Never Forsake a Friend!

Never Forsake a Friend!

Proverbs 27:10 – “Do not forsake your own friend or your father’s friend…”

alice's bibleAn unexpected package was delivered to our house this past week from a lady we have never met in person (unless you count when Joe was a little, tiny baby). We wondered what this dear woman had sent to us. Her name is Alice. She was a member of my father-in-law’s church in Tampa, FL, in the late 1950’s. Over the past fifteen years since the death of Joe’s dad in 2002, we have received notes and Christmas cards from Alice. In addition, every year at Christmastime she sends us a Texas Apple Pecan Cake or a world-famous Deluxe Fruit Cake sent from the renowned Collin Street Bakery, that opened in 1896, about 50 miles from Dallas, TX. (If you must know, my favorite is the fruit cake.  I googled how many people like fruitcake and it appears that about 20% of people do indeed like it, so I’m not that weird. I’m also in the 10% of people who are left handed, so being left handed must be weirder than liking fruitcake.)

So back to Alice’s package. We couldn’t imagine what she would have sent to us at this time of year. She once sent a check with a note for Joe to use the money to buy a suit. (That was such a blessing at a time we could not afford one and Joe really needed a new one!) And over the past couple of years, she has been a faithful supporter of Joe’s discipleship ministry to pastors and leaders in Moldova and Uganda, as well as in the US. Cakes only come at Christmas and those are shipped from Texas with a kind note from Alice. This was in a brown cardboard package directly from Alice addressed in her own handwriting.

Well, when we opened it, our eyes filled with tears, as we unwrapped a precious and thoughtful gift – Alice’s well-worn, marked-up with many notes, red leather Bible from many years ago. On a purple sticky-pad note, Alice wrote, “Dear Bro Joe, Couldn’t dispose of these things-thought you would like them. Love, Alice.” Wow! We wouldn’t have been more blessed if the package had contained a $1,000 bill. WE were overwhelmed with Alice’s love and thoughtfulness in sharing her life and memories with us.

Tucked inside the worn Bible were some precious hand-written letters from Joe’s mom and dad to Alice and her late husband, Oscar. In reading the letters, we learned that Oscar came to know Jesus after Alice had prayed for years and after Joe’s parents had left the church in Tampa. One letter, postmarked July 2, 1965, was written in Joe’s dad’s handwriting from his church office in Green Cove Springs, FL.

Apparently, Alice had contacted Joe’s parents to let them know that Oscar had become a Christian. The letter was in response to this good news.  Pastor Joe Olachea, Sr., writes, “We are so glad to hear about Oscar receiving Jesus Christ as his very own personal Savior. Praise the Lord, it is an answer to prayer and all glory and praise unto Him who has loved us and given Himself to redeem us by His precious blood. Glory!” The letter follows with an encouragement to Oscar to continue walking with Jesus and letting Oscar know that some booklets were on the way to help him to grow in Christ.

We were overwhelmed as we looked through the other pieces of paper, pieces of history really, tucked in the old red Bible. Alice’s wedding announcement with her picture as a beautiful, young bride. Obituaries for Oscar, Joe’s mom, Ermina Rose Olachea, and his dad, Dr. Joe R. Olachea. A news clipping about the funeral of Dr. Lester Roloff and three others who died in a plane crash in 1982. (Dr. Roloff was a friend of Joe’s dad and a well-known evangelist in that era.) There were poems by Mrs. Ruth Narramore, whose husband shared Jesus with my father-in-law when he was in junior high school. There was a poem called “My Pastor” by Essie Hunter and a couple of tender, hand written love poems, one by Alice’s son to his girlfriend and one about Alice’s sister who died at age 17. What a precious gift we received from the friend of Joe’s father! Proverbs 27:10 rings so true, “Do not forsake your friend or your father’s friend.” What we would have missed if we had not regarded Alice’s friendship when she reached out to us in 2002.

Even though we have not met Alice in person, she holds a very special place in our hearts. And even though we haven’t seen her face to face, she is like family to us. Through her notes and her gifts we have learned some things about Alice.

  • Alice loves Jesus.
  • Alice loves her family.
  • Alice loves her pastor and his family.
  • Alice prayed for her pastor.
  • Alice prayed for her family.
  • Alice loves us.
  • Alice prays for us.
  • One day we will meet Alice in person when we are all with Jesus.
  • Alice is a lady who shares God’s love with others.
  • Alice is an encourager.
  • Alice is a generous lady, who obeys the Lord.
  • Alice is not rich, but Alice is “rich” in love and good works!
  • Alice is a friend of God.
  • Not only was Alice our father’s friend, she is our friend.

I took the liberty of looking through the Bible Alice gave to us, to see what Alice had marked in the book of Proverbs.

If you would like to see the verses that Alice found to be significant, please click here  and subscribe to the ProverbWise: Wisdom Calls! newsletter. When you do,  I will send you a pdf list of the verses in Proverbs that I discovered in looking through her Bible. May these verses encourage you as they encouraged me.

Thank you, Alice, for your love, your prayers, and your generous and precious gift. We will treasure it always, and we look forward to meeting you one day in the presence of Jesus with your Pastor Joe and his loving wife, Ermina Rose, and your beloved Oscar! You are indeed a virtuous woman who fears the Lord and is to be praised! May your good works praise you in the gates!

Women of Wisdom Who Influenced My Life – Part 2


woman-553429_1280Rumor had it that our pastor and his wife would be coming up to our summer youth camp for the day. This would be an opportunity to see my pastor’s wife in a different setting than at church. My family attended a very large church in south Florida with several thousand members. In my eyes, my pastor’s wife was like the “queen” of the church, the “first lady” of the congregation. She always appeared so elegant and refined. She was very quiet and reserved, and I really did not know her on a personal level. So this would be an opportunity to see what she would be like outside of the church – in a rustic camp setting with mosquitoes and woods and screened-in camp buildings. My youth pastor’s wife wore jeans, went swimming with us, and waterskied on one ski. She was fun to be with, just hanging out with us because it seemed like she actually enjoyed being with us. She would laugh until she cried or worse, but I could never imagine our pastor’s wife having as much fun or being as relaxed as Pat was. I hoped I would get to say hi to her when she came, although I was really quite shy and not sure I would have the nerve to actually go up and talk to her.

I was hanging out with my friends near the lake when I saw her. She was wearing her dignified looking dress, pantyhose, and high heels, walking toward the dock and then stepping gracefully into the boat. How did she do that? How could I ever be like her? She was so perfect! So dignified. So sophisticated. I could never be like her!

By the time I got to high school, my family moved from south FL to NC, and I mourned the loss of my life at my church and school in the Miami. I felt lost in this completely different culture in the mountains of NC.

For a while our family lived in a rural town of about 1,500 people, where we attended a very small, country church, probably no more than eighty people in attendance. The pastor’s wife was nothing like my pastor’s wife in FL. She was a busy mom of four, a full-time public school teacher, and not at all sophisticated, maybe even a little unkempt. She was from Pennsylvania, a place I had never been and had a strange accent that seemed weird to me, although not as weird as the NC mountain accent. She was the total opposite of my genteel, reserved southern pastor’s wife in FL. This pastor’s wife was more outspoken and always on the run, not anything like I thought a pastor’s wife should be like, based on my naive childhood experiences…And her house was old, kind-of-run down and messy. I know this because her oldest daughter was my age. We became friends and attended school together. Their house was totally not what I thought that a pastor’s home should be like. I wondered about this small town pastor’s wife and why she didn’t know things like this about being a pastor’s wife. I just didn’t understand her at all!

We didn’t stay long in this small mountain community before moving to Asheville, where we attended another church. This church was much bigger in comparison to the little church we had just left, but much smaller than my FL church. But it was good to be back in the city, even though a small city and even though I had to live through the cold winter with snow. Nothing like Miami or Hollywood, Florida, where I had come from, but the church was definitely a little closer to what I was used to. Right from the start, we began attending Temple Baptist Church on the main street going into town. The church sat high up on the hill above Patton Avenue, overlooking the K-Mart parking lot down the hill off to the right. Above the church was a large car dealership with a gigantic Indian statue standing tall, marking the location, a landmark beckoning people to come and buy a car. Whenever you needed to give someone directions to the church, all you had to do was mention that giant Indian. Everyone knew where the Indian was. (Kind of like Mr. Bill’s down Route 73 on the way to the Jersey shore.) The church was a large brick traditional structure and inside the auditorium, I finally felt like I had come home. I loved my new church. The pastor had a Hispanic name and spoke with a bit of a Hispanic accent, which after living in Miami with Cuban neighbors and a best friend from Puerto Rico, made me feel like I belonged. It took me forever to remember how to say my pastor’s last name. It was a name I had never heard before. A few years later I learned that there were only twelve families in the US with that last name. I recall sitting in the service each week for months, reading the name in the bulletin, and racking my brain trying to remember how to pronounce it.

The pastor’s wife was a very quiet and reserved lady from Wisconsin, but she was warm and had a sweet smile. She sang in the choir and sometimes she played the piano for the services. She had one little boy at home and two sons in college. Her daughter was married and had two little girls of her own. Her husband was in the Navy and they lived in Jacksonville.The pastor was an excellent preacher with challenging sermons, studying through books in depth. I especially remember the book of Romans, which he began preaching through on Sunday nights soon after I came to the church. When I came home from college after my freshman year, he had only gotten to Romans chapter eight. He stayed in chapter eight until I got married a year later, if I remember correctly. But I can quote much of Romans 8 today, mainly because he started each sermon on Sunday night by having us to turn to Romans 8 and beginning in verse one he would begin reading, “There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus…” And so it went.

I learned a lot about what it meant to be a pastor’s wife from observing my pastor and his wife during my final years of high school and into my college years. One lesson I learned was actually from my pastor. One day my sister and I were very upset about something that had happened at church. My sister was younger than me and had a beautiful singing voice. Sometimes she would sing a solo and I would play the piano for her. One day she sang and held the microphone, instead of using the pulpit mike. As it goes in church, for those folks who have attended church for any length of time, people have their own ideas as to what is appropriate in church and what is not. No matter whether it is biblical or not. If people have an idea of what they consider right or wrong, they feel very free to share their opinion and expect your compliance. Asheville was an extremely traditional place to live at the time, and one person thought it was not appropriate for a girl to hold a microphone while singing. I think she implied to my sister that it looked like she was singing in a bar or something. (My sister was thirteen at the time and not at all worldly looking or acting. Michelle was merely holding the microphone so that her voice could be heard.) So of course we were upset and we went to our pastor to talk to him about it. He gave us some very wise words which I have never forgotten and which have been much needed and heeded through many years of ministry. He said,

“Girls, if you’re going to be in ministry, you’ve got to have skin as tough as a rhinoceros.”

Little did I know at that time, that one day my pastor would be my father-in-law and my quiet, gentle pastor’s wife would be my mother-in-law. As much as I had dreamed of being a pastor’s wife, I did not start out married life as a pastor’s wife. But, I do remember my soon-to-be mother-in-law telling me something one day. It was really quite out of character for her to be so open about something like this, because typically she chose her words very carefully. She was a very private person and tended not to say anything that might reveal personal information regarding someone else or even her own her opinions. She did not push her children toward any specific career or academic field, nor did she seem to have pre-conceived notions about what her children might do when they graduated from college. Getting advice from her was challenging, even when I asked directly for her wisdom on a matter, whether it was about raising my kids or how to handle situations at church. She usually listened carefully and responded with an “Oh…” (a Wisconsin thing, I think). I think in her quietness she allowed opportunity for me to answer my own questions. Then she was say something like, “Well, we will pray for you about that.” But this once, she told me something that she had not even told her son. My soon-to-be husband had spoken for a youth meeting or something, and we had talked about how well he did speaking. At that point, she told me that she felt sure that the Lord was going to use him as a preacher or pastor one day. She knew God had a special plan for his life. Since she did not say anything to him about it, I didn’t tell him for many years, until after he became a pastor.

When we first got married, my husband was a Christian school teacher and a coach. He had dreams of becoming a college basketball coach someday. His hero was Dean Smith of University of North Carolina. He learned everything he could from watching Carolina games coached by Dean Smith and attended coaching clinics at UNC Chapel Hill. Joe was really great coach! He could have accomplished his goal of becoming a college basketball coach, but after a few years of teaching and coaching, he came home and told me, “Coaching is not it! I believe God is calling me to preach.” His mother’s prayers and my dream was becoming a reality.

Almost thirty-five years later, I am forever grateful to my Lord for allowing me the privilege of being a part of the Olachea family – being a daughter-in-law of Pastor Joe and Ermina. I learned so much from being part of this loving family for all these years. What an example they were to me in their lives at home and at church. One of the most important characteristics of their lives was their consistency, living exactly the same way at home as they did in public, never putting on airs or being presumptuous. They were humble and they were real. Above all they “put on love” which is the bond of “perfectness” according to Colossians 3:14. Their love was unconditional, as they always accepted everyone right where they were in life, never judging, never condemning, never comparing. I never heard an unkind word come from either of their mouths in all the years that I knew them.

So what have I learned from my amazing, incredible, “perfect”, genuine pastor’s wife/mother-in-law? Here are some things that I learned about being a pastor’s wife:

  • The pastor’s family isn’t perfect!
  • The pastor’s house is not always clean or neat!
  • My pastor’s wife in the small town of NC was really a good pastor’s wife.
  • My pastor’s wife in FL was really a good pastor’s wife.
  • The book by Dorothy H. Pentecost, The Pastor’s Wife and the Church, published in 1964, is a very negative, eye-opening book. And every prospective pastor’s wife should read it, because most likely your experience won’t be quite so negative as is described here. And then again…maybe it will. In any case, if you aren’t really called to be a pastor’s wife, this will probably give you pause and make you reconsider.
  • Every pastor’s wife is unique, with her own set of talents, gifts, and skills.

Some are elegant and fashionable. Some wear jeans and t-shirts. Some play the piano. Others sing. Some are great teachers. Some are not. Some take care of the nursery. Most of us just love people, most of the time. Some are serious. Some are funny. Some are great housekeepers. Others (like me), not so much. Some work outside the home. Some work at home. All work…a lot. Some homeschool their children. Others send them to a Christian school…or to a public school. Some don’t have children, and they may struggle with this, except that most likely people in their church won’t know how hard it is for them. Some are outgoing. Others are quiet. There is not “the perfect pastor’s wife.” We are all human and we all “stumble in many ways” as we read in the book of James. But almost all the pastor’s wives I know desire to please the Lord more than anything else.

  • You don’t have to do everything people expect you to do. Just be yourself.
  • Love your husband.
  • Love your children.
  • Love people.
  • Above all, love Jesus.
  • Know your spiritual gifts and use them.
  • But also know your limitations.
  • Accept yourself.
  • Be faithful!

My pastor’s wife/mother-in-law was one of the most faithful, godly women that I ever met. I miss her more than anyone could ever know. She was like a mom to me, and she was my role-model.

  • Pray always. Pray without ceasing. Pray about everything.
  • Stay in the Word!

I cannot think of a morning when I was at the home of my mother-in-law and father-in-law, that they both did not have their Bibles open reading God’s word, with a cup of coffee, and praying for their family. Mom’s Bible was open at the dining room table. Dad’s light was on long before daylight at his little “office” under the stairway in the basement, and later in the morning at his place on the opposite end of the table from Mom.

  • Being a pastor’s wife is sometimes hard and sometimes very lonely.

Other people often have more difficult circumstances than me. And many times, they are more alone than I am. It’s important to recognize this, and instead of feeling sorry for myself, I need to get up and help someone else to know they are loved.

  • Being a pastor’s wife might mean living far away from family.

Adopt friends who love you, no matter who they are, and let them be your family. God brings these good gifts into our lives as His blessing to us. A dear lady named Joyce at our first church in NC “adopted” our little ones one day each week, so I could help Joe at the office. For many years she sent letters, cards, and gifts to our children as they were growing up. She loved our kids and she loved us. We missed her so much when we moved away. She is with Jesus now. Then when we moved to NJ, we met Grandma Becky, who for twenty-five years, has been our kids “Grandma” and now Great-grandma to our grandchildren. She has loved us through thick and thin. There are others who have cared much for our family, through the years, and we are so thankful for each one.

  • Being a pastor’s wife means you must be willing to go wherever God calls your husband.

My father-in-law asked my mother-in-law to marry him by asking her, “Are you willing to go to Africa with me?” Obviously, she said, “Yes!”

  • Being a pastor’s wife means not always having everything new and fashionable in regard to your home, your clothes, your cars, etc.

Dad and Mom inherited lots of furniture from people who were replacing their own furniture and gave it to them. They gave some of the things they were given to us when we got married. They didn’t drive new cars, and my father-in-law wore “dead men’s suits”, which is another story for another day.

  • Be generous.

When we were going through their things after their deaths, I noticed a steno pad with notes written in my mother-in-law’s hand. There were lists of bills to be paid, etc. I noticed the income amount for a certain month of the year, which was a much smaller amount than the total in the expense column. I noticed a relatively large donation listed for one of my children’s mission trips. In spite of their own needs, they always gave generously- first.

  • Be content with what you have.

My in-laws never asked for anything. It was hard to shop for them at Christmas, because they never seemed to need of anything…They were content with what they had.

  • I learned that it’s okay for pastor’s families to use Tide laundry detergent without guilt, even if it costs more than other brands.
  • Be strong in adversity.

My in-laws were strong through very difficult times – and they never treated others unkindly, no matter how unkind others were to them.

  • Finish well. Die well.

They did both! Mom died in May of 2001 after a long, painful battle with cancer. She died gracefully, in spite of the great pain she experienced. When Mom passed from death to life, we were all around her bed singing, “Great is Thy Faithfulness”. Dad was quiet for a little while and then he said, “Something precious just happened here.” Because Dad knew his Lord Jesus and His words so intimately, he was able to draw strength from the truth and promises He had studied and known for more than fifty years of serving his Savior. In speaking these words, Dad comforted us as well. “Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints.” (Psalm 116:15)

 Dad passed away the following year, quietly in his sleep one spring afternoon. My sister-in-law was with him at lunch and got him settled for a nap. She turned on his favorite movie, Saving Private Ryan, and left to go home, just a few minutes from the rehab where he was recovering after a serious fall. Soon after she walked in the door, she got a call that he was gone. Dad had not been well for a long time. He didn’t know that he would probably never walk again or that he would be going to a nursing home. He was not going to be happy about that, and the Lord decided to take him home to his real home instead. Now Mom and Dad are together again with Jesus.

 

in memory of Ermina OlacheaI think of my precious pastor and his wife, my dear father-in-law and mother-in-law, every time I hear “Untitled Hymn” by Chris Rice. Each time it plays on the radio I weep openly and then I laugh. Each verse is a chapter in their story, until the verse that goes, “Dance for Jesus, dance for Jesus, dance for Jesus, and live.”. That line makes me laugh. Mom and Dad were conservative, independent Baptists and had attended Bob Jones University and Tennessee Temple University. If you graduated from either of those schools, you didn’t dance – or else you didn’t get caught. As far as I know, they never danced a day in their adult lives, at least not on the outside. I do know that when the joy spilled over in the good things of this life, they certainly rejoiced. But I laugh because I think, “I bet they’re dancing now!” and I can just imagine the scene!

When the last verse of the song begins I cry again, “And in your final hour, you kiss the world good-bye, and go in peace and rest on glory side, fly to Jesus, fly to Jesus, fly to Jesus and live,” and then I smile, because they did “fly to Jesus!” and they are truly living now! Oh, what joy and delight as they rejoice in seeing Him face to face and they both can say, as did the apostle Paul at the end of his ministry,

I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith:

 Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day: and not to me only, but unto all them also that love his appearing. (II Timothy 4:7-8)

 

So what did I learn about being a pastor’s wife from those who have gone before me? What does it mean to be a pastor’s wife?

