Thursday, August 11, 2011

"MUGGED" A short Story.

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  That's right. When I was a much younger man (man being a term thrown around with reckless abandon in my particular neck-of-the-woods) I was... well, maybe not "mugged", but at least robbed at gunpoint. Experience wise, I cannot imagine there is a significant amount of difference between an actual mugging, and the fear and panic one feels at an almost mugging. Having only experienced the one incident, I am probably not the best judge. Either way, I do believe it was our assailants first armed robbery, and despite the fact that it was also mine, we managed just fine. There was a minor disagreement over what should be done with the robbee's (is that a word?) at the conclusion of the robbing, but other than that, things went as smoothly as could be expected, especially for two "first timers."

  The whole terror... gun-wielding... assaulting people... thing aside, I think that deep down, our assailant was probably a nice guy who had just fallen on hard times, or was severely lacking appropriate amounts of intelligence. Evidence thereof is that he picked, as victims two starving college students.  While I have no idea how the average hardened criminal picks his victims, I have NO doubt that even the common lawyer, or corruptus vulgaris, ranks much higher on the perspective target list than college students. I would have helped him look for a lawyer too, if he had explained what the alternative was.   Perhaps our assailant had previously been involved with a lawyer, and knew there was no way to actually come out with MORE money than when he started. Whatever the case, he never went over his target list with me and I did my best to be a suitable Robbee; despite the fact that I had little or nothing of value on or about my person.  For this reason, my assailant made off with practically nothing. You can imagine his surprise, and my embarrassment when the total value of his haul was tallied.  Provided he duped someone into buying the watch, (I think you could pick a JCM watch up on campus for less than the price of a happy meal), he may have gotten away with 20 bucks.  In fact, if he had known exactly how broke I was at the time, he probably would have offered to split that evening's "TAKE" with me.  I wouldn't have accepted of course (do you tithe stolen money?)

Anyways.... the story goes like this...

O,... To protect the innocent, names have been changed.   The young lady who happened to be with me at the precise time of said encounter shall be referred to as Darla. I will be Frank. The unknown assailant will be prosecuted if he is ever caught, and you may be whomever you wish to be. Any similarity to persons now living or otherwise, who may or may not have been in attendance at school of reference between said time period not heretofore indicated, is purely intentional and not at all coincidental. Now back to our story,...

  It was one of those fall evenings that God creates specifically for the enjoyment of happy couples, the kind of evening where young people stroll hand in hand through leaf strewn parks, or sit idly on a park bench, discussing dreams still unpolluted by reality.  The cool wind blows, not menacingly, but just enough to draw young lovers closer together. The night air is crisp, clean, beautiful. The stars are radiant, The company pleasant. One can hear the occasional voice drifting with the wind, soft enough to make itself a pleasant backdrop; yet not interfering with those lost in contemplation; of dreams, or simply one another.

  As I have already stated, I was a young college student. I was broke-  like most college students. One of the favorite pastimes of broke college students at that time was studying. Not all college students though, there being a large contingent of students, who believed as I did; studying was hazardous to your health, not to mention your social life.  Sure, It earned you good grades, but what good was that if it meant not having a single date for three years?

  Now you may see my dilemma... I was torn between my value for the company of the fairer sex, and the realization that said company generally required something I had precious little of, money. As lacking money was a situation common to the average college student, those who had preceded me at,... Ummh,... let's call it..." Jackson College of Matrimony"... had solved this particular issue by locating a place known as "Highland Village",.. a cross between an outdoor mall and a park, whose many shops would be closed at this time of night. Here they gathered for giant games of "Hide-and-seek", (yes, I said hide and seek.) strolls past it's manicured landscapes, or conversation of a more romantic bynt.

The plan for the evening had been brilliant in it's simplicity... Food immediately following service (hey, we're Pentecostal.) and then... YES!... Highland village! While my contemporaries engaged in their frivolity, I would engage in the noble pursuit of that most elusive of prey,... The female heart. I had picked a suitably attractive ( though not too discriminating.) young lady to accompany me to "Highland Village". She had agreed, whether out of sympathy or a momentary lapse in reason; we may never know. And so I found myself seated on a bench in a cozy and conveniently isolated little niche. A water fountain played in the foreground, it's melody only adding to the ambiance of a glorious autumn night. Darla sat beside me, holding my hand ever so gently, as we talked of life, and love, and dreams.

