When it Matters-An Easter Story

by Donna Poole

Reverend Bill Williamson had been retired for ten years, but today he’d stand behind his old pulpit one last time.

His mind wandered as he waited for the funeral service to begin.

How many funerals did I preach during my fifty years as pastor? My text was always the same, the one that rings out hope, John 11:25-26: “Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou this?”

He’d recited those verses when young parents had clung to him, weeping, as a tiny casket had been lowered into the ground. He’d shared it with a teenager dying of cancer.

They were verses that helped when it mattered most.

They’d been his secretary’s favorite verses. When early onset Alzheimer’s had hit her fast and furious, she’d wandered the halls of the nursing home repeating them. Word by word they’d slipped from her mind until she could only say, “I am resurrection life.”

Her family had called Bill to come when she’d been slipping away. She’d been moaning and saying, “I…I…I…”

Her daughter had been sobbing. “Pastor Williamson, I don’t know what she wants.”

“Perhaps I do.”

He’d put his hand on the dying woman’s shoulder, leaned close to her ear, and repeated, “‘I am the resurrection and the life; he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live.’”

Her eyes hadn’t opened, but she’d smiled. She’d stopped moaning, and a few minutes later she’d slipped softly through the thin door that separates earth from heaven.

He’d preach those verses at today’s funeral too.

Bill sat soberly in the chair on the platform as the organ played and tried not to rub his arthritic knee. Betty had often reminded him not to do that when he’d still been pastor here.

“It’s distracting, honey,” she’d said. “And besides, you don’t want people thinking we’re getting old, do you?”

“We are getting old, Betty.”

She’d laughed, a sound he’d loved. “Maybe you are, but I’m not.”

She had gotten old though, and quickly too. Strokes can do that to a person. She’d gone from jogging a 5k charity run at the age of seventy-five to needing help walking a single step.

“We’ve never had a patient work as hard as Betty,” a physical therapist at the rehabilitation center had told Bill.

“That’s Betty! If she’s anything, she’s determined!” he’d replied.

But when the months of therapy had ended and Betty still had no use of her right arm and limited use of her right leg, Bill had retired to stay home with her. She could no longer stay alone.

Then Betty had done something Bill had never seen her do.

“I quit,” she’d said. “I give up. Help me into bed.”

And there she’d stayed despite Bill’s pleading and prayers.

When the family had come to visit, Betty had turned her face to the wall and had refused to see them.

“Tell them I’m too tired. And close that door on your way out.”

Friends from church had come to visit, and they’d gotten the same response.

When Bill had suggested Betty talk to a therapist about her depression, he’d seen a side of his wife he’d hadn’t known existed. And Betty had spoken words he’d never heard her use.

Spring had come unusually early to Michigan that year. By March it had been warm enough to open the bedroom window for few hours some afternoons. Bill had pulled back the room darkening drapes and let fresh air and sunlight into the room.

Betty had shielded her eyes. “Close that window! Close the… whatever you call those things. The bedspreads. Too bright.”

Bill had turned so she couldn’t see his tears. It was time for tough love. He’d left the window open.

He’d left the room and prayed.

It became their afternoon ritual. Sometimes she’d called the drapes the shower curtain, the sheets, or the bathrobe. She’d begged for darkness. Sometimes Bill’s prayers had been tears; that had been all he could manage. He’d run out of words.

He’d begged her to look out of the window. “It’s beautiful, honey. Spring was always your favorite time, remember?”

Once again, his normally sweet wife of fifty-five years had cussed him out finishing with, “I don’t care about spring now. I don’t care about anything, Bob!”

That’s the first time she’s forgotten my name. Is she getting worse? Staying secluded like this isn’t going to help her get better. Lord, help; what am I going to do?

Bill kept opening the window and letting light into the darkness. A few times, by early April, he’d noticed Betty pushing herself up on one arm and looking out of the window. As soon as she’d seen he’d noticed, she’d turned her face to the wall and closed her eyes.