 

 It means to be a true and faithful follower of Jesus. Nothing more, nothing less.

Women Who Influenced My Life as a Pastor’s Wife (Part 1 of 2)

 

Women of Wisdom Who Influenced My Life as a Pastor’s Wife – Part 1

Proverbs 31:25-26

Strength and dignity are her clothing,
And she smiles at the future.

She opens her mouth in wisdom,

And the teaching of kindness is on her tongue.

What does it mean to be a pastor’s wife?

woman-553429_1280

When I was five years old, I already knew I wanted to be a pastor’s wife when I grew up. From my earliest memories, I remember observing and mimicking the actions of my pastors’ wife. In fact, I carefully watched and learned everything I could from missionary wives who visited our church to Christian school teachers and Sunday School teachers and Bible club leaders. Anyone from my church or those who visited our church as guest speakers. If they were serving God in ministry, I watched and I tried to be just like them. By the time I was ten or eleven, I even “hung out” with them whenever I could…I was a weird kid! I’m sure they were thrilled to see me coming. Hahaha!

In junior high school, I did my best to emulate my youth pastor’s wife, Pat. I babysat for Ken and Pat, and I tried to spend every possible minute with them, learning from them. They were my heroes, and I hoped that one day my life would be just like theirs!

Through spending time with Pat and other pastor’s wives, through observing their lives and following closely, I was learning. I was watching how they spoke, how they walked, and how they raised their children. I observed their attitudes toward their husbands. I tried to dress like them and talk like them and be like them.

You know, modeling is one of the best ways for human beings to learn! Children learn by imitating their parents. They learn language through conversing with their parents and other adults. They learn pronunciation by listening, thus their accents are developed based on their parents’ accents and other adults with whom they spend time. When our youngest son was in kindergarten, his teachers were Hispanic, with Spanish being their primary language. They included basic Spanish in the curriculum, and Jordan was able to pick up the pronunciation perfectly. When he took Spanish in high school, he could pronounce the words perfectly and naturally because of what he heard on a daily basis for his four-year and five-year kindergarten experience.

Parents who read tend to produce children who are readers. Children who are exposed to music early in life and sing on a daily basis learn to carry a tune at a very young age and tend to love music as adults. In many cultures, young people have traditionally served as apprentices to learn trades.

We are seeing more schools today that require internships giving students practical experience using what has been learned in the classroom. Those who are training to become teachers do student teaching. Physical therapists, chiropractors, and surgeons must practice techniques and actually perform procedures under the supervision their instructors prior to receiving certifications to perform medical treatment on their own. How often do you find circus performers such as trapeze artists and tightrope walkers who began their careers when they were just babies learning to walk? Often we find politicians come from a family of politicians such as the Bush family. Family businesses tend to be passed from one generation to the next, when sons and daughters grow up learning each facet of the business from childhood. Farmers raise children who are farmers. And whether you like his politics or not, Donald Trump raised children who became successful business people.

In Jesus’ day, the rabbis would choose disciples to teach and train. The students would come and live with their rabbi, “not to…hear Torah from him, but to watch him tie his shoe lace.” (It was about living the Torah, not just knowing it.)

Isn’t this what Jesus taught when He called us to be His disciples? He modeled the life we are supposed to live. He taught us how to live by His example. Then, at the end of His life on earth, before He returned to His Father, He commissioned His followers in Matthew 28:18 to “go and make disciples…teaching them to observe all” that He had commanded them. This meant teaching others, not to just to “know” the commands, but to observe and DO them. So as we go and tell others about Jesus, we are to live as examples, teaching others through our words and our actions to live out all that Jesus taught in the Scripture by His life.

When I wanted to be a pastor’s wife, I learned how to be a pastor’s wife from observing pastor’s wives. I asked questions, watched, and imitated what I saw. In my mind, as a child, my pastor’s wives seemed beautiful, perfect, wise, and completely poised, having the most exciting, glamorous, and significant lives. I wanted to be just like them. I wanted to tell people about Jesus. I wanted to serve my Lord Jesus in the church, to help people, to encourage people, and to teach. So I emulated them the best that I could.

pat mastin

My youth pastor’s wife, Pat, was an incredible role model for me. She was a young mom at the time who worked outside the home. She struggled with keeping it altogether (although I didn’t know it at the time). What I knew was that she took time for me and for the other girls in our youth group. For at least one year, she was my Sunday School teacher. Another year, she taught the physical education classes at the Christian school I attended, and I was in her class. She was our counselor at youth camp. She spent most Friday evenings with us, as we went somewhere with the youth group almost every week. We laughed a lot and enjoyed life. Pat sometimes took several of us to the beach for the day or out on their boat where I learned to waterski. And she let us babysit her little girls at times.

Pat may not remember this, but one day my friends and I made a decoupage plaque for her. It had a portion of Proverbs 31:10-31 written on it. I recall specifically verses 25 and 26 from the King James version of the Bible. “Strength and honor are her clothing; she shall rejoice in time to come. She openeth her mouth with wisdom, and in her tongue is the law of kindness.”  Every time I read Proverbs 31, Pat comes to mind and I remember how highly we esteemed her.