I can still hear the sounds of the game of hide and seek that night,.. the staccato of feet on concrete, the delighted laughter of pursuit.  As it faded off into the distance, I took stock of my position.... Being broke wasn't that bad! I had just spent the last bit of my meager earnings buying dinner for,... Errr "Darla." We had eaten at (Rhymes with "willie's", has a giant pepper for a trademark.) and to the best of my recollection, "Darla" had ordered the chicken finger basket.
  This show's what a great judge of female character I am, because I sincerely believe she was aware of how broke I was, and ordered the cheapest thing on the menu. It didn't matter now though, because we were finally where I wanted to be,... alone.

As we sat there on the bench, we discussed the service that night. I seem to remember that it was a fabulous service, but few other details.
Soon the conversation turned, taking on a more personal note. We talked of why we had come to this particular college,... our dreams and goals,... our hopes for our respective ministries. I remember that I was listening to Darla talk, but my mind was scarcely on what she was saying. Instead, It raced a thousand miles an hour, doing advanced calculations as to the best time to attempt a kiss. It factored in hand holding, distance to target, possibility of rejection, crunching the numbers again and again, but never coming up with a firing solution.

At first I thought Darla had picked up on my agenda,... I saw her eyes widen, jaw drop in disbelief, her grip on my fingers becoming incredibly uncomfortable. I quickly wondered about my breath... Could captains wafers cause halitosis? realizing that it was now or never, I closed my eyes, leaned in,... and "wham!"
  Actually it wasn't a wham. I cannot now recall the sound made by the"robber" poking me in the back of the head with the weapon... and for a second I had no idea what was happening. I do remember that for a second I saw stars, and It wasn't because I had gotten that kiss I wanted. As the constellations that played across the back of my eyelids faded away, I turned my head in anger to confront what I mistakenly thought was my bestfriend "Bob" playing a practical joke.

Instead of "Bob", what I saw that night made every hair on my body stand on end. The first thing I noticed was that I was staring into the barrel of a sawed-off shotgun.  You can imagine my surprise. To go directly from contemplation of a kiss, to contemplation of imminent death; is a leap no one but James Bond should have to make.   Let's just say it does a number on the "ole ticker". My heart jumped into my throat,.. For just a moment I considered engaging in what I call the M.S.P., or "Modified Stationary Panic". For those of you who are unfamiliar with the modified stationary panic; it is very similar to an ordinary panic, but with less running around, and a lot more crying.
This would have been impossible though, because Darla was now squeezing my fingers into a shapeless mass, and in near panic herself was uttering the one word that I wished I could have said,... " Jesus!" I was unable to say anything though, because my tongue had picked that precise moment to go on vacation....perhaps permanently; and without bothering to leave a forwarding address..

  All joking aside, I would like to leave you with a description of the gut wrenching, horribly sickening feeling I had at that moment. I cannot explain to you what it was. To those of you who are parents, It is very similar to when your child is playing down the hall in another room, you hear that crashing sound, and then your child's cries of anguish.  It is that gut wrenching. For those of you who are not parents,.. you know how it feels when you stick you tongue to a 9-volt battery to "See if it's still Good?" Well, If you checked 120-volt wall outlets the same way; that's not even a tenth of what it would be like.

But I digress,... So Darla is saying "Jesus..!" In a very loud ( or what seems to be very loud) whisper. It is too this statement that our rather large, bedraggled, and hygenically challenged perpetrator replied .. " Jesus Nothing,... I'll blow your head off ! " This statement was addressed to me, (unfairly I thought) even though Darla had been the one speaking. In a spray of spittle the thief then said, " Now move! and nobody gets hurt."  Using the tip of the shotgun like a cattle prod, he poked us towards a small,dark, and alley-like cleft between two shops. He forced us a few dozen steps into the alley before ordering us to stop.