One mid-April day, Bill had opened the window, and Betty hadn’t shouted at him to close it. He’d been surprised but hadn’t commented. As he’d been leaving the room she’d asked, “Is that the blue wings I hear and the spring peepers?”

“Yep. The red wing blackbirds have been back for quite a while and the frogs started singing a few weeks ago.”

She’d nodded. He hadn’t said anything else; he’d been afraid to push it. He’d been closing the door when she’d asked, “Will you help me get outside?”

“I’ll get the wheelchair.”

“No! If I have to use a wheelchair, I won’t get up. You! You help me. What’s your name? I forget.”

‘I’m Bill, your husband. Of course, I’ll help you.”

She’d giggled and he’d almost collapsed from shock. “You ninny! I know you’re my husband. I just forget words sometimes.”

They’d only gone as far as the bench on the front porch. She’d sat there silently for half an hour, sometimes lifting her face to the sun.

Then she’d reached for his hand. “I’m sorry.”

He hadn’t tried to hide his tears. “You don’t have anything to be sorry for.”

“I do. I’ve been so angry at God and at you. And mostly at myself. I wanted the old me back. I’ll try to get used to the new me, but it’s going to take a while. I think I’d like to talk to that therapist you mentioned.”

Bill had put his arm around her and had pulled her close. “I’ll be with you every step of the way.”

“I love you, Theodore.”

“And I’ll love you forever. Honey, tomorrow’s Easter. Would you like to go to church?”

“I’m not up to that yet.”

“That’s perfectly fine. But we could listen to the service over the radio from the church parking lot. Remember, that’s as far as it broadcasts.”

“Okay. If you’ll help me walk to the car.”

“I’ll help you walk anywhere.”

And he had. For the next ten years they’d walked together, a bit farther each day. She’d grown stronger and more alert, though she’d never regained use of her right arm. Her right leg had remained a bit weak, and when doctors had suggested she use a cane, she’d laughed and pointed at Bill.

“I’ve got one.”

They’d been inseparable, and she’d always held his right arm with her left.

God had given them ten more good years together, years they’d shared with family and friends, years of love and laughter.

One April day Bill had taken Betty to the doctor for her annual physical.

“I don’t have another patient your age with such good blood pressure, oxygen level, and muscle tone. I doubt you’ll ever have another stroke,” the doctor had said.

They’d celebrated with a long walk in the park, sat on the bench, and thanked God for their many blessings.

He’d leaned over and kissed her cheek. “Have I ever told you how much I’ve loved having you hold my arm all these years? I love helping you walk. I’d walk you to the ends of the earth if I could.”

Betty had laughed, a sound he’d loved. “I’d love to walk to the ends of the earth with you and keep walking right on up to heaven. But now you’d better help me get home. It’s Thursday, and with all the family coming for Easter dinner, we don’t have much time to get everything ready.”

He’d been helping her up from the park bench when she’d slipped limply from his arms. He’d known it was a second stroke before they’d told him.

The family had gathered for Easter, but Betty hadn’t been there. She’d been celebrating her first Easter in heaven. They’d talked about the funeral, and Bill had said he’d wanted to preach it.

“Dad, I’m not sure that’s a good idea,” his son had said. “Are you sure you’re up to it?”

“I want to do it for your mom.”

And so here he was, rubbing his knee, waiting for the service to begin. He was going to try to follow Betty’s instructions; they’d talked about their funerals.

“If you preach mine, keep it short,’ she’d said. “Remember what Mark Twain said. He doubted any sinner ever got saved after the first twenty minutes of a sermon.”

He’d laughed. “Yes, dear. Any other instructions?”

“Yes. Keep it about Jesus, not me.”

Bill had four pages of notes for this funeral tucked in his worn Bible. He thought he could finish it in twenty minutes, maybe a half hour. Suddenly, he realized it was silent in the church and everyone was looking at him. How long ago had the music stopped?

He stood and walked behind the pulpit. For the first time Betty wasn’t in one of the pews. He knew she wasn’t in the flower covered casket at his feet either; she was with the Lord, and she was forever young and strong again, but he was still here. He wasn’t young, and he wasn’t strong.