One significant memory for me (besides the time my friend, Laura and I, lost her diamond ring in the ocean…okay, that is a story for another time!), was the time when the mother of one of the girls in our class committed suicide. Pat took several of us with her to the funeral home to visit this poor thirteen-year old girl who had lost her mom in such a horrible way. I don’t remember much about the visit, except sitting on a couch in the funeral home with our classmate, in an attempt to comfort her. It was one of my earliest experiences of being in a funeral home. I did not realize how often this would someday be one of my responsibilities as a pastor’s wife. Pat’s example helped prepare me for difficult times such as this that come with the role of a pastor’s wife.

I was very blessed to have Pat in my life for those early teenage years, and I am thankful for her continued friendship ever since. My family moved away toward the end of my eighth grade school year. I deeply and privately grieved the loss of my relationship with Pat and her family, thinking I would never see them again. Certainly I missed my friends and my life, but Ken and Pat were like family to me, and this was one of the most difficult times of my life. I had no way of knowing that one day, Pat and I would share a friendship in another city when I became an adult. This time, I was the wife of a pastor. My husband was the Singles Pastor in a large church in Atlanta, and Ken’s and Pat’s daughters were now young adults in our Singles class. Pat and I had some great times while we were in Atlanta. We both sang alto and were in choir together. Rehearsals, especially were a highlight of my week. Our choir director, Jerry Cline, was amazing, but was also incredibly funny, so we enjoyed a lot of laughter and comradery participating in the choir together. (As a child, I dreamed of one day singing in a large choir like my pastor’s wife and youth pastor’s wife had done in FL…and the Lord gave me the desire of my heart when we lived in Atlanta, even allowing me to sing in the choir WITH my youth pastor’s wife!) Joe and I enjoyed time with Ken and Pat during that season of life, renewing a friendship on a new level, with me being an adult and learning more of what it really meant to be a pastor’s wife. Pat has remained faithful to the Lord all of these past forty years that I have known her. She continues to disciple young women in her church, and I continue to value her wisdom and insight whenever we have opportunity to talk on the phone or on the rare occasion that we see each other in person.

As we get close to the end of this Women of Wisdom Series for the month of May, I want to honor this dear friend and mentor, Pat Mastin. Thank you, Pat, for being a faithful example of a wife, mom, friend, and pastor’s wife.

Tomorrow, I will share more of what it means to be a pastor’s wife and what I learned from another pastor’s wife who impacted my life in a very unexpected and delightful way!

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In Honor of Leanne, A Woman of Grace Who Has Done Valiantly!

In Honor My Precious Daughter, Leanne – A Daughter Who Has Done Valiantly!

leanne and me

A favorite of Leanne and me at Lake Pine (Leanne, Before Kids)

As a mom, this past year was one of my most difficult years ever. In January, the most feared”C” diagnosis came to our family. Our oldest daughter, Leanne, was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. Leanne is the third young woman in our family to be diagnosed with thyroid cancer. My sister, Michelle, had thyroid cancer in 1992. Our niece, Rachel, was diagnosed in 2010. And this time, it was our girl. I hated that she had to go through this, wishing it could have been me, not her! She is the mom of three little boys, and her youngest, Micah, was only a few weeks old when the diagnosis was confirmed. Jadon was two, and Erik was four years old. Leanne’s thyroid was removed in April of last year, and a month later, her husband, Sam,  woke up with a severe migraine.

After being treated at the ER and given medication to help the pain, Sam returned home, but his headache did not go away. It just got worse.- and he was having difficulty with his vision. He went back to the ER and after having a CT Scan, Sam was diagnosed with a pituitary tumor. Leanne was still recovering from surgery. Now Sam was out of work.  A lot of people prayed, helped financially, and assisted with meals and caring for the children. Sam’s symptoms finally began to subside, and when Sam went back to the doctor to schedule the surgery and have another scan, the doctors decided not to do surgery. The tumor had shrunk. Sam was able to go back to work again after several weeks.

Through all of these difficult months of uncertainty and waiting, Leanne and Sam exhibited God’s abundant grace and peace beyond human comprehension. Both Sam and Leanne were examples of great courage and perseverance. Leanne used her Facebook page to chronicle the journey of that difficult year, each month choosing a theme from her quiet time in God’s Word. Here are a few of the themes as Leanne experienced her radiation treatment last fall (from her Facebook page):

September – Our theme verse: “Be still, and know that I am God. I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth!” (Psalm 46:10 ESV)
As we prepare for my radiation treatment in October, I’m not sure how many photos or activities will be documented. What I do know is that this month will need us to rely on our Lord for strength and peace. It’s time for us to be still and reflect on God and who He is.

October – Our theme verse this month: Oh, taste and see that the Lord is good! Blessed is the man who takes refuge in him! (Psalm 34:8 ESV)… We are blessed and we see the Lord’s goodness!

November – Our theme verse: We give thanks to you, O God; we give thanks, for your name is near. We recount your wondrous deeds. (Psalm 75:1 ESV)

Thank you, Leanne for your courage, your faithfulness, and your joy in spite of the circumstances you faced! I am so blessed that God has placed you in our family! I love you more than you can ever imagine!

