Monday, December 26, 2016

Giving Precious Gifts

One of my favorite giving stories happened many years ago at Linda’s parents’ home.  The family had gathered, including my young nieces Jennifer, Natalie, and Christi, all married and mothers now.  Basil, Linda’s dad, thought Jennifer, his oldest granddaughter, was old enough to wear a watch, so he had bought her one.  She opened her gift, and burst into a big grin and hugged Basil in thanks.  While Jennifer was bursting into a grin, her younger sister, Natalie, was bursting into tears.  She watched Jennifer open her watch and, with trembling lip and watery eyes, came to Basil and said, “Granddaddy, you didn’t get me a watch?” In that moment, Basil realized that he’s made an honest mistake.  He didn’t think Natalie was old enough to care about a watch, but he forgot that she was old enough to feel left behind by an older sibling.  “Of course I have a watch for you,” he answered in a moment of inspired generosity, as he took his watch off of his wrist and gave it to her.  I don’t know if she kept it or if Basil later exchanged it for one like Jennifer’s, but I do know that when you love someone, you’re willing to give them what you treasure. 

When the Wise Men met Jesus, their reverence for Him, their love for Him, compelled them to give Him some of the most precious things they had. 

(Matthew 2:11b) Then they opened their treasures and presented him with gifts of gold and of incense and of myrrh.

I know that many gifts have been exchanged today in the circles of family and friendship.  That’s a beautiful part of the Christmas experience.  But if you have that hunger in your heart for Christmas to make a bigger difference in your life, then let me ask you a question, as I ask myself,

What precious gift have you given to Jesus?


If you’ve found Jesus for yourself, if you love Him with all your heart and soul, if you strive to follow Him as the Lord of your life, then you will give Him the most precious gifts you have.  What you give Him changes your life.  

Thursday, December 22, 2016

God Ships Before We Order

I was driving to a Christmas program where my friend, Don Grant, and I were to share some music of the season.  My cell phone rang, displaying a number I did not recognize with an area code from out of state.  My first thought was to let the phone ring and let the caller leave a message.  So many calls from unknown callers end up being robo-marketing calls or wrong numbers.  For whatever reason, I decided to answer this one.  The caller identified himself as Kenneth, a missionary with Baptist Medical and Dental Missions International.  Kenneth serves at the Thomas Herrington Bible Institute in Honduras, a school that trains Honduran pastors to serve Honduran churches.  Kenneth said he was calling me because he heard that I have been known to bring or send a guitar to Honduras that doesn’t make the return trip.  The guitars I take are given to a local pastor whose church doesn’t have any musical instruments for worship.  Kenneth said that one of the pastors at the school had recently started a new church in a very poor area and had no instruments for their worship services.  He wondered if I could find a way to send a guitar for this church as soon as possible.  I let his request sink in for a moment, then I answered, “Kenneth, the guitar is already on the way.”  Three months before I received Kenneth’s request, I had put a guitar in the hands of a pastor who is going to Honduras with a mission team in January.  I told Kenneth I would be sure the guitar got to him so he could give it to this student.  In God’s great plan and provision, the guitar was on the way before the request for it was made.  God ships before we order. 
For the past four years, I’ve undertaken a mission project I call “One-Way Guitars.”  Not surprisingly, I chose a name with a double meaning.  The guitars travel one-way to Honduras because they are given to churches in need.  The guitars are also “one way” because they are sent for the purpose of helping local churches lead people to Christ, the one way to salvation. 
The guitars I send are used instruments donated by people who have a guitar in their home that is not being used.  I receive these donated instruments, make small repairs and adjustments to them, equip them with extra strings, guitar picks, a guitar strap and an electronic tuner, and take or send them to Honduras.  I couldn’t imagine that so small a gift could have such a huge impact upon a church or bring such encouragement to the pastors of these poor congregations. 

If you have a guitar that you’re not using and want to send to the mission field, I hope you’ll contact me at deevaughan@standrewsbaptist.org. You can know the joy of equipping a church to worship Christ and spread the good news.  

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Don't Walk Past the Gift

I enjoy playing tricks with Christmas gifts.  I like to disguise packages.  I give clues without giving away the secret.  I add rocks to the contents of boxes to make them heavier.  But of all the Christmas present tricks I’ve played, this one is my favorite.  I bought Linda a necklace as a Christmas present and was preparing to wrap it and put in beneath our tree.  How boring! I thought.  I had a better idea.  I took the necklace out of the box and took it to our daughter Elizabeth’s room.  Atop her book and toy shelves sat a collectible doll--a doll which she was not, at her tender young age, yet allowed to touch.  I put the necklace around the doll’s neck, in plain view, and waited to see what would happen.  Linda walked past that shelf and that doll and her necklace many times every day, but saw nothing.  Every day I waited for a telephone call at work from her, declaring her great discovery, but she continued to see nothing.  Finally, Christmas came and she opened the little jewelry box.  Inside it was a card which read,

I'm sorry that this box is bare,
But Elizabeth's doll had nothing to wear.
See the doll shelf for your gift. 