Bill hadn’t cried since Betty had died, but the tears came now. Tears come when they want; they have a mind of their own. He opened his Bible. He opened his four pages of notes. He tried to speak.

Instead of his carefully crafted sermon he could manage only two verses, spoken between sobs: “John 11:25-26: Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou this?”

It took the funeral director a minute to realize Bill had finished preaching. He ushered out everyone but family. Bill apologized to his children.

“I’m sorry; I should have listened to you and had someone else preach. Anyone could have done a better job.”

“Dad, what are you talking about?” his son asked. “Mom would have loved that sermon. It was perfect. Those are the verses that help when it matters most.”

Bill took a deep breath. “They do ring out hope, don’t they?”

His son hugged him.

And then Bill lined up with the pall bearers to carry Betty out to the graveyard behind the church.

“Dad, what are you doing? There are enough of us to carry the coffin. You don’t have to do that.”

“Please, let me. I’ve been helping your mom walk everywhere for the last ten years. I told her I wanted to walk her to the ends of the earth.”

As Bill walked through the grass carrying Betty’s casket, he thought of the Martin Luther quote he’d meant to use in his message but hadn’t been able to because of his tears: “Our Lord has written the promise of resurrection, not in books alone, but in every leaf of springtime.”

Spring was late that year. Bill heard the frogs sing. He caught a flash of a red wing blackbird and remembered when Betty had called it a blue wing. And he smiled.

Photo Credit: Kimmee Kiefer

What He Heard

by Donna Poole

What were the first sounds Jesus heard?

Perhaps it was the soft bleating of a lamb, the whispered love of His mother, or a Jewish blessing from Joseph. He surely heard awe and joy in the rough voices of His first visitors, shepherds from a nearby hillside, whose hearts were overflowing with wonder at this Savior in a humble manger.

As Jesus grew, He heard the familiar sounds of saw and hammer in the carpenter shop where He worked with Joseph. I wonder if He loved the beautiful things He made with His hands in that shop, even though before He’d chosen to limit Himself in a body, He’d created the stars of the universe just by the breath of His mouth!

Jesus heard lovely things in His short life; the crashing of waves on the seashore where He loved to walk, the quiet sounds of mother robins singing babies to sleep, the night sounds of owls hooting in the trees.

He heard the fluttering wings of tiny sparrows and taught us God the Father cares about each little bird that falls to the ground. He noticed the rustle of the lilies swaying in gentle breezes and preached about a heavenly Father who dresses flowers in beauty and can take care of us.

Jesus heard sad things. Cries for help; pleas for mercy, and sobs of the bereaved—Jesus heard all of these.

Jesus heard terrifying things. He listened to the crazed sounds of demons and the voice of Satan himself and emerged victorious and unsoiled.  

Noise, Jesus heard noise. Crowds of 4,000 and 5,000 clamored with need; yet He often made time for just one voice. He held a quiet conversation with one woman at a well that transformed an entire city.

Jesus heard what no one else did. He always listened for words too deep to be spoken. When a sinful woman washed His feet with her tears and dried them with her hair, she couldn’t say a word. But He heard the prayer of her tears and answered, “Your sins are forgiven.”

When crowds of people surrounded Him in Jericho, Jesus saw a short man, a tax collector, and a cheat, who’d climbed a tree just to catch a glimpse of Him. The little man never said a word. Jesus heard his unspoken need and changed his life forever.

Jesus heard His Father’s voice. He went alone to quiet places where He heard only the sounds of nature. There, He prayed, sometimes all night.

Jesus heard praise. What joyful sounds surrounded Him on the day we call Palm Sunday! As He rode into Jerusalem, shouts echoed through the streets. “Praise God! The Messiah is coming!”  

But Jesus knew what was really coming. The people weren’t going to accept Him as their king, their Messiah; quite the opposite, and He needed to prepare. It would be the spiritual battle of His life and could be won only by prayer.

