Dad is interesting. The son of an older father, whose
grandfather was the son of an older father, his family tree appears to be
missing a couple of generations. Although it seems incredible, Dad’s great
grandfather was born in 1807.
As a result, my father’s family had very old roots. It’s values and its stories came from the
earliest times of American society. So he was born with an ancient soul.
He lived on a small strip of inhabitable land beneath the
shelter of the Alleghenies, in a tiny village called Chesapeake. It is built on
the banks of the Kanawha just barely beyond sight of the much higher
elevations where his family lived a generation before. He swam perhaps before
he could walk but at least soon thereafter.
He farmed when his hands were able hold a hoe. He learned to read the
forest floor and knew what animals had been there and when. He learned which
berries, roots and leaves people could eat.
Like his father, dad became a contemporary Daniel Boone, as
much at home in the woods as in town.
To me, Dad will always smell of sassafras. Although he
became a polished, urbane minister, my favorite image of him will always be of
him returning from the mountains with game, or from the river with fish. And, every year, he brought paw-paws and
sassafras in from the woods.
I didn’t learn those lessons. They already seemed a part of
our family’s distant past, when those old folks buried up on the mountain had been
alive, back in the days before Lincoln. Dad connected me to that past and loved
telling me about it. It just seemed so quaint and remote to a kid growing up
ducking under desks to protect himself from Russian bombs.
We moved into Charleston when I was young. Nearly every week
we visited Chesapeake and Marmet. It wasn't far. However, those few miles took us into a different world. There were Syrians, Greeks, Jews and Chinese in the city; even a few Presbyterians! In those days, people tended to live in their
own ethnically defined community, so school was the place where you met those other
kinds of people.
Dad thrived there, in Charleston. Although he never stopped wanting
to farm and hunt, he knew he had to adapt to a rapidly changing world. So he
started a business to support himself as he pastored our small church. When the church
kept growing, he sold his business.
Perhaps it was time for a stable, predictable life.
When I was in my teens, Dad decided to move to South
America.
People move around a lot now. They didn’t then. It would
have been a shock had he said we were moving to Maryland or Pennsylvania. But Ecuador? That might as well been the dark side of the moon! Moving there would involve
learning a new language and eating God knows what. But I suppose for Southern
West Virginians, if you are going to move out of the state, you will have to
learn a new language anyway – it might as well be Spanish!
That’s how, in the spring of 1969, my mom and dad took three
children out of the Appalachians Mountains and moved them to the Andes.
My dad started learning our new language right away. He began
preaching in it as soon as he knew enough words to get his point across. He made
business acquaintances. He met government officials. He started schools. He
helped clinics get established in Indian villages. He organized communities of new Christian
believers. He worked tirelessly to help younger people rise out of poverty and
ignorance. He purposefully and openly ignored all forms of class distinction,
which he despised and taught us to despise.
Twenty years later, now in his fifties, Dad returned to the
United States. He and my mother had no home. They had spent their savings
building churches and schools. They had
to figure out how to fit back into a country that had changed more radically
than they had imagined.
Dad began by starting a church in West Virginia.
Then, he began planning churches among immigrants. He
believed Anglo-Saxon Christians were not noticing the many opportunities for
the gospel among the nation’s newest peoples. So he went to work to make a
difference.
As they build countless congregations, my dad and mom lived
modestly. They stayed out of debt. They invested what they could. They rejected
the growing madness that minsters of the gospel should display
conspicuous wealth.
So, when dad retired, well into his seventies, their modest
home was nearly paid for. As he has repeatedly told me, “I don’t think I will
be a burden on you kids. I think I have things pretty well planned out to take care
of us.”
And that has proven to be true.
Dad is eighty-one now. His hearing is challenged. He has had
a serious bout with glaucoma.
Nonetheless, every morning after prayer he cleans up,
dresses up, and goes to work. Sometimes he is busy writing articles or books.
Sometimes he is repairing something in the house before it breaks. Sometimes he
is taking a trip to speak or meet with someone who needs encouragement.
But here is the takeaway. My dad tried to teach me all sorts
of lessons I couldn’t seem to learn. I may have been stubborn. Maybe I was
wired differently. For whatever reason, I have not learned nearly as much as I
could have. So, in a dozen different ways, Dad is a much better man than I am.
However there is one thing I have learned from Dad. It may be life’s most important lesson: never stop growing.
In many families, the children are gradually forced to
parent their parents.
That hasn’t happened in our family. It is not likely to
happen. My dad is still a step ahead, still growing, still thinking things anew.
He still tries to figure out why young people think differently than he. He wants to know what he can learn from them as well as teach them. He tries to understand new
technology and then uses it. He likes a challenge. And he really doesn’t like it when people
discourage others.
Not long ago, some people were grumbling about our president.
Some of them got pretty passionate. Dad remained silent. After a while he said, “This new
president is terribly young and he has such a heavy burden. Maybe we should just
pray for him.”
Well. What does one say after that?
It has been hard on Dad to accept his hearing loss. It was really a
difficult day when someone told him he should learn sign language. But after a
few weeks he told me, “Well, I figure its just another language to learn. I’ve
done that before. I can do it again. Besides, do you know deaf people have
their own culture? God probably wants me to care for people in that culture. If
that’s what He wants, I’ll need to learn that language. We just do what we
can.”
Those are the components of Dad’s greatest lesson to me: Keep
moving. Keep growing. Don’t get trapped in a particular era or a particular
stage of life. Grieve things that are passing and then adapt to the way things
have changed.
When I think of an example of a life well lived, I think of Dad,
a mountain man who became a citizen of the world.
I am proud of all his accomplishments. But to me, he will
always smell of sassafras, fresh from the forest; a gift from a man with roots who
learned the importance of both stability and adaptability for living a wise, meaningful and
holy life.
2 comments:
What a great tribute to a wonderful man. We knew him many years ago. My husband Maurice DeFord preached a revival for him in Charleston at Open Door. He also taught at WV youth camp for three years when your Dad was responsible for choosing the teachers. Wonderful times. It was good to read his family history. Thanks for the story. Great lessons for all of us.
I am glad I ran across this and I will tell you their is much wisdom to gleaned from your Dad.
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