Finally, she walked to the shelf, examined the dolls and found her gift.  I was amazed at how she walked past that doll time after time and never saw that it displayed a gift for her.  Linda is not alone.  Many of us do that very same thing with the entire Christmas season.  We may not walk by our Christmas gifts from each other and not notice them, but we will do something far more tragic.  Many of us will walk through the season and never see the gift it offers us from God. 

In Luke 2, we read the story of Mary and Joseph taking the infant Jesus to the temple to dedicate him to God.  As I think about their journey to the temple, I imagine how many people saw this little family en route to Jerusalem.  Joseph, Mary and the infant Jesus came face to face with hundreds, perhaps thousands of people on that trip, but none of them, not even the priests in the temple, saw this baby for who He really was, a gift of hope from God.  No one that is, except a man named Simeon, and a woman named Anna.  They are singled out in the story as those rare persons who saw much more than the dedication of a child.  They saw, in the face of Jesus, the gift of God’s salvation.


May we not walk through life and never see the gift it offers to us from God.  May we, like Simeon and Anna, be counted among those who have eyes to see the gift and hearts ready to receive it and rejoice.  

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

A Thanksgiving Story

I was working in my office at the church when my telephone rang.  Jo Henson, a member of my church, had an urgent request.  “Dee, could you come to my house right now!  I need you.”  Jo lived within a block or two of the church, so I arrived at her home within minutes.  Having heard so much excitement in her voice, I didn’t know what to expect. 

Jo met me at the door and led me to her den, where she sat down and said, “I just have to tell you what happened to me today. You know I’ve recently finished chemotherapy treatments for cancer.  While I had that medicine in my system I couldn’t eat.  Nothing tasted good to me.  But today, my friend Carolyn brought me some homemade potato soup and, Dee, it tasted good!  After months of everything tasting like medicine, I enjoyed my lunch today.  I asked you to come here so we can thank God for that wonderful soup together. 

That day, my friend Jo taught me the meaning of thanksgiving.  Thankfulness isn’t about how much you have.  You don’t feel gratitude because life is easy.  Thanksgiving happens when you see God’s goodness in small things and praise Him in a big way. 

May you, like my precious friend, Jo, experience true thanksgiving.  May you see God working through little things to bless you in big ways. 


Thursday, November 10, 2016

See God in Life's Good Gifts

When my Andrew was a little boy, he had a favorite blanket he always wanted at bedtime, nap time, or when he was feeling uneasy about life.  This blanket, along with his folded first finger, had seen him through many anxious moments and had ushered him into many nights of restful sleep.  I don’t suppose Andrew couldn’t remember a time he didn’t have that blanket.  He probably didn’t think too much about where it came from, though he certainly knew when it was missing.  So did the rest of the world! 

Then, one day, at a Furman football game, Linda and I crossed paths with a dear friend.  Lottie had been a member of the church we served when Andrew was born and had personally made that blanket for him.  She had stitched his name and birth date into it and had added many other beautiful touches to it.  Our children were with us that day, so I saw the opportunity to make an important introduction. 

Andrew, this is Ms. Lottie Caldwell.  You know your favorite blanket?  She’s the one who made it just for you. 

Andrew looked up at Lottie in wide-eyed amazement.  I didn’t know if he was going to say “thank you” or take off his shoes and fall to the ground.  But he moved to a new level of understanding that day, a deeper level of maturity.  Now, he not only knew the blessing of a good gift.  Andrew also knew the giver of the gift.  He not only had a cherished resource.  He had a relationship with the one who had given it. 

Your life and mine are filled with good things.  We value them.  We enjoy them.  We sometimes think or talk about being lucky or fortunate.  But the Bible teaches us that life’s good things can lead us beyond themselves.  They can introduce us to the giver of the gifts.  James teaches us…

(James 1:17) Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows.


When you know that every gift points beyond itself to a Giver, then you can see God in all of life’s good gifts.  

Thursday, October 13, 2016

Gifts from Aleathea

Wednesday, I traveled to Greenville, NC, going the long way to avoid many areas still flooded in the aftermath of Hurricane Michael.  I made the trip to be with my Cousin Greg and offer my tribute to a truly great Christian lady, my Aunt Aleathea Hester.  



 I’m honored to be here and to play a part in remembering and giving thanks for the life of my Aunt Aleathea Hester.  I can’t remember a time when she wasn’t in my world and a part of my life.  The family that surrounds you and supports are such a part of you that you don’t think about how much they’ve given you until they’re gone.  These past few days, since learning of her death, I’ve been thinking about my Aunt Aleathea and the wonderful gifts she’s given me.  I want to tell you about three of them today.  First, my Aunt Aleathea gave me…

A Second Home

Cousin Greg
As Greg and I were talking by phone, he said, “Ronald, you and I grew up almost like brothers.”  That was certainly true.  Almost the same age and interested in many of the same things, I spent many a day and night at Uncle Bill, Aunt Aleathea and Cousin Greg’s house.  He spent some time at my home too.  What I remember about those many visits was the wonderful hospitality I experienced every time I was in their home.  I was welcomed.  I was cared for.  I was cherished as part of their family. 

