could depend on.  The faithfulness that you showed is what got me back in church where I belong.  Now, there is no doubt where I will spend eternity.  As I said, I always looked up to you.  I knew that it would be almost impossible for me to be like Christ.  I thought that if I could be like you that I would be almost close enough to touch Him.  Needless to say, when all of this came out, my picture shattered before me.  The deceptive life you lived invalidated everything that was between us.  I felt as though our friendship meant nothing.  This left me quite empty.  After considering all that had happened, I broke down and did what Jesus was telling me to do.  You are still my brother in Christ and I forgive you.  That doesn’t make me anyone special, however it helps me cope with things because I am doing as a Christian should.  Truly, from my heart, I forgive you.

     The only problem remaining was how I was going to ask you what I must ask.  Yes, I prayed about it and God told me to forgive you, however, when He told me to forgive you He also told me to ask you something.  Dan, all this time has gone by and this is the first communication from me to you.  Despite the fact that I felt you had invalidated our friendship, you were still my brother and I failed you as a Christian.  I should have been there for you as Jesus was, but I was not.  Can you find it in your heart to forgive me?  Please think about it.

     I don’t know if I will ever be able to trust you again.  Trust is something that has to be earned.  This will take a considerable amount of time.  I pray for you everyday.  My prayer is that you will repent and turn to God.  You know what is out there for all of us.  Please do not spend an eternity paying for what you have done.  Get your heart right with God and everything else will fall into place.  You have made some very bad decisions and have done some horrible things.  Be thankful that we are the only one who weight things.  God will forgive right away and Jesus is waiting to intercede for you.  If you have not already done so, don’t wait another minute.  Get things right with God right now.  You never know what is in store tomorrow.

     You still have a long road to travel.  I am constantly praying that you will do the right things.

Yours in Christ,

David Harrison

 

July 18, 2001

 

Dear Dan,

     I heard that you were complaining about not receiving any mail or visits from anyone.  I’m sure that I’m not one of the people that you wanted to hear from, however, I need some “closure” as I’ve been told, so I’ve decided to write.  You may not want to read all of this, but I need to write it, though I don’t know where to start.

     First of all, you obviously have no idea what this has done to everyone.  To me, you weren’t just my boss for 6 years.  You were someone I respected, I cared for like a friend, and most importantly, you caused me (almost daily) to question my religion and my faith.  Our beliefs are very different, obviously.

     What I would love to know is if you think you’ve going to Heaven?  Are you a Christian or not?  It seems to me that you really aren’t but hid your real self behind your religion.  Is that accurate or not?  I can’t believe that at some point a long time ago you decided that someone other than your wife was more important to you than your career, your children, your brother, etc.  You have hurt people in a way that you may never know, Dan.   You have hurt me deeply. 

     …..I think that you believe in your heart that you are above everyone, including God.  The God I worship would never forgive your sins.  Especially the one where you have used His name and your religion in vain for so many years.

     …..I truly hate that you are there in jail, Dan, but you deserve to be there for a very long time.

Helen Perkins

 

Two friends.  Two angry friends.  Two friends who had the right to be angry.

But two very different approaches to dealing with the anger.  One was redemptive – the other resentful.  One forgave – the other held the grudge.

I understand the anger.  I appreciate the forgiveness.

Choose to Run

In Behavior Modification, Choices, Control, Devotions, God's Love, Jail, Jeremiah, Perseverance, Prayer, Prison on June 4, 2008 at 9:36 am

For surely I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope.  Then when you call upon me and come and pray to me, I will hear you.  When you search for me, you will find me; if you seek me with all your heart.  I will let you find me, says the Lord, and I will restore your fortunes and gather you from all the nations and all the places where I have driven you, says the Lord, and I will bring you back to the place from which I sent you into exile.  Jeremiah 29:11-14

I have always been fascinated by people who have the discipline and ability to get out, day or night, hot or cold, rain or shine, and run.

Why do they do it?

Are they getting ready for a big race?  Probably not.

Are they preparing themselves so that IF they are ever accosted, they can sprint to safety without becoming too winded too quickly or without their legs tiring too fast?  That’s unlikely.

I’ve tried to develop this discipline.  Over the years I have spent untold hundreds of dollars on running shoes and clothes – like I needed some special “look” to run.

I joined track teams in both junior high and in college.  Both times I rationalized my decision to quit.  Justified it by telling myself that I was just not cut out to be a runner – I didn’t have the “stuff”.

Well, yesterday I did it again.  I stopped in and bought some new running shorts and short socks and I’m going to try it again.  Not because I’m afraid of or expecting an attack.  And not really because I want to lose the little paunch that I have developed over the years.  But because I want the discipline in my life.  I need the discipline in my life.

I have always been fascinated by people who have the drive to get out of bed an hour before they really have to, regardless of how late they were up the night before – although I expect that getting to bed at a reasonable hour is a part of the discipline, too – to pray and study and listen to God.

Why do they do it?

Do they think they are going to be engaged in some sort of intense spiritual battle that day?  They’d better, because that’s what happens – daily!  Satan is out there.  The Bible says he’s prowling around like a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour.  I have been devoured  When the spiritual battle came – and it always comes – I was out of shape.  I tired too quickly.  My spiritual legs gave out.

I never was much of a threat to Satan.  I never developed the discipline of prayer and study.  Oh, sure, when the big test was approaching and I hadn’t studied as I should have, or when the money was all gone and the twins needed food, or when the office payroll came due and the work was not there, or when I found myself in jail with very few friends and the bad news was hitting me from every direction, in those times I would be very disciplined, very conscientious, about my devotional life.

But I’ve never learned the trick of preparing for battle in times of peace, of staying prepared for the battle even when the threat board was empty.

Today I choose to prepare.  I choose to be disciplined.  I choose to let God control my life one hour at a time.  I choose to run and I choose to pray.

Jeremiah 29:11-14 is my promise.  I want to search for Him and His will for me with all my heart.  I want to get in on his plans to prosper me – not as the world perceives prosperity, but I want to be rich toward God and in what He has in store for me.


I wrote this while sitting at my brother’s house.  I wrote this thirteen days after my bail was posted and I regained some measure of freedom, tenuous though it was.  I wrote this the day before 9/11, never comtemplating the change the next day would effect in the psyche of our nation and the world.  I wrote this not realizing until later just how quickly everything that matters can change. 

July 10, 2001

In Encouragement, Jail, Love, Mail Call, Mother on May 31, 2008 at 5:22 pm

As I was wrapping up my first month of confinement, desperate for some ray of hope or some sense that everything was going to work out, my precious Mother, once again, provided just the ray for which I had been searching.

 

 

July 10, 2001

Dear Dan:

Just a note to let you know that I love and we are praying for you.  I realize these are tough times.

Now that you have commited your life to God, things are going to be better.

I love you dearly and am proud of your new life!

Keep praying and keep your chin up!

Love and Prayers,

Mom

 

 

It was about this time that I began to believe that something would happen to spare me the horrors of prison.  I had never been in trouble in my life, no one was actually harmed despite my efforts to the contrary, and surely prison time would not be the end result of all of this.

I began to believe – foolishly – that since I was forgiven, that all would somehow revert to something similar to the life I had just left.

How stupid we can be sometimes.

Footballs & Blessings

In Blessings, Choices, Control, Devotions, Football, Jail, Jesus' Words, Prison on May 28, 2008 at 7:04 am

It’s a beautiful fall day.  Picture perfect even.

There is a little chill in the air.  Not much.  The climate here is always fairly mild, but a little chill is present, nevertheless.

And the excitement.  Oh, yes – excitement is there keeping the chill company.

The crowd is gathering in.  They know what to expect.  They’ve all seen it before – well, most of them have.

Two rich men are preparing to play the game.  Others have roles to play as well, but it’s the two rich men who are the center of attention.

And it’s not entirely accurate to call it a game, either.  It’s a serious business to the two rich men.  A game to some but not to them.

The two of them have been preparing for this day for a very long time.  A lifetime.  An eternity, some would say.  And they’re ready.

A hush falls on the crowd.  They all appreciate the importance of the next play.  It’s success or failure will have huge consequences.  The stakes are high and, regardless of the outcome, many people will be affected.

So here it goes….let’s listen in….

Tom:    This is it, folks.  It all comes down to this.

Chris:   You’re right, Tom.  It’s third down and fifteen from the Giant’s 29.  And, with only 25 seconds remaining, the Cowboys have got to get this first down and stop the clock in order to stay alive.

Tom:    Aikman is set.  He takes the snap and drops back into the pocket.  He’s looking downfield.  Here come the Giants.  Aikman fires.  Irving is in the end zone.

Chris:   O, my God.  Michael Irving never even looked back.  He turned at the corner of the end zone and the ball was right there.

Tom:    A picture perfect pass and a trademark finger-tip catch as Irving falls out of the end zone.

Chris:   The official is running down the sideline.  TOUCHDOWN!!!  The Cowboys have won.  The Cowboys have won the game.