Last year I was walking and praying for Leanne one morning, and for her precious family. I thought about how it difficult it would be for Erik, Jadon, and Micah, while their mommy was going into the hospital for surgery and again in a few months for her radiation treatment. And as I prayed, an idea came to write a simple book for the boys to help them while their mommy was away. And out of those thoughts came My Mommy is My SuperHero!

 

 

Advocating True Social Justice (Part 2)

Courageous Women Advocating True Social Justice (Part 2 of 2 in Series)

tiara-1301867_1280Probably the most prominent woman in Old Testament Scripture who fought courageously for social justice was Queen Esther. Her whole story, described in the Biblical book called by her name, illustrates the valor of one woman, in a situation completely out of her control. Esther risks her own life to save her people from the diabolical plot of wicked Haman, and God blesses her efforts and saves the whole Jewish population. She could have been killed by her husband, King Ahasuerus, who reigned over all of Persia, from India to Ethiopia, when she showed up to speak to the king without being called. But God called her to save her people. She was safe because “the king’s heart is in the hand of the Lord” (Proverbs 21:1), and God called Esther to the kingdom “for such a time as this.” (Esther 4:14). Therefore, the Lord caused King Ahasuerus to show favor to her when she entered his presence uninvited, and he “extended to Esther the golden scepter which was in his hand.” (Esther 5:2) As she courageously and brilliantly exposes Haman’s scheme, God brings salvation to the Jewish people through her actions, saving thousands of innocent lives, and bringing Haman to justice, where ironically, he was hanged on the same gallows he had built to kill Queen Esther’s Uncle Mordecai.

 

Esther was the woman of the hour, the woman of wisdom in her day, courageously fighting for social justice. Throughout Scripture, God inspired and commissioned courageous women to stand for and fight for the lives of the helpless and innocent. Women such as Shiphrah and Puah, the Jewish midwives in the days of Pharoah when he tried to destroy the male babies born to the women of Israel. There was Rahab, the harlot, who believed in Israel’s God and hid the spies. And other women including Jael, Deborah, and Abigail. There were courageous women of faith in the early church like Lydia who played a major role as a church planter. Priscilla worked alongside her husband and the apostle Paul during a time of great persecution. Eunice and Lois taught little Timothy in the faith, even though Timothy’s father was not a follower of Messiah. In the “Hall of Faith” in Hebrews 11, we read that “women received back their dead by resurrection; and others were tortured, not accepting their release, so that they might obtain a better resurrection; and others experienced mockings and scourgings, yes, also chains and imprisonment…of whom the world was not worthy.” (Hebrews 11:35-37)

 

After the Scriptures were complete, courageous women of faith arose throughout history who fought for the rights of the poor, the helpless, the marginalized. Women in history like Joan of Arc, Queen Elizabeth I, Florence Nightingale, Rosa Parks, Edith Cavell, and Mother Theresa.

 

During the reign of Hitler, women, along with men, fought for true social justice, and saved the lives of many Jews from certain death by the Nazi army. Women including Corrie ten Boom and Irena Sendlar, both of who are memorialized as “Righteous Among the Nations” at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. In fact, “a little over half of the Righteous Among the Nations recognized by Yad Vashem are women.”

All of these women are amazing, brave women, willing to die for the rights of others. God has put this same fire in each of us for our good, for the good of others, and for His glory. But we cannot live on the glory of past days. We cannot stand on the courage of those women and say we would have stood firmly against slavery or that we would not have allowed Hitler to do what he did. We believe we would have been courageous. We believe that we, too, would not have tolerated Pharoah’s or Herod’s killing of infant Hebrew boys. We want to believe we would have been strong and true and protected the innocent. But today, here we are. We have unborn children murdered by the thousands each day. What are we doing to “deliver” these babies from death? What about human trafficking? According to Wikipedia, about 17,500 people are trafficked in the US each year, small in comparison to the world trafficking issue, but each life matters to God. What are we doing to stop it? What are we doing to help the poor, the hopeless, the orphan, the widow, the single mom. How are we helping those who suffer with severe disabilities? What are we doing to help the countless refugees around the world, displaced because of terrorism and war? Are we willing to risk our lives or sacrifice our comfortable lifestyles to help save lives?

I want to recognize several, “ordinary” women who live today who are courageously standing for true social justice. Some have written for ProverbWise this month. Others are family and friends who sacrifice their time, energy, and personal comfort to rescue and “deliver those who are being taken way to death…”

JenFirst I want to mention my baby sister, Jen, a mother of four young children, whose favorite quote on Facebook comes from the Bible, “What does it profit a man to gain the whole world yet lose his soul?” She has a beautiful comfortable home and could stay at home and enjoy the wonderful gifts God has given her and her family, ignoring the horrible things that take place out in the world. But instead, every Tuesday she loads up her little ones and goes to the local Planned Parenthood abortion clinic, not to harass people and say unkind things. Not to attack those who work there. (As some have stereo-typed people who fight for the lives of pre-born babies – and it is true that some are harsh and vindictive, which is NOT the way of Jesus, the way of the cross.) Jen, instead of spewing hate to those who perform abortions, offers love and alternatives to women who believe that they have no other option but abortion. Her mission: “Bringing the Gospel and true choices to the families entering the abortion facility and loving our unborn neighbor.”