I felt as much at home with them as I did anywhere on earth.  And a great part of that was my Aunt Aleathea.  Her heart and her home were always opened to me.  She always made me feel welcomed and special.  And that never changed.  Through the years, after the Hesters moved from Greenville, SC to Greenville, NC, every time I was able to visit and be in her presence, I always felt special, I always felt her love, I was always at home. 

As I became an adult and began to see my family with more mature eyes, I received another precious gift from Aleathea,

An Example of Devotion

My Uncle Bill was a strong man and a hard worker.  You could always count on him to do what he promised and to do things right.  But in the later years of his life, his health weakened and he faced much pain and many physical problems.  He suffered with terrible back pain that no surgery or treatment could totally relieve.  As part of his Hester inheritance, he was prone to skin cancer and needed multiple surgeries to keep that disease at bay.  Hurting as much as he did for as long as he did, let’s say my Uncle Bill was never nominated for Patient of the Year.  But through all of his trials, my Aunt Aleathea was there for him, there with him, there supporting and loving him every step of the way. 

She was the same if Bill was having a good day or a very hard day.  She had that inner strength that kept her constant in her love for him, her devotion to him, and her encouragement that he could overcome his problems and tomorrow could be better than today.  She brought to life the words of Paul when he wrote,

Love is patient.  Love is kind.  Love always believes, always hopes, always perseveres.  Love never fails. 

In a world where so many people measure their lives by convenience and personal space, my Aunt Aleathea gave us a beautiful picture of self-giving devotion and a Christian commitment to marriage.  We honor her for that today. 

These are precious gifts, but the one I treasure most is…

A Story of Saving Love

For most of my life, I had known that Aleathea had a bad back.  People would ask her about it from time to time.  She might mention it when it was particularly painful.  From my childish perspective, I just figured that it was one of those things which happens to old people when they hit their thirties.  I was sorry that she hurt, but my understanding of her pain went no further than that.

          Years later, when I was visiting my aunt and uncle, the subject of her back came up again.  But this time, as she told me of her discomfort, she asked me a ques­tion, "Do you know what happened to my back?"  I seemed to remember that she had fallen or some­thing, but this was not enough.  If I were to understand what her suf­fering was all about, there was something more I needed to know. 

          Aleathea realized that I was old enough to hear the whole truth about her pain, so she sat me down and told me this story.  When I was just an infant, she came to my home for a visit.  She had me in her arms as they walked out of our back door.  Suddenly, her feet slipped out from under her.  There was no time for thought.  There was no time for anyone else to help.  All that she could do was react.  Her love for me and her desire to protect my young life caused her to hold me up above her as she fell.  She kept her body between me and danger while her back crashed down five concrete stairs to the bottom.  Her back was permanently injured, but I was safe and sound. 

          I sat and listened to that story in amazement.  I felt a great gratitude for what she had done and had a deeper love for her because now I understood the purpose of her pain.  What had happened to her had happened for me. 

          The love Aleathea expressed that day has become for me a powerful picture of the love Jesus has for each of us, the love that led Him to the cross. 

          Jesus bore the penalty of our sin.  Isaiah was given a glimpse of the meaning of the Savior’s suffering when he wrote,

          (Isaiah 53:5a)But he was pierced for our trans­gressions, he was crushed for our iniquities...

          Just as my aunt placed her body between me and the destructive force of falling down concrete stairs, Jesus placed him­self between us and the penalty of our sin.  He was pierced by the pain of sin that would have stabbed my soul.  He was crushed by the consequenc­es of my sin which would have crushed me for time and for eternity.  He bore the penalty of my sin.  Jesus lifted us up that we might live.  Isaiah continues,

          (Isaiah 53:5a)...the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed.

          Just as my aunt held me up that I might be kept alive and whole, Jesus suffered and died upon the cross in order that, through faith in him, you and I might be lifted up, to live in peace with God, to be made whole. 

          My Aunt Aleathea is in heaven right now, I truly believe, because she placed her faith in Jesus Christ, the one who lifted her up to give her eternal life. 


Where is Aleathea Hester?  She’s not in this cemetery.  She’s gone home.  And she’s alive in hearts like mine she blessed with precious gifts of love.  

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Hammering Out a Joyful Noise


Today, I played a part in celebrating the life of Richard McAbee, a member of Woodruff First Baptist Church, a church I served over twenty years ago.  I shared this story among my memories of Richard, a great discovery he made and taught me. 

In 1989 I traveled to Pineville, West Virginia, with a group of men for the purpose of building a church.  While we were there, we began each day with a time of devotion led by one of the men.  One of the first mornings of our trip, a member of our group, Richard McAbee, shared a thought which fed our souls and guided our work for the rest of the week.  Richard read the one hundredth Psalm to us, the psalm which begins,”

(Psalm 100:1) Make a joyful noise unto the LORD…

This was a scripture passage we all knew very well.  But as he shared his thoughts on that passage, he opened our eyes to a meaning fit for the moment.  Richard said,

"I have never been talented in music, so I have never sung in a choir.  I haven't been able to make the kind of joyful noise to God which some people can.  But it occurred to me as were working last night to build this church that the sounds of the hammers and the saws and the staple guns must be a joyful sound in the ears of God.  Work done to glorify God makes a joyful noise.” 

Richard's thoughts found a home in our hearts and became the theme for the rest of our week.  Every time God's people use their talents in a way which honors Him, their work is an act of worship, a holy offering, a joyful noise unto the Lord. 

Have you made a joyful noise lately?  

Note: This story is included in my book The Stories of My Life.

Saturday, September 3, 2016

Remembering Uncle Leland

I’m deeply honored to be asked to play a part in this service, to reflect upon the life of one of the most remarkable men I’ve ever known, my Uncle Leland Vaughan. 

Leland was only seventeen when I was born, so he was the young cool Uncle.  My first memories of him are sitting in his lap on the sofa in my grandmother’s living room, running my fingers through the Fuller-brush flat top college boy haircut of his and seeing that smirky mischievous smile on his face.  That haircut didn’t stand the test of time, but that smile became his signature. 

Leland’s life was a many-splendored thing.  I hope you identify some of the ways his life blessed you as I name some of the qualities I so enjoyed and admired. 

Leland was a genuine friend.  He knew that one of the great blessings of life was making and keeping close friends.  Leland had friends from college, friends from banking, friends from golfing adventures; circles of friends he made time to be with regularly for more than 40 years.  His life can teach us that joy and peace are found in people, not in things.  He challenges all of us to be friends who love at all times. 

Leland was an ambassador.  Almost every person I’ve met who’s visited Edisto knew my Uncle Leland.  I often called him the Edisto Ambassador.  You couldn’t walk through the pro shop at the golf course without him greeting you, getting to know you, and sharing a couple of good stories with you, fact or fiction.  The initiative he took in meeting people and the interest he took
in them having a great experience at Edisto flowed out of one of his core beliefs he repeated to me several times:  “Ronald,” he said, “you’ll go a long way if you just treat people like they matter.”  I don’t think Edisto will ever have a bigger fan or a more effective promoter. 

Leland was a natural entertainer.  When you were with him, you couldn’t help but have a good time.  He had a way of talking to you, listening to you, and sharing with you that made you smile and laugh and feel better about yourself and about life.  So often, when Leland’s friends got together, he was the emcee of the event.  He could write a skit or tell a story that would have you rolling on the floor.  He used that stuffed whatever it is, Charlie, in some incredible antics.  Just a few weeks ago, at the big Saturday night concert he conceived and brought together, as sick as he was, he wrote much of the material that kept the event fun and flowing.  Leland had a gift for enjoying life and leading others in doing the same.  His example invites all of us to enjoy each day of this brief beautiful journey. 

Leland was a mentor.  I’ve met people from many places who’ve told me that some of the most important lessons they learned about business, about banking, about customer service, about life they learned from Leland. 

My dad, Leland’s oldest brother, died thirty-five years ago, leaving my brother, sister and me, two young adults and a teenager, without the fatherly coaching we needed.  Leland was always ready to help.  When Linda and I were given the opportunity to move out of a church-owned parsonage and build our own home, Leland guided me step-by-step through the process of securing a mortgage.  Not surprisingly, the lender we worked with in Spartanburg knew Leland and had played softball with him a few years earlier.  I know that my brother and sister could add numerous stories of times we called Uncle Leland or he called us, and helped us through a tough time.  In fact, one of the few times I knew I’d made him mad was when I went through a tough transition from one church to another and didn’t call him.  The next time I saw him, he said, “Yeah, Ronald, I had to hear about what happened from someone else.  I wish you’d called your Old Uncle.  I’d like to have helped you if I could.”  I deserved and appreciated that correction. Leland’s wisdom and strength will live on in me and so many others to whom he was a mentor. 

Leland was a trickster.  Some of my earliest and most vivid memories of my Uncle were of him getting me into trouble.  I bet many of you have similar stories you could share and even more you wouldn’t share in this particular setting.

When I was just a preschooler, our family was outside Atlanta’s Cyclorama, the rotating Civil War attraction, when I informed Leland and my other Vaughan Uncle Harry that I needed a restroom.  Instead of taking me to the facilities, they encouraged me to, shall I say, desecrate a flagpole outside the attraction.  He repeated that story often. 

I was still a preschooler when Leland sent me to the bedside of my ailing grandfather to ask him a question which sounded fine in a preschooler’s mind.  Years later, when I learned the actual metaphorical meaning of what I’d asked, I realized that question was, shall we say, not very nice.  Then, I understood why my grandfather looked at me the way he did before he answered.

One of my favorite Leland shenanigans happened on a trip to Las Vegas.  Leland had a friend who bore a striking resemblance to George Burns.  This man, a widower, didn’t get out a great deal, so Leland and his buddies invited him to go with them on the trip.  In fact, they bought him a new pair of glasses for the trip, just like the ones George Burns wore at the time.  George Burns was performing in Las Vegas when Leland and the gang arrived, so they made the most of it.  Several times, Leland or another front-man would enter a nice restaurant, ask for a table and, when turned down, add that “Mr. Burns was hoping to dine here tonight.”  Let’s just say they ate well that week.  In fact, Leland reached Burns’ manager and got the real George and the fake George together for a conversation and a photo-op. 

A few years ago, Leland called the Chick-fil-A customer care line and somehow got my brother, Barry, on the phone.  Barry works in quality control and new product development in the Atlanta corporate office.  Leland, taking on one of his many personas, told how he was traumatized by finding a feather in his Chick-fil-A sandwich.  Barry didn’t recognize his Uncle’s voice for a while, and very patiently and professionally explained that the company’s chicken processing practices would make that highly unlikely if not impossible.  Leland then raised the volume of his complaint, now protesting that Barry was calling him a liar.  This went back and forth for a while before Leland broke into laughter and Barry knew that he’d just been initiated into a big club; those who’d been had by Leland Vaughan. 

Leland knew how to get you and make you glad he did. 

Leland was free.  I was in a restaurant with Leland in Atlanta.  My Uncle Harry, who had recently retired from Georgia Tech, was found to have pancreatic cancer and was only hours from death.  We sat there eating when Leland began thinking out loud about the brevity of life and the danger of delaying your pursuit of the life you want to live.  He said,

Ronald Dee, I’ve been playing the game for a long time and I’ve won a pretty good stack of chips.  But there has to come a time when you go to the window and start cashing in those chips.  Your Uncle Harry waited too long to do that.  Your daddy died before he got to enjoy what he’d worked for.  I don’t want to make that mistake.

Not too long after that, Leland told the bank where he’d worked since his graduation from PC that he was retiring and moving to Edisto.  He later told me how strange he felt when he held his final bank paycheck in his hand.  But he also told me that he never felt more alive than when he turned the page and began that new chapter of his life.  Leland was free to choose how he wanted to live. 

As a pastor, I envy another expression of Leland’s freedom.  He told me that when he left banking and moved to the island, he had attended his last committee meeting.  He was ready to help his church and his community in any way they needed, but he was not spending another minute sitting around a table trying to figure out what to do.  He was free to choose his life and live his life as he believed best.  What a challenge to all of us. 

Leland was family.   He never spoke to me that he didn’t ask about my wife, Linda, about our children and grandchildren, about my work, and about my happiness.  He got after me when I didn’t call often enough to check in. 

Every time I spoke to Leland, face to face or by telephone, he told me how proud of and grateful for his own family he was.  I’d hear about my Aunt Anne, the beautiful work she was doing and the fun they were having.  He caught me up on Mike and Bryan and Kelly and David.  You four came into Leland’s life in different ways, but he loved you all just the same.  I never heard him refer to you as natural or adopted or make any other distinction.  He was your dad and you were his beloved children.  And, of course, Leland loved to tell me about his amazing grandchildren.   He glowed with joy when he talked about you.  During one of those two-way family updates, Leland gave me one of the greatest words of advice I’ve ever heard about being a parent.  He said,

Love your children.  Pray for them.  Coach them when they’ll let you.  But don’t worry about them.  Worry doesn’t help and it’s a waste of life.

I saw Leland’s devotion to family so clearly when his mother, my grandmother, suffered a stroke and had to leave her home in Mauldin to receive nursing care.  Leland moved her to Greenwood, to a facility near his workplace. He visited her several times most every day.  At one point, he fed her every meal she ate.  He made sure she was receiving the best of care.  And he listened to some of the most heartbreaking questions a son could hear.  As Ella withered away in that bed, a little at a time, she often asked Leland, “Why is God leaving me here like this, Leland?  Why won’t the Lord take me home?  I’ve asked Him so many times!” I don’t know every answer he gave his mother, but I know he sometimes said, “Mama, some mansions take a long time to get ready.  God has something very special He’s getting ready for you.”     

When she died, I saw Leland standing by her casket with a pained expression on his face.  He walked over to the window and staring outside asked, loudly enough for me to hear, “Why did she have to suffer like that?”  I didn’t tell him then, because I didn’t see it then, but I told him later what I believed.  I said,

“Leland, none of us could see God glorified in the way Mama suffered.  But we did see God’s glory in the love that surrounded her.  Your daily care for your Mom gave meaning to the final chapter of her earthly life.”

We Vaughans have lost the ringleader who brought us all together.  Leland taught us how to be family.  Let’s honor him and bless each other by doing that. 

Leland was a grateful soul.  When Leland learned that he had stomach cancer, one of his friends asked him if he was angry that sickness struck him so suddenly and severely.  As he related the story to me, Leland answered,

What I feel is thankful.  I’ve lived for 76 years with perfect health.  I’d never been in the hospital before this happened.  I’ve been to countless places I never thought I’d see and done so many things I couldn’t have imagined I’d do.  I don’t want to be sick.  I certainly don’t want to die, but I have no complaints.  I’ve had a great life. 

 Leland did have a great life.  And his grateful soul allowed him to see that and cherish it and praise God for it and come to the end of it with thanksgiving.  I want to live like that.  When my time comes, I want to die like that.  And that leads me to the most important thing I can say about my Uncle Leland. 

Leland was God’s child.  I was on my way home from church and had pulled into the Walmart parking lot when my phone rang.  I saw Leland’s name and quickly took the call.  He wanted to tell me about how things were going.  He was beginning to see that he probably wouldn’t overcome his cancer for very long.  My Uncle was a deeply feeling man but not often openly emotional, but as our conversation began to wind down, his voice began to crack and he said, through his tears, 


I’m going to fight this every way I can, but I want you to know that however this turns out, you don’t have to worry about your old Unc.  I’m good.  The Big Man and I have everything worked out.  When the time comes, I’m ready. 

I’ve shared many reasons why I loved and admired my Uncle Leland, but this makes all the others pale in comparison.  Leland knew he was God’s child, through his faith in Jesus Christ.  And now, God has welcomed His beloved child home. 

Thank you, Leland, for your remarkable life.  You didn’t waste the journey and you were a blessing to us all. 

Thursday, August 18, 2016

What Would They Say?

Wednesday, I was sitting on the platform of St. Andrews Baptist Church, leading my fourteenth funeral of the year.  As I sat in my chair behind the pulpit, I witnessed something truly touching and, for me, soul-searching.

We had come to the part of the service designated in the program as a "Family Tribute."  I sat and listened as, one at a time, each of the deceased man's three sons came to the pulpit and shared grateful memories of their dad.  Each one saw his dad in a unique way, but they were in perfect unison in their admiration of their father's character, awareness of how much he had shaped their lives for good, and appreciation for how blessed they were to be raised by such a remarkable Christian man.

As I sat and listened to the thankful remembrances of these three sons, questions began to flood my mind.  "What if this were my funeral and my own three children had risen to speak?  What would they say?  What would they remember of the life we've shared?  Has my example led them toward the fullness of life or away from it?  Would they see their dad as a success in the things that matter most, or a failure?  Would they be able to say honestly, 'I'm glad you were my dad?'"  

Father's Day was two months ago, so I know I'm not writing this to lobby for a bigger gift.  The gift I received during that funeral service was a greater awareness of how the reality of death awakens us to the realities of life.

What would those close to you say at your funeral?  You may not want to think about it, but it's not a bad way to take inventory of your life.

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Your Verse in the Song


Sing to the LORD a new song, for he has done marvelous things; his right hand and his holy arm have worked salvation for him.   
                                                                                   Psalm 98:1

Imagine that I asked you to write a new verse to a great hymn of faith like Amazing Grace or How Great Thou Art.  This is exactly what the scriptures call us to do—to add a new verse to the old old song of God’s saving love.  

Along with singing the old verses that tell what God has done in ages past, you and I are to sing our new verse, telling those around us what God is doing in our lives and our world today.  It’s not enough for us to talk about what the Apostle Paul said, or great scholars have said, or our parents have said, or even what our church has said.  We must sing a new song, sharing with others that God is alive and at work in us. 


What is your verse of the song?  Can you put it in words?  It may be your most effective witness you can share with those who need to know Christ.

Are We Poisoning Our Children?

This is one of my favorite family stories that got me thinking about one of the great issues of parenting.  I hope you enjoy.  This story is included in my book, The Stories of My Life. 


Are We Poisoning Our Children?

As I pulled into the driveway of the Vaughan house, all seemed to be well. I was home for lunch as was looking forward to some time with my family.  I entered the house and said hello to Linda, then asked my usual question, "How was your morning?"  She got right to the point. 



          "I just got off the phone." 

          "Really, who did you call?" 

          "Poison Control."  

          At this point I stopped looking at Linda and started looking for Joshua. "Is he all right?" I asked urgently.  "What did he take?"  

          "Your son," she answered (he is always my son when he does things like this) “ate a raw pork chop.  I called Poison Control to see if he was in danger.  Dee, they don't have a category for poisoning by raw pork chop, that is, until today. Your son has made history."  

          The anxiety of that moment along with the thought of raw pork in Joshua's stomach took away our appetites.  But we were truly thankful that he was all right because we knew that poisoning can take away much more. 

          Our experience with the raw pork chop is funny, but anything which threatens to poison our children is no laughing matter.  I remember the families of Love Canal who realized too late that contaminated soil and water were poisoning themselves and their children.  Many became ill.  Some died.  We can only imagine their heartache.

          I know that you care for your children.  I care for children too, yours and mine.  That is why I need to tell you some disturbing news.  Many of our children are being poisoned.  What makes this news even more alarming is that they are being poisoned by us.  Many of us, without even knowing it, are poisoning our children.  Our unhealed pain poisons them. 

          Parents who suffer from addiction to drugs or alcohol poison the future for their children.  Children of alcoholics often spend their lives in emotional numbness, afraid to relate to others, distrustful of their own reactions, living by the lie that if they had been good enough mom or dad would not drink.  They often become perfectionists who never see themselves as quite good enough for anyone to love. 

Parents who have suffered physical or emotional abuse and never come to terms with their problem pass this poison on to their children.  If their parents whipped them with words and told them that they were useless, then they will, in turn, whip their children.  If they saw that their parents dealt with frustration by beating the kids, then they often do the same.  Parents who were sexually abused often see themselves as dirty and vile and treat their children like tramps.  The abuse of the past, if not owned and overcome, often poisons the future for the children.  They do suffer, to the third and fourth generation.

Some of us grew up hard and poor.  We came to believe that life was found in the possessions we did not have.  So we committed our lives to gaining things in hopes of finding happiness.  Our endless battle with materialism can, if we do not end it, poison the lives of our children.  We try to give them the happiness we never had by giving them the clothes, the home, the car, the money which we never had.  And in the process of trying to make peace with the poverty of the past, we make irresponsible, irreverent, monsters of our children. 

Some of us feel a sense of guilt over a lack of achievement.  We were not the star athlete, the star pupil or the beauty queen, so we felt that we were nobody.  If we bring those feelings into our relationship with our children, then we will make them slaves to our unfulfilled dreams.  We set standards which are so high that they cannot achieve them--nothing but A's, nothing but championships, nothing but the best from you will do.  And when we poison our children with our need to achieve through them, they grow up believing that they will never be good enough for anyone to love them. 

          Apathy is a spiritual poison, the poison of just not caring about spiritual things.  Some of us who are parents are not faithful to God and his work through the church.  Some are unfaithful because they were beaten by guilt and condemnation in church as a child.  Others may have felt embarrassed or rejected by the church.  Others feel guilty because they know that their lives do not live up to the call of Christ.  But whatever the reason, whatever unresolved pain we carry from the past, it will poison our children.  They will look at us and come to believe that God and his kingdom simply do not matter.  They will pass through this church and never make a saving commitment to Jesus Christ.  If we, as parents, fail to answer the call to discipleship, then we poison our children and hinder them from answering the call to salvation. 

          This is troubling news, almost too hard to bear.  What can we do?  When your child takes some pills or even eats a raw pork chop, you call poison control for help.  What can we do when we know that our children are being poisoned by our pasts? 

          I believe that God wants to do an awesome work in you and me.  He wants to get the poison of the past out of your heart.  I believe that he wants to get it out of your home.  I believe that he wants to get it out of your child's future.

          How will he do it?  I cannot answer that for you.  If you are not a Christian, he wants to begin by entering your life through your faith in him. If you are marginal in your relationship to the church, he wants you to find the healing of faith and fellowship which the church can offer.  You may need the help of a counselor or a support group.  But all of these steps in the right direction begin with a commitment: 

          With God as my Savior, the sin of my past stops here.
          With God as my healer, the pain of my past stops here.
          By the power of the forgiving God, the guilt of my past stops here. 
          By the grace of God, I will break the cycle of sin and pain and punishment.

          With God as my helper, I will never again poison my child.  

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Write Living Letters

2 Corinthians 3:1-4

Are we beginning to commend ourselves again? Or do we need, like some people, letters of recommendation to you or from you? 2 You yourselves are our letter, written on our hearts, known and read by everybody. 3 You show that you are a letter from Christ, the result of our ministry, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts. 4 Such confidence as this is ours through Christ before God.

My dear friend, Harriet, and I, working in two different places, were each trying to get things organized. 

Harriet had set aside the day to tackle the job of cleaning up and cleaning out a small building that sat behind her home.  This wasn’t a storage building or a workshop, as most of us think about a workshop.  This small building was the place where her now deceased husband would go to study the scriptures and write his sermons.  Doug was truly a masterful preacher.  A tall strikingly handsome man, his voice had a unique melody that few could trace to his Canadian roots.  Week after week for thirty years, he had filled the pulpit of the church I had come to serve.  Doug was a great pastor to follow.  He was my friend.  He was my encourager.  He was my helper every time I asked.  When I didn’t ask for help, he never once intruded.  He, like our own Fred Miller, could’ve written the book on how to support your successor. 

Now Doug was gone and the time had come for Harriet, his wife, to sort through the things in his backyard study.  She looked at the rows of books shelved along the walls.  She thumbed through stacks of notes on the desk, sermons in progress, ideas for future messages, verses and quotations that struck a tone in Doug’s heart.  As Harriet took inventory of all that surrounded her and all that it meant, she noticed a cardboard packing box pushed back under the desk.  What could this be?  What would she do with what she discovered? 

When Harriet opened that hidden away box, she found it stuffed full of awards and recognitions, the kind of things you might find displayed in an office or a living room.  She pulled them out, one by one, and read and remembered each one. 

·        Here was a plaque given to Doug to thank him for serving as the President of the South Carolina Baptist Convention in 1988-89. 

·        Crammed in next to it was an award from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary congratulating Doug on being chosen their Alumnus of the Year.  

·        The Medical University of South Carolina had given him a framed certificate for serving on their Board of Visitors. 

·        Baptist College at Charleston, as it was then known, offered him a gift of gratitude for serving as a trustee, and as the chair of the trustees during days of challenging change. 

·        Anderson College, too, gave him a thank-you gift for serving as trustee. 

·        In the box were two honorary Doctor of Divinity degrees, one from Charleston Southern University and the other from Furman University. 

This box was stuffed with plaques and certificates, engraved gifts and awards, the kind of recognition that marks a great career and celebrates a life invested in the church and community.  Then why, you might wonder, were all these symbols of accomplishment packed into a box and pushed back under the desk in Doug’s backyard sermon factory? 

To answer that question, you need to remember that Harriet was not the only one working to get things organized.  A few miles away, I sat in my study at the church, reading through a sweet and sacred stack of stories.  A few weeks after Doug’s death, I had invited people in the church and community to send me stories about Dr. Baker; their fondest memories of his life and their personal testimonies of the scope and depth of his ministry.  I had the idea that we would take a few excerpts from these written tributes and publish a special edition of the church’s newsletter to share the stories.  I frankly wasn’t prepared for the response I received.  Well over one hundred people responded to my request, some writing a sentence or two and others writing pages of heartfelt gratitude for Doug and his ministry.  This overwhelming response promoted me from the writer of a newsletter story to the editor of a book. 

Picture this: a box full of the symbols of success and accomplishment were hidden away in Doug’s backyard study while my desk was covered with grateful memories from more than a hundred people.  What does that say about my friend’s life?  And what does it teach us about how to live? 

Spend Your Life Writing Living Letters

In Paul’s second letter to the church at Corinth, he told them and us the goal of his life.  He didn’t want or need the praise or approval of those in positions of influence or power.  He wasn’t seeking any kind of credential for his position in the church or any evidence of the value of his ministry except for one; the difference he was making in the lives of people.  His mission was to make a mark of truth and love and grace on the hearts of those he served.  And, in return, the changed lives of the people Paul served made a mark upon his heart, giving him the assurance that his life’s work mattered to God and to others. 

The awards Paul cherished were lives changed by his ministry.  The people he touched and changed in the name of Jesus were the living letters that gave joy and meaning to his work. 

Today, we have honored two of the wonderful people with whom you and I have the joy of serving.  We gave Fred and Sharon new titles today.  When I say that, I almost imagine them kneeling before the Queen of England, being touched on the shoulders with a sword, and being told to rise as Sir Fred and Lady Sharon. 

But that’s not what we’ve done at all.  What we’ve said, in this small way, is that you have written the words of life and love upon our hearts.  We, and many others in many other places, are your living letters.  And we hope that knowing that will do for you what it did for Paul—give you the sense of fulfillment and joy that comes from investing in the lives of people, in knowing you have made a beautiful faithful enduring mark on each of us. 

To be a minister, I’ve learned, is to have a front row seat from which to witness the many scenes of the drama of life.  I’ve held babies on their first day in this world and held them up thank God for a new miracle.  I’ve sat with children as they “talked to the preacher” about giving their lives to Jesus.  I’ve shaken hands with hundreds of graduates to congratulate them on their accomplishments and express the church’s blessing as they move forward into adult life.  I’ve stood with couples as they pledged their love to one another for a lifetime.  I’ve sat with families in principal’s offices, courtrooms, and hospitals in moments of crisis.  And, more times than I can count, I’ve stood by the bed of a saint as they finished their earthly race and have gone home. 

As I’ve witnessed the final hours of life, I’ve seen what truly matters to those who know they will soon go home. 

·        I’ve never heard someone ask to see their college transcript or their university diploma. 

·        No one has cried out to hold a trophy one more time. 

·        Not a person has spent life’s final hours admiring an investment portfolio. 

·        I can’t remember anyone asking to be rolled to the window so they can look out and see their favorite car with the boat on a trailer behind it.  

·        Never has a dying person asked me to comfort them by reading their resume.

What do they want?  What do they need?  What do they now see so clearly as the crowning achievement, the enduring impact of their lives? 

Surround me, they say, with the people I have loved; the people who have loved me. 

As my mentor Doug and the Apostle Paul and Fred and Sharon can teach us today,
The words of praise that truly endure and inspire are engraved upon human hearts. 
May we learn that lesson and live it.  May we spend our lives writing living letters.