Tom:    It just doesn’t get any better that that Aikman/Irving combination.

Chris:   You’re right, Tom.  That was a beautiful sight to see.

 

That game being over, you grab your remote and begin channel surfing.  Another scene grabs your attention.

It’s a beautiful fall day – well, it could have been fall..  A picture perfect day.

There is a little chill in the air.  Not much.  The climate here is always fairly mild, but a little chill is present, nevertheless.

And the excitement.  Oh, yes – excitement is there keeping the chill company.

The crowd is gathering in.  They know what to expect.  They’ve all seen it before – well, most of them have.

Two rich men are preparing to play a game.  Others have roles to play as well, but it’s the two rich men who are the center of attention on this day.  And this is definitely not a game, but there are rules that must be followed.

The two of them have been preparing for this day for a very long time.  A lifetime.  Some would say an eternity.

A hush falls on the crowd.  This is it.  The moment.  Most appreciate the importance of this play.  It’s success or failure will have eternal consequences.  The stakes are high and, regardless of the outcome, many people will be affected.

So here it goes….

Let’s listen in….

 

Rich Young Ruler:      Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?

Jesus:   Why do you call me good?  No one is good – except God alone.  You know the commandments: ‘Do not commit adultery, do not murder, do not steal, do not give false testimony, honor your father and mother’.

Rich Young Ruler:      All of these I have kept since I was a boy.

Jesus:   You still lack one thing.  Sell everything you have and give to the poor, then you will have treasure in heaven.  Then come, follow Me.

 

Scripture reports that when he heard this he became very sad, because he was a man of great wealth.

 

You can almost hear the great cloud of witnesses gasp as the play fails.  How tragic.  How utterly tragic.

Aikman launched a ball.  Christ launched a blessing.

Irving followed his instructions.  The rich young ruler did not.

Irving turned the right way and caught the ball.  The rich young ruler missed the blessing by turning the wrong way.

Aikman connected with his receiver.  Christ was unable to connect due to the exercise of the free will God has given each of us.  The blessing was there but the intended receiver was not in the right place.

One took a risk, the other elected to play it safe.

Don’t we tend to do the same thing?  We go our own way and then ask God to bless us.  And when the blessings do not come as we think they should, we get mad at God.  Blame Him for our failures and our situations.

Don’t get mad at God – follow His route.  His planned path.

The blessings are there waiting – follow His leading.  His direction.

“In all thy ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct thy paths.”

Connect with Jesus – the consequences are eternal.


This thought was written while I was in the jail in Shelby County, Tennessee.  The date was December 15, 2002, and my effort to avoid prison by being granted probation had failed.  Things were dark but the Lord was there.

Blessed be the Name of the Lord!


For more Ponderings, click here.

July 4, 2001

In Behavior Modification, Encouragement, Jail, Mail Call on May 21, 2008 at 6:57 am

Two days after our mother wrote that letter, my only sibling sat down at his keyboard and gave me a piece of his mind.

     I can’t say that I blame him.  I had deceived him, along with everyone else, and he felt like a fool.  He shouldn’t have – I was a good, no, a great, deceiver – but that didn’t alter the fact that all this had gone on right in front of him and he felt he should have noticed something…..anything.

     Be that as it may, the first letter I received from him, even given my recent confession to God and the resultant repentance, stirred my emotions in dramatic fashion.

    And, more to the point, he was right on track with every word………………..

 

July 4, 2001

Dear Brother,

     I hope this letter finds you in good spirits and with a sense of well-being.  I have so much to say to you that its hard to know where to start.  I guess the best thing is to start with the hard stuff an end on the up-side.

     I imagine you have an idea of how shocked and disillusioned I feel. Someone could have tortured me to the point of near death, and I would have never said that my brother would have ever done anything like what youve done. I defended you on many occasions with regard to an affair with Ellie. I still try to understand without result why she, of all people, would appeal to you in this way.  I always thought you only put up with her because you were a good guy, trying to be a good friend to her, and also the fact that we needed her skills around the office. Anyway, I guess thats neither here nor there in comparison to the main issue here.

     All those times that we talked about your relationship (or lack there of) with your wife, I felt like you were confiding in me and that I was allowing you to release some of the penned up emotion and frustration. Since you were talking to me about it, however infrequently, and the fact that you were in counseling made me relax about your situation.  I see now that you werent really confiding in me at all.  All it was was a pitiful attempt to further cover your tracks. Im not here at this point to sugar coat anything.  That makes me feel like a fool.  All these years I worked side by side with you, not to mention all the time at church and in our personal lives, this affair was going on and I was too blinded by my ideal of who you were to see what was happening right before my eyes.