Then, there is my niece, Kimberly Rae, who promotes awareness of Human Trafficking. Kim’s verse, “He has sent me to heal the broken hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, to set at liberty those who are oppressed.” (Luke 4:18) This was Jesus speaking, but Jesus sends us out to be the salt and light of the world, to do His work, to fulfil His purposes. Kim’s challenge, “Know Your Worth, Change the World!”

My sister, Michelle, is creating awareness regarding human trafficking in New Orleans. She became aware of this serious issue in 2013 when the Superbowl came to her city. In addition, when she participated in a missions trip to Peru in 2014, another area of need came to her attention. She and a team from her church went there to build a house for a single mom and her children. The experience changed her perspective and gave her a deep desire to help the young girls in Peru and other like them. These girls are pretty much “stuck” in a life of poverty, in spite of their intelligence and desire to change. They just have no way to get an education, no money, no opportunity. Through her friend, Dr. Bev Smallwood, also an advocate battling for those enslaved through human trafficking, Michelle became an independent consultant for Rodan + Fields. Through this organization, Michelle and Dr. Bev, have opportunities to give back and help the poor and the helpless and the hopeless.

Many other women I know promote social justice in their communities and around the world.  Brenda Antinore of “She Has a Name”, a branch of Seeds of Hope Ministries in Camden reaches out to women in drug addiction that eventually leads to prostitution. Lynn Jahns and her staff at Barbara’s Place, serve women in addiction through this in-house program at America’s Keswick. Theresa Salazar and her husband facilitate an NARANON group, giving them opportunities to reach out to families who are broken because of drug addiction and offering them hope in Jesus. There is Project Hannah, a ministry birthed by Marli Spieker, Brazilian missionary with Transworld Radio and author of When Hope Wins. Marli has now passed the torch to Peggy Banks, and Project Hannah continues to offer compassion, encouragement and hope to suffering women worldwide through prayer, awareness and radio programming.

My friends, Barb, Cornelia, Marge, and others are actively serving with Operation Christmas Child, bringing hope and the gospel to millions of children worldwide. My friend Elizabeth, a very busy mom and pastor’s wife, endlessly opens her home to abused, neglected, unwanted children, including drug babies and alcohol syndrome babies, as a foster parents for many years, adopting and raising six of these children in addition to her own biological child. My niece, Larie, and her husband, also take in foster children, and have adopted a precious little girl into their family, along with three children of their own. Debbie, a friend from my church in FL as a kid, sits with the suffering at hospitals and cares for those who need help, giving of herself to meet the needs of those who have no one else. Cynthia Nichols left her own life to help her brother Dan and the church plant team start Restored Church in the depressed downtown area of Wilkes-Barre, PA. I could go on naming others, but time will not permit. My prayer is that these women, past and present, will inspire each of us to do something to stand up for what is right and good in our time.

Eleanor Roosevelt gave this challenge, “Do one thing every day that scares you.”

Standing for truth and justice, often alone in a world that seems to have gone crazy, is very scary, but it is necessary, if we are to do what God has called us to do! Jesus tells us it will be scary – and dangerous! “If anyone wishes to come after Me, he must deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me.” (Matthew 16:24) A cross is scary, but if must be willing to die if we are going to obey God and be true followers of Jesus, true advocates of social justice.

God has called His people today to “deliver those being taken away to death, to hold back those who are staggering to the slaughter.” And “who knows whether you have come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” This was the question Mordecai had for Queen Esther, and this is the question we are faced with today in this culture. We have been placed in this world today for a reason. We have the opportunity to speak up for those who are being “taken away to death” by the enemy, Satan. There are many ways that Satan deceives and captures the hearts of people. (II Timothy 2:26) He “goes about as a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour.” (I Peter 5:8) “He is a liar and the father of lies.” (John 8:44), and he comes only “to steal, kill, and destroy.” (John 10:10) We cannot live on the victories of those who have gone before. The issues of their day were different than those we are faced with today. We must be alert to the schemes of the devil. We need to understand this is our time to stand for truth and promote justice. This is our opportunity and our privilege. We have been charged by God to do what needs to be done NOW, for such a time is this!


I leave you with these questions:

  • What are you doing to “deliver those being led away to death?”
  • What is God calling you to do?
  • What are you willing to sacrifice to “hold back those staggering to the slaughter?”
  • What is one “scary” thing you can do today in regard to social justice?
  • Are you willing to step out in faith and do it?
  • Will you commit yourself to “trust in the Lord with all your heart”?
  • Will you acknowledge Him and allow Him to direct your paths?

I would love to hear from you, if God has taught you something today. I pray that the stories of these women have inspired you and that God will lead you in becoming a courageous woman of wisdom, advocating true social justice as Jesus did, when He came “to heal the broken hearted and set the captive free.”