For anyone who needs clarification of my mind set at this point, let me just say.... I used to love crime dramas. Dramas where the hero would at this very point have leaped upon his assailant, and beat him unmercifully about the head and shoulders. Dramas in which the perpetrator slunk away, cowering in fear, as fast as his wobbly legs would carry him. Dramas in which the hero always had a sarcastic one liner to hurl after his vanquished opponent. I had often thought to myself that I was precisely that kind of Hero.
I now found that I wasn't.

The next seconds passed in a frenzy,... I would love to play them back for you,.. but the truth is they have all jumbled together in a fusion which is equal parts terror, and the forgetfulness caused by distance and time. The main feeling however remains intact, and the things remembered I will chronicle as best I can.

I remember being told " Don't look at me!" repeatedly. I remember being ordered to hand over my wallet. ( 10 dollars and my drivers license.) I remember the thief barking at me.. " Is this it?! " his breath as violent as his prodding with the gun barrel had been. " Is this all you got?!" His question had an extremely ominous tone to it. I was sincerely afraid that we were about to be the first people ever shot for NOT having enough money while being robbed.

I remember events, but not the sequences of those events,... I remember him taking Darla's watch, ( the JCM watch previously spoken of.) Ripping my shirt open as he searched me for jewelry,.. I heard him say "Where's the jewelry?" , and Darla replied,.. " We're pentecostal!" We don't wear jewelry!" This whole time, Darla had demonstrated ( besides squeezing my fingers into mush.) a remarkable amount of reserve. The only thing she had done was pray quietly; in a voice barely audible , throughout the event.
I remember being forced to our knees, and told to face away from our assailant.I remember the way the atmosphere seemed to change, the oppressive and almost overwhelming fear. His voice had seemed to drop an octave as I heard him say... " Didn't I tell you not to look at me?!" I didn't reply.  Something in the way that last was said,.... Instantly,... I just Knew. I knew this was it. I knew I would probably meet my maker in the next few seconds.

And this I remember best.

I remember thinking,.. " So, This is how it ends?" My thoughts spun dizzily through my head, but they were simply hurried, and NOT clouded by emotion. In fact all emotion seemed to fade away, and my thinking became singular and crystal clear. I thought " Well, At least we just left a great service." That's got to be a good note to go out on, right?  And then the rush of thoughts, things that were so very important at this time, but wouldn't be remotely considered during daily life. These things were made relevant by this series of events,... but wouldn't ordinarily have carried much importance.

I wanted desperately to talk to my Mom. Tell her it was Ok. Mainly because I knew others would say the same thing to her. I knew she would acknowledge the truth of what they would say, and then cry anyways.

I wanted to be in the presence of God, in worship; on this Earth, one more time. I ached to have accomplished something that I would be able to present before his throne, (sooner now; than later!).   And to have done something with the time I had been given. And with that thought came the realization... How little I had done, how I had been selfish, squandering my life in the pursuit of me.  I prayed silently,.. denying,( Lord, How could this be your plan for me?!) accepting,... ( Well, if this is your will, Lord.. Then I'm fine with it.) Bargaining,... And it was here;.... I vowed that if by some miracle I survived, then I would be different.

I don't know exactly what happened next. Apparently, A group of people had approached the far end of the alleyway, and beholding the three darkness muted figures in the alley, had paused, squinting to make sense of the scene that was unfolding in the ominous blackness.
The thief, keying on this, abruptly bolted.  As he darted off, my tongue returned from vacation. I stood and shouted " He took my wallet! get him!" A number of the guys in the group chased after him.  In hindsight, It now seems appropriate ( though I didn't think of it at the time) to have said something of the crook being armed.  No one thinks with absolute clarity in times of crisis though, and I hope all those "Brave" guys have since forgiven this oversight.

The whole point of this story is that It is amazing how quickly we forget the promises we make, not just to each other, but also to God. This story was all but forgotten, a dusty, and ill used memory abandoned to the highest shelf in my minds library.