Jesus loved to pray in the Garden of Gethsemane, but He wasn’t enjoying the beautiful sounds of nature His last night there as He begged His Father for strength to endure.

Jesus heard the hostile crowd coming before He saw them, swords and staves clanging, feet stomping. Then he heard the treacherous words from a man He loved, one of His own disciples betraying Him for money, “Hail Master.”

Jesus felt the traitor’s kiss.

That was the sign Judas had given Jesus’ enemies. “Grab the one I kiss; He’s the one you want.”

Grab Him they did.

The sounds Jesus heard next were sounds from hell; blows to His face, clothes being torn from Him, a razor-sharp whip whistling through the air and cutting into His back. The sound of a crown of thorns being pounded into his head.

And then came the blood thirsty cry of the crowd; “Crucify! Crucify! Crucify!”

Jesus heard His own labored breathing as He struggled to carry His cross up the hill, until He fell under its weight, and they forced another to carry it for Him. Then came other horrific sounds: the pounding of nails into flesh, the tortured screams of the two being crucified with Him, the jeering of the crowd.

Finally, after an agony of suffering, Jesus heard His own victorious shout, “It is finished! Father, into thy hands, I commend my spirit.”

And then, blessed, sweet, peaceful silence.

“All night had shout of men and cry/ Of woeful women filled his way; Until that noon of sombre sky/ On Friday, clamour and display/ Smote him; no solitude had he, No silence, since Gethsemane.

“Public was Death; but Power, but Might,/ But Life again, but Victory,/ Were hushed within the dead of night,/ The shuttered dark, the secrecy./ And all alone, alone, alone/ He rose again behind the stone.” –Alice Meynell

Then came Resurrection Morning.

Jesus didn’t have to wait to hear the grating sound of the stone being rolled away to leave the tomb; He was already outside. Joy had washed the world with newborn glory! Did Jesus breathe the fresh air and rejoice in the songs of the birds He’d created?  

Jesus heard a woman weeping; His dear friend Mary Magdalene was sobbing because she thought He was dead. Through her tears He showed her a brighter rainbow of hope than a weary world could ever have imagined in its wildest dreams.

“Jesus lives!”

Oh, my sweet Lord Jesus, you still hear all our voices; hear my voice now. You said you died for sinners, so you died for us all. You took our sins into your own heart on that horrible cross; you felt our guilt and shame and paid what we owe.

 “The wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.” –Romans 6:23

I took that gift God offered as my own in a short prayer of faith many years ago. It was a simple child’s prayer, but He heard it!

On this Resurrection Morning we call Easter Sunday, I read the promise of my own resurrection not just in God’s Word but in every springtime flower. I fall to the knees of my heart in joy, and I sing today! I want Him to hear it!

My praise is so imperfect; I stutter and stammer, and sometimes tears shorten my song to just a word. But just as a mother loves to hear her baby say his first, “Mama,” God loves to hear even my broken notes. And so, through all the seasons of my life, I sing.

Jesus heard everything when He walked our planet; He hears everything now. What’s He hearing from us?

Lord, sadly, our country church has no choir to praise you this year, but we join our hearts with millions of others to make a magnificent cantata. Do you hear the music, Lord? This Easter your people are singing your praises all over the world! I hope the sound is sweet to your ears!

“God sent His son, they called Him, Jesus/ He came to love, heal, and forgive. / He lived and died to buy my pardon/ An empty grave is there to prove my Savior lives.

“Because He lives, I can face tomorrow. / Because He lives, all fear is gone. / Because I know he holds the future, / And life is worth the living/ Just because He lives.

“And then one day, I’ll cross that river. / I’ll fight life’s final war with pain. / And then, as death gives way to vic’try, / I’ll see the lights of glory and I’ll know He reigns.” –William J Gaither and Gloria Gaither

The End

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Corners Church: https://amzn.to/36ImxOj

If the Creek Don’t Rise: Corners Church Book 2 https://amzn.to/3jqarv2

Tale of Two Snowpeople: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09GJKG83R

Photo Credit: Kimmee Kiefer