     Then, the attempted murder.  Of all the hair-brained things to do.  I know you have to be saying the same things to yourself over and over again (or at least I hope you are). You are smarter than that. A divorce would have been painful enough, but this is devastating. And the guy who you were conspiring with. Some day, if you ever want to have a meaningful relationship with me ever again, you are going to have to come clean about everything.  Everything!!!  Why he would lead you down this road and then set you up for a fall, I just cant fathom.  How could you unload everything to that idiot, a petty thief and drug dealer and who knows what else, and not to me, your own and only brother that would have done just about anything for you? Your wife could be dead in a box right now leaving no one for your kids to fall back on.  Thats the bottom line.

     Well, I could continue along these lines for pages but it would do no good and Im sure you (are) sick of hearing it by now. On the other side of all the mistakes, I want you to understand fully where I stand.  You are my brother.  Youve always been there for me.  Even when you had to show tough love.  I will always be here for you as well. No matter what. That means as long as Im alive, Ill have your back under any circumstance, including this circumstance.  I want to slap you and embrace you all at the same time, and Im not sure in which order.  Also know, for whatever its worth, that (my wife) and I are going to make every effort to look after your wife and your kids. At this point theres not a lot I can do for you right now outside of letting you know that I’m going to stand beside you through it, but I can take an active role in their lives.  They are the victims here and they didnt deserve any of this.  This is not a matter of taking sides.  Im on everyones side.  Sometimes I wonder how that is possible, but thats just how it is.  Im doing my best to not provide ammunition to either side.  I hope you can understand my position.

     The thing that weighs most heavily on my heart is the condition of your soul. I always thought that if one of us got into heaven, it would be you.  You know Ive struggled with things and am still struggling.  I dont feel like Im as close to God as I should be either, so its hard for me to talk about this with you.  I keep telling myself that there will be some good to come out of all this.  If I had my wish, I would hope that it would break you to the point of submission to God and His plan for your life.  Your life is not over.  He can use you and your talents still.  Its up to you to use the situation that you find yourself in.  Your know what is right.  Do what is right starting today.

     I guess for now Ill let you off the hook.  I realize that the tone of this letter might not be what you need right now, but it is what I need.  I needed to tell you these things so that I can try to move on and start feeling something else.  I feel a bit overwhelmed right now with all that I have on me.  This has made me take a real close look at my life, my marriage and my relationship with God.

     Be strong and take heart. You have more people praying for you and supporting you than you can imagine.  Im enclosing everything that people have given me on your behalf.  Stop using all your phone calls on whats her name and let me hear from you.

See you soon,

All my love and support,

Your Brother

     And he did and he has.  He has been there for me through this time like few others.  Most turned their back, got busy, or simply lost interest.  He did not.

     Even today, we see each other regularly, laugh and clown around like we did when we were kids, and talk to and confide in each other as brothers should.

     More importantly, I know without a shadow of a doubt that he still “has my back” and would do anything within his power to help me if I asked.

     He’s a good brother and for him I am thankful.

July 2, 2001

In Deliverance, Encouragement, Forgiveness, Jail, Mail Call, Mother, Prayer, Prison, Salvation, Thanksgiving on May 20, 2008 at 6:53 am

I was arrested on Father’s Day in 2001.  Not one of my proudest moments.  It was frightening, intimidating, overwhelming and alienating.

     My Dad drove thirteen hours – one way – through the night to be by my side and hold me in his embrace as I wept on his chest.  In that moment standing there with my father’s arms around me I knew that somehow – someday – all would be OK.

     As it would happen, my precious mother – already suffering the effects of the devastating Alzheimer’s that would eventually rob her of even her ability to express herself verbally – wrote the first letter I received after my arrest.  This letter watered the seed planted in my father’s arms that day.

     God could and would forgive.  God could use this horrible moment in time for good – both for me and for others.

     God could make a way………

 

July 2, 2001

My Dearest Son,

     I know this is belated but I have been trying to get my wits together.  I’m still not sure I am there but I did not want to delay any longer so that you would think I did not care.  You have to know that this letter is hard for me to write.  I still can hardly believe what has happened.  You have been such a model son all your life and I guess I thought you were invincible.  Perhaps I have not spent enough time praying for you.  I should have known that a young man of your many talents would be pursued by Satan himself.  Forgive me in failing to hold you up in prayer more often.  I do want you to know that I love you now more than ever and you are constantly on my mind.  I have not written because I was too emotional to get thoughts together.

     The first (thing) I want you to know that my Mother’s love is as strong or stronger than it has (ever) been.  I will not abandon you for making a mistake – no matter what the consequences are.  Of course, you have to know that I am shocked to think you would plot to kill any one, especially the mother of your children.  You should have known that your actions would have devastated the boys.

     I have taken heart in the fact that no one has lost their life and you still have the opportunity to make a confession and ask God’s forgiveness.  I implore you to that step.  Although this plot was inspired by Satan you have not committed the unpardonable sin.  If you come to Him, He will blot out your transgression.

     I am aware that all of your material wealth is gone and you feel that all is lost, but if this event will save your soul from being lost for eternity it will be worth everything that you have lost.  I am praying constantly to that end.  There is no telling what you can accomplish in God’s Kingdom if you surrender to Him.  My prayers are to that end.  Material things dim in the light of eternity.  I encourage you to use your time in jail reading God’s Word and repenting.  Even if you are incarcerated, you can let God use you.  After all, nothing of this world is lasting.  Look toward eternity.

I love you so much!!!

Mom

 

She had no way of knowing, but her prayers were answered even before she wrote the letter.

     After two weeks of jail, the time clearing the fog and giving me a chance to fully come to terms with the reality of my situation and the horror of my crime, on my 41st birthday, lying on a mat in a two-man jail cell, I finally came to the end of myself and cried out to God for forgiveness.

     And He forgave.

     It would be years before I would achieve physical freedom, but that day, as I read the letter of my wonderful mother, I was already free!!

Gratitude or Grumbling

In Blessings, Choices, Deliverance, Encouragement, God's Love, God's Provision, Jail, Prison, Thanksgiving on April 23, 2008 at 9:32 am

     I wondered how it would be.  As my out date from the Department of Corrections approached and my mind began to focus more and more on life after prison, I wondered how I would react to freedom and the accompanying stress.
     The possibilities were many, each with a blend of circumstance and dilemma, but they can all be reduced to two general categories: gratitude or grumbling.
     Would I be like Peter who, released once from the prison of brick and mortar and later from the prison of his failure, spend my life in grateful service to my God?  Or would I be more akin to the children of Egypt who weren’t out of sight good before they started in on poor Moses?
     Would I be thankful for the blessing of release and employ my God-given talents to help others – a modern-day Joseph?  Or, to pick on the poor Israelites again, would my attitude turn sour at the first setback, disappointment or difficulty?
     Well, on this day which marks the six month point of my post-prison life, I can answer that question.  Not that this is the only time this question will need to be addressed for there is a lot of life left if God allows it, but, as with the first one hundred days which was the subject of another article here, this milestone is a big one – if only to me – and I feel the need to report for the glory of God.
     My answer to the question of which side of that fence I am on is resoundingly gratitude!
     There have been – and will surely continue to be – challenges and trials as the readjustment continues.  There will probably always be a little financial stress.  There will surely always be times of loneliness for my children and the life that could have been had I not allowed the enemy of my soul to gain that foothold in my life.
     But I am, indeed, grateful.  As I stepped out of my little rented house in the country setting north of Nashville this morning at just after five to head to work, I couldn’t help but pause to give thanks for all He has done for me.  In the quiet, early morning moment, as the birds celebrated Spring and the sleepy community began to come to life, I was again humbled – as I have been many times over the past six months – by God’s love, His provision, and all that He has restored to this once-shattered life.
     I am very grateful.

A New Endeavor

In Encouragement, God's Love, Jail, Law Firm, Prison, Twins on December 6, 2007 at 6:23 pm

Always exciting but also intimidating, a new project or endeavor yields a wonderful and strange mix of emotions and feelings.  That queasy sensation in the pit of your stomach that is occasionally welcomed and sometimes dreaded.  I had that feeling when I opened my own law firm.  I had the same wonderful and simultaneuously sickening feeling during my wife’s first pregnancy – the one with the twins.  In a much different way, the same mix of fear and wonderment were there when I was arrested and taken to jail for I knew, even in those first hours, that the end of the road I was now on lay far into the future and the outcome was largely – almost totally - out of my control.

So it is with this stange mix of feelings that I embark upon this venture.  Some may read these pages as they are in the midst of trials similar to mine.  Others may find these pages while they are in the early forays onto the roads that led me to where I am today.

Which ever situation best fits your circumstance, may God use these pages to provide help and encouragement, correction where it is needed,  and a knowledge that you are not alone in this journey and that His love will never fail you.

I welcome your comments.  I covet your prayers.  I am grateful for it all.