A few months ago, God brought it back to my memory. The event was there again in startling clarity, but more startling was the prompting I felt in my soul... " Do you remember what you promised me?"

I DO.
I remember that I vowed to make every day about HIM. I vowed to never take those I love for granted. I vowed to remember that those things that were important on my knees; Gun to my head,... staring into eternity,... are the things that are important ALL THE TIME. I would like to say that I never let that lesson slip, that I always remembered, but that would be a lie.
I forgot. For years.

Then one day, even as I prayed for something else,... for me,... God again reminded me, very gently, that it was not about those things. He reminded me, the way you entreat someone you love desperately;...to remember the things that had been important on my knees in that alley.

My relationship with Him.  My relationship with the ones I love.
What I have done with the strengths and gifts I have,... Not for my Glory, But for His.   Everything else in life is simply situational. Problems to be dealt with, obstacles overcome. But these things,... well, Time invested in them, effort poured out,... reaps astonishing rewards. Damage done to these things takes years to repair, but only moments to cause. These are the things that should always be precious, but are often forgotten in the crush of urgent, insatiable, hurried life.

I am now a career firefighter, and an Emergency Medical Tech. As part of my career, I have seen a rather large number of people pass from this life to the next. In many of these faces, I have had the opportunity to see; even as I worked feverishly to save them, these same truths welling up from the inside. I say this not to be morbid, but to point out that what is important when a human faces that great unknown, When light fades from these eyes, and rises anew on that golden shore,.... Well, Those things must be supremely important here also.

I don't know why I felt so compelled to tell this story. But I do. I tried, ( many will say in vain) to temper it with humor. I did not intend to make it about me. My aim was quite simply to remind us of what God had taken the time to remind me of twice.

Remember what is truly important, today; and every day hereafter.

Friday, April 29, 2011

"Going in for the Rescue"

 A few weeks ago, I ran into a friend of mine at the gym. As we discussed recent developments in our lives, the conversation naturally turned to our two favorite subjects: Faith and firefighting. I have had the honor of working with Thomas for a number of years @ AFD, and can vouch for his abilities as a firefighter, and as a man who aspires to serve GOD. Thomas has pursued a Theology degree, and runs a "men's ministry" that caters to firemen specifically. As we talked it dawned on me, that perhaps he might have something to share here on this blog. And so I asked him to share with us a favorite scripture and story, and it turned out into an admirable result. I hope it blesses you.


Thomas Stokes is a Lieutenant with AFD, assigned to AT-1


Jude 1:22-23
"And of some have compassion, making a difference: And others save with fear, pulling them out of the fire; hating even the garment spotted by the flesh."

“Going In For the Rescue”
So often we have long, tedious days at the fire station with the mundane, average alarm calls and the copious medical calls. We come to work and expect the unexpected. Experiencing the rush of climbing onto the fire truck with emergency lights flashing and sirens blaring. I’ve done it a thousand times and I still seem to feel the most insane adrenaline rush with my heart racing and my mind wandering, “Is this the BIG ONE?!”
For a firefighter, there are many, many, hours of training and drilling that prepare me to be a lifeline to some desperate, helpless victim. There are days and nights of wondering if this is the day that I will put my life on the line to rescue someone whom I’ve never seen or will probably never see again. Thinking, “I’m no hero; this is just part of my job.”
After a long day, my mind finally stops racing and I lay my head on my pillow to grab a few hours of sleep. I lie there hoping that my sleep isn’t interrupted this night. Then suddenly at 2am (All memorable calls seems to happen late at night or early in the morning) the lights pop on and the alarm bell blares. I jump out of bed and attempt to compose myself as if my heart isn’t about to jump out of my chest. Dispatch reports that there is a house fire and that there are persons trapped inside.  They need immediate help to escape the impending flames.
We arrive on the scene, run to the front door with all of our protective clothing on and properly secured,  pop our regulator  into our face mask so that we have breathable air, something that the surrounding atmosphere does not afford to the slowly, perishing victims. We crawl through the house in total darkness, driven only by our desire to save the perishing victims from the impending flames and to a safe place. As we crawl, we hear weak, faint cries of “Please save us, we can’t breathe!” We crawl toward the weak cry and find a mother with her child in her arms crying “Save my baby!” We hook mother and baby by the arms and pull them from the furious flames and to fresh air.
Then suddenly, it dawned on me that, “this is much more than just a job!” God has uniquely placed me in a position to emulate His love and compassion to hurt, downtrodden, and helpless people in society. Jesus Christ as our ultimate standard and example endured the cross, looking beyond His pain and reached into the fire to pull us to safety when we were in an unlivable state of sin, lost without hope.
We now have a charge to be “spiritual firefighters.” Not getting comfortable in our everyday mundane, selfish Christianity, but having compassion, “Going in for the rescue,” presenting Jesus Christ to everyone in our paths.
The tones have sounded, and we have an assignment. That assignment is this:
  
