COPYRIGHT 1991

CHAPTER 9

THE MINISTRY

 

Using my cane to find the building, I pushed through the

double doors, and made my way to my new study room. It had been

moved to the other side of the building because a second blind

student had been added to the public school program. We needed,

therefore, more room for our equipment. I was a senior and though

I felt the tug of the ministry on my life, I now had no interest

to move in that direction. I couldn't picture myself, however,

going any where but a Bible college. Setting down, I opened the

lid of my tape machine and plugged in a blank cassette. One of my

readers was going to take the machine home tonight and read an

assignment for me.

The doors swung open and Maureen strolled in. "Hi Phil," she

said in her cheery youthful voice.

"Hi Maureen. "You're sounding happy this morning."

"Oh, sure," she replied, "had a wonderful weekend. How'd

your first week of school go?"

"All right I guess," I said shrugging my shoulders, "it's

school is all I can say."

Maureen and MaryAnn were resource teachers who traveled to

the other schools in the Omaha public school district. They

talked with teachers to solve any book or material problems blind

students might be facing, and they picked up future exams and

either recorded them on tape for us or had them Brailled. Once

they even had my geometry book put into Braille for several weeks

lesson-by-lesson until the Braille copy could be obtained from the

Braille publisher. How the Braillist had gotten the diagrams in

raised lines was a mystery. It didn't matter, though, because I

never liked geometry even if I did receive B's for the year.

Setting down, Maureen said, "How are you and david getting

along?"

"fine," I said. "Dave is ok really, a little odd, but he's

ok. Besides, we were in school together down in Nebraska City for

over three years. I only have one class with him and I can live

through that I guess."

Maureen laughed. "Anything you need done today?"

"Yea, I said, "I'm going to have a test in an English class.

Could you get a copy of the test and put it into Braille for me?"

"Sure," she said, opening her purse and extricating a note

pad. "What's the teacher's name."

I told her.

"OK, I'll see her today and see if the test is going to be

ready a few days in advance. If so, I'll get it done for you."

"Thanks," I said and picked up my cane and atocia case which

carried my small cassette recorder and Braille slate. "I gotta

get to my first class now."

"School doesn't start for another fifