After two
breakdowns, we arrived in the village in the middle of the night with
nothing available to quench our thirst but local beer. Our hotel room was a
concrete cell with cots, a primitive toilet, and a spigot and bucket. Its
walls, infested with ants and a massive spider, vibrated with the snores of
a dozen other guests. We awoke at 4 a.m. to the sounds of roosters and a
herd of pigs being maneuvered into the open market next door.
Later that
day we met and worshipped and ate with Christians who had never before seen
blonde kids, and whose joy and hospitality transformed our lives. Will
developed a scorching fever during that trip, but even he agrees with Carrie
and me that we wouldn’t trade the experience for anything.
His faith
Daddy’s
faith undergirded every detail of his life. He never wasted a chance to
remind us of God’s unshakable trustworthiness.
My sister
Judith recalls the one and only time she leaped from a high dive. Terrified
of heights, she climbed the ladder and tipped herself into the open air,
clinging to Daddy’s repeated promise that he would be right there with her
when she hit the water. He was.
“I have
never gotten back on a high dive board again,” Judith says, “but I have
never forgotten what faith is—that terrifying leap into the unknown, holding
tight to that absolute trust that God will not let you sink. That’s come in
handy over and over in my life. I’ll never forget that.”
Daddy
mentored our faith at every step and prepared us for our own relationship
with God. As a minister, he understood the sacrifices that accompany God’s
calling.
My sister
Abby decided to take a year off from college to teach as a volunteer in
Amman, Jordan. As she prepared for the trip, she saw worry cloud my mom’s
eyes. She told Daddy, “I’m not going to Jordan. I can’t put Mother through
that.”
“If God is
calling you to do a job,” Daddy answered, “you’ve got to do it. He will take
care of the details. He’ll take care of Mama. Besides, she would worry about
you no matter where you were.” So Abby went, and her experience enriched the
whole family.
A couple
years later, Daddy wrote in a letter to me, “God wants you to be happy. Tell
him your desires, and he will work his purposes through the talents he gave
you. Just cut the rope, and let him guide your boat away from shore. You’ll
never regret it!”
The legacy of forgiveness
I idolized
my dad, as kids often do, but did not blind myself to his shortcomings. He
made mistakes we had to work to forgive, and his own example of forgiving
others made this easier.
My dad’s job
frequently required him to extend himself beyond what was humanly
reasonable, and he sacrificed many things in the process. Losing his health
and time with his family were the worst.
He endured
periods of great sorrow in his ministry, facing moments of slander, malice
and betrayal from some of his closest friends. Although it hurt him deeply,
it never shook him. “Why are you worried?” he would say. “God knows. We are
all his children.”
Now that we
are adults, my siblings and I have had our own letting go to do. It was not
easy growing up as minister’s kids under constant public scrutiny, and Daddy
was a lot stricter than he needed to be at critical periods in our
development. We battled a lot with frustration and guilt.
But Daddy
mellowed out as he grew older, and to his credit he prayerfully acknowledged
his past extremes. He and my mother rejected the legalism we grew up with
and embraced God’s grace. This provided us a space in which to reconcile and
grow as a family.
We expected
that forgiving Daddy would relieve the pain of the grudges we carried, and
it did. But the process also produced an unexpected effect for which I thank
God every day.
In forgiving
our dad, we opened our laps to receive blessings he had been waiting to load
upon us. Freed from
the
snags of the past, we were able to share the time of his life when he had
become more of the person he had longed to be. Had we not released our old
disappointments, we would have completely missed the man Daddy had become.
I know now
that Daddy did what he could with what he was given in a culture where
faulty legacies about manhood and fatherhood continue to be passed down.
When I looked for them, I found glimpses in my dad of the hopeful and
curious boy he once was—and always remained, deep down.
If I could
offer a little advice, find that kid in your own dad. Then nurture that kid
in the children you know, in honor of your father, so that they don’t end up
scarred by the same burdens you’ve seen.
Most dads
have left very apparent blessings. When you search through the boxes of his
life, you’ll find them. Even if you don’t know your dad, he gave you life,
and in his old age would feel proud of your talents and choices, which are
yours to make every day. Anticipate that reunion with him when all mysteries
and barriers fade.
This is what
Daddy taught us: Forgive, be forgiven, and get on with life embraced by
God’s love and faithfulness.
During his
recent hospitalization, after he had survived his first few surgeries and
was barely a day off the ventilator, he whispered: “No grudges. Only peace.
All is well.”
Daddy
narrowly survived a traumatic triple bypass in December, and after three
follow-up surgeries in seven weeks, he insisted on going home. He accepted
the hospice care and declined steadily until his death in March.
During one
visit while he still had some strength, Daddy and I discussed the details of
one of his unfinished projects, which I promised to complete for him. We
both understood that his condition would likely not improve.
As I kissed
him goodbye that day, I impulsively pressed his palm to my head, as he had
often pressed my cool hand to his own brow while he was hospitalized. Daddy
immediately grasped my head with both his hands, and prayed his blessing on
me. I shall never forget the love, acceptance and exhortation that flowed
from Daddy’s hands and heart at that moment. That blessing healed me of all
worry and doubt, and gave me permission to go on without him.
But that
prayer was not his legacy. He left that everywhere else, embedded in
all our lives and memories and faith and choices. It was his living will to
us, his children, who can now freely pour those blessings from Daddy onto
others. Unlike his physical belongings, the bequests of his living will
increase and multiply in the giving.
And those
blessings are greater and more lasting than all the bounty of the distant
mountains, and of the age-old hills.
•
Dr. Lila Docken
Bauman
teaches media, culture and communication courses at St. Louis
University. She is married and has a 3-year-old son.
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