Winning souls for Christ, even when it costs us some sleepless nights!

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Thank you.

  Today I was thinking about the thank you's I've heard on the job. I'm sure that many of my brother firefighters can relate to exactly how meaningful they are, if only for their rarity. Can you remember the last meaningful thank you you heard? The way it made you feel about yourself, and what you do everyday? I can, and I'm grateful everytime someone says thank you. This is one of the more memorable thank you's I've received.

  I don't remember what day of the week it was, But It was slightly before lunch. Lt. J. Smith, David Blount, and I were dispatched to first respond to an unresponsive patient at an address on East T_____ street. We arrived to find an elderly male supine in the floor, and entering the door, we heard him take that last rattling breath.His wife heard it too, and began hysterically crying  " Cheeky- Poo!!! Don't leave me!!!"
     As she begged her husband not to go,I knelt down beside him, adjusted his airway, and looked, listened, and felt. There was no breath sounds, no chest rise, and no pulse. "Cheeky-Poo" was quickly becoming a statistic. David and I flew into action, doing what we were trained to do, and this time, we got one back. It was incredible, and the only ROSC ( return of spontaneous circulation) I had seen up to that point in my career. It was miraculous.

  A couple of weeks after the incident, "Cheeky-Poo" came by the fire station. He and his wife were effusive in their gratitude. He took pictures with us in front of the Engine, left us a hand written thank you note, and referred to us as " the twilight retreivers". It felt awesome to know we made a difference. One of the things I still remember about his thank you, is the way he kept saying " thank you for being there."

  Thank you for being there? I didn't realize until after he said it, that this was the most significant thank you of all. It encompasses more than Thank you for a specific job, It recognizes the individuals desire to step in and assist, to get involved in someone elses crisis. It says " thank you for what you are willing to do".
  Every day in the United States, men and women get up, put on their uniform and go to their respective careers in Public Safety; standing in an attitude of preparedness, ready to intervene in someone else's emergency. Whether they have a significant call or not, They were there, ready and able to assist, waiting to stand between the citizens they serve, and whatever crisis might arise. 
They seldom hear a Thank you.

    Thinking of this one "Thank you" led me to think of the ones I probably should have heard, but didn't. Thinking of those led me to think of all the times "I" should have said thank you, and again, for whatever reason, I didn't.
 How very often GOD has stepped into my personal life and intervened, and how very rarely I have been appropriately thankful!! I know he is there, on a much greater scale than we could ever be, stepping in and helping, fixing the things I can't. He has stood between disaster and I so many times... how many of those times did HE know I was thankful?
  Better yet, How many times did he know I was thankful for all the times HE's been there, waiting quietly, ( and sometimes ignored) for the next time "The Tone" went off in my personal life, and he was needed to respond? And it also occurs to me that the miracle isn't the job he does, fixing my "self-induced" disasters...
It's all the times He's been there, waiting for me to need him... The miracle isn't the work... it isn't the curing of  "a leper", but the fact that the creator of the universe would be willing to hear my cry, see my distress, and step in to touch a leper at all.

 Thank's God... Thank you for being there, and thanks for touching me.




