I don't always
pay attention to special days here on the Shipslog. With
Father's Day coming up my sons have already wished me a Happy Father's day.
If they didn't, I would know they meant it. I tell my wife many
times, don't expect cards and calls on every special day from your sons,
neither has a 'sweetie' to tell them, "Hey your mother's birthday (etc) is
in three days."
You ladies seem to have a special clock that goes off to announce
special occasions. But today it is me, I am thinking of my dad. The
best man I ever knew in every respect. He was the oldest of 9 brothers and 3
sisters. He went to the 3rd grade in formal education and then he started
working full time on the family farm in the Red Hill community of North Georgia
near Toccoa.
For a few years after the
marriage to mama, he was a successful sharecropper, raising peanuts.
He dug wells by hand and learned on his own how to handle dynamite.
Neither family, mama's or daddy's were particular religious.
(Dad & Mom early in his ministry, Shelby, NC)
Like the old song Hank Williams sang, my daddy “saw
the light." He felt 'a call to preach.' He first associated with
the 'Fire-Baptized Holiness' group. Studying every spare moment and
working under older ministers, he was self-educated.
(Dad & Mom on their 50th)
His parents sold their
farm and moved to Lowell, NC to work in the cotton mills. Dad and some of his
siblings did also. While working at the Art Cloth He learned of a Bible School with the
Church of God. He attended when he could and still hold down his job at Art
Cloth.
Dad organized and built the ‘South Gastonia Church of God’. It is
still one of the strongest in Western NC.
Dad loved his people. He became
known as a very good pastor. He was not a ‘ladder climber’. Most folk know even
in church organizations, politics come into play. When we moved he never took a
larger church than he pastored. But when he left it was much larger than when
he came.
His life, his dedication instilled
in his the three sons and two daughters that lived to maturity, to call him
BLESSED. Though he pastored large churches and received good salaries, most of
it went back into HIS church. He had no savings and a very small bank account,
but at his death hundreds came, church leaders, politicians and HIS people, the
cotton mill workers. In death he was RICH, because he was a child of the KING!
Daddy is now on ‘The Other Side’. Shirl and I think of
him often. Out of the family of nine, we
are left.
Nite Shipslog
<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Ramblers, dad's car of choice!
9 comments:
A great man in what really counts.....character. His life on this earth was too short. One day soon I'll be standing in line to give him the biggest hug ever.
I can tell your dad was a good man. You are right. Rich is not what you have on you but what you have in you.
Happy Fathers day
Lisa
Wonderful tribute, my friend. The way in which you write makes me wish I could have known your dad.
Your dad knew where to store his treasures, lots of them in heaven. Wonderful honorable man he seemed to be.
Betty
Our Dad was the greatest, He was smart and had lots of patience everybody loved him. People tell me all the time what a wonderful person he was and loved by everybody. We still miss him very much.
Wonderful memories of your father. A nice nod to him on this special day. HAPPY FATHER'S DAY to you too Jack.
Your dad was a wonderful man. What wonderful memories you have. Knowing that church is still standing is a tribute in itself. Not many of us can say we've left something like that as our legacy. Hope your special day was a good one there. Very hot here.
A wonderful tribute to your Dad. Hope your day was good yesterday. We had a nice one seeing a piece of land John's oldest son bought next to Calaveras Lake near San Antonio. Then eating out at a nice place we had never been before.
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