In loving memory of David (possum) Blount. One of the best men and firefighter's I have ever met.





Wednesday, March 2, 2011

"Smooth, Bump-Bump."

Psalms 112:7 " He shall not be afraid of evil tidings: his heart is fixed, trusting in the Lord."

  It was a firefighter's worst nightmare. Out of touch with the other members of my crew, disoriented, running low on air, and now... trapped. I had no radio. I struggled desperately to control my breathing, and stave off the fingers of panic creeping into my mind. The space I was in was barely big enough to turn around in, but I had no idea where it was. On my knees, I went around and around the tiny space, searching desperately for the opening I had come in through. Sweat poured down the inside of my turn-out coat, and fogged my mask. "I had come in this space!! There has to be a way out!". Over and over, I reached up the wall surface, searching for a knob, a window opening, anything. There was Nothing. Smooth walls on four sides, cluttered floor beneath, solid wood over my head; less than 3-4 feet above the floor. Suddenly my regulator began to vibrate, a subtle warning my air was running low. I quit my frenzied searching.... stopping to think what I should do. I Forced myself to STOP, and think... and there, in the darkness and the heat, breath hissing loudly through my face piece, I remembered...
 
What I am describing is the scariest scenario for almost any firefighter. In the dark and the heat, disoriented and alone, the readout on the SCBA (self countained breathing apparatus) slowly blinking out until only the red lights glow. The structure is burning, and you are trapped...what do you do next?  We train for these moments, practicing, over and over until it becomes ingrained. In "disoriented firefighter" drills, with "blacked-out" masks, we search until we find a hose-line, feeling for the coupling. Then, repeating the moniker, "smooth-bump-bump, back to the pump.", firefighters rub their hand across the coupling, the smooth  shank of the female, and the double row of lugs where the male and female coupling meet telling them the direction to safety. They then follow a convoluted hose line through two hundred feet of "restricted" passages, entangling wires, and disorienting wall and floor formations, trying to make their air supply last until the end of the drill.  "Trapped firefighter" drills are slightly different. A trapped firefighter learns to call a "May-Day", activate his P.A.S.S. device (a loud firefighter trouble alarm, hooked to his equipment) and then conserve air until a R.I.T. (rapid intervention team) can reach him.
 
  While the drills may be different in some aspects, they do have similarities.  In both of these drills, firefighters practice making themselves STOP , giving themselves a chance to reset. If you walked in on one of our drills, with a participant frantically searching for a hose line, the two words you would probably hear the most are "STOP!!" and "Think!!"  Stopping gives the firefighter a chance to catch his breath, and clear his mind of panic,before moving on. But it also gives him the opportunity to break from whatever ineffective action he might have been taking. "Think" goads his memory into falling back on his training... and maybe saving his life.

  What is comparable between my real life scenario and the training is that a moment comes when You must TRUST.  In training, you must trust the instructor to get you through the drill.  You must trust that the drill isn't to harm you but it's for your benefit. You must trust that the knowledge is reliable and translates into actions that will save your life.  In real life you must trust yourself. At first you doubt what your mind is telling you, partially because your instincts are screaming something else. Your nervous system wants to panic, and the little man in the back of your head is jumping up and down, red faced, screaming at the top of his lungs: "RUN!!!" The questions pop into your mind, so fast they form one giant, barely cohesive doubt... "did I feel smooth bump bump or did I feel bump bump smooth?"  " It's fifty feet to the next coupling, am I going the right way?", "what's in front of me?" "DID I FEEL smooth bump bump?  Can I make it?"

  That day, I was trapped. I stopped, remembered my training, and as cool as I could muster, activated my PASS device. As soon as it went off, the most incredible thing happened. Accompanied by the sound of wood splintering under force, a shaft of light broke through the gloom. A voice called out "Who's in here?!" I scrambled for the light, and as I crawled past a "truckie", I just barely managed to mumble, " Dude!! I was stuck."   After the fire was out, I went back... I had to see.  I rounded a sharp corner in the hall and there it was, what had almost been my grave... a coat closet.  Seriously?! The heavy wood shelving had fallen down, and was wedged a little more than 3' above the floor. It was maybe 4' deep x 3' wide. The truckie's tool marks were still on the door where he had pried it open, and there was no knob on the inside - a perfect little box, 10-15' from safety.

   I was reminded of this story today because I have had some problems trusting in the recent past:  Trusting GOD, trusting myself, trusting the ones I love. But remembering this story reminded me that even if I didn't portray it as well as I wanted, that before I could be "saved", I first had to "stop" and "trust"... Trust that what I knew was still true, whether on the training ground or in real life. "Trust" that "someone" would hear and intervene.

Last week, struggling with these concepts, a most incredible woman sent me this link: http://www.jesus-is-savior.com/Books,%20Tracts%20&%20Preaching/Printed%20Books/NOP/nop-chap_03.htm ... And I sat there stunned, as I read about.... Trust.  Not just in the action of GOD, but more so in his PERSON and His goodness.  I was stunned to realize that before He could move... I had to TRUST. Isn't it amazing how much like faith, trust really is?

So there may be times where you feel trapped... don't know where to go... don't know what to do... But just as I was trained and I was reminded on that day... take some time.... STOP....THINK.....  And TRUST.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Dear God

  Last Night, I watched a movie with my girlfriend entitled "Letters to God ". While the acting may have left something to be desired, the point came across very clear. It's the story of a very real little boy, Tyler Doherty, who managed to look past his own terminal illness and pray for those around him. Tyler did this by posting (US mail of course) letters to GOD.

  As simple as it may have been, this movie started me thinking. Over and over, the scripture from John 15:13  began running through my mind: "Greater love has no man than this, that a man  Lay Down His Life for his friends." Many of us firefighters are already familiar with this scripture, and for obvious reasons...  Most of us are keenly aware that we may wake up one morning, put on that uniform... and be asked to make that exact sacrifice.  As firefighters, we have always defined our Hero's in terms of men unafraid to "face death", and that it is as it should be. I am well aware that we must be fully committed to the "so others may live" traditions that define us, and our roles in the fire service. It is who we are... It is what we do.

  But as I pondered these things in my heart the other night,.. I became aware that what impressed me most about Tyler wasn't his lack of fear at dying. It was his concern for the people around him, in the face of insurmountable issues: wanting to make sure a boy who picked on his condition knew he forgave him.. wanting desperately to play soccer one more time... It wasn't that Tyler wasn't afraid to die... It was that Tyler wasn't afraid to live.

  If we're honest with each other, then most of us would willingly face death under the right conditions, even if your NOT a fireman. Think: If someone was threatening your child or loved one? If you saw a helpless child in the roadway and could hear the screaming brake... Would you hesitate?  Probably NOT. Even if it cost you your life, dying then, is not that difficult of a premise to come to terms with. 

  But Living unafraid? That is an altogether different scenario. A thousand little concerns, worries about tomorrow.. let's call them what they are... Fears... constantly pulling at each of us. If we are not careful, their pull will drag behind us, slowly imperceptibly at first.. altering our course. To live without fear is something we are ordered to do as Christians (Matt. 10:31,Luke 12:32, Romans 8:15, 2 Tim. 1:7 ) yet it is difficult to put into practice.

  As I considered the movie again and the scripture, I began to wonder: "Lay down his life..".  Does that mean "to die"? Or could there possibly be something more to it?  Could it mean loving someone so much that you will lay down your life, your wants, your concerns, your fears, and live for them ?


Dear GOD,

  I thank you for who you are, how powerful and merciful. I'm aware that I have no right to approach your throne, and ask you anything... it is only your grace that makes room for me here.
  Thank you for always being there, for never walking away, .. even when I have let our relationship take second place to other things in my life.
   You know where I am now Lord,.. This place where I am worried about so many things, where fear of the unknown, and uncertainty about the path ahead has made me edgy and forgetful of my promise. Help me to be an example to those around me, to lay aside the fear, and lay down my life for you.

                                                                                                Love,
                                                                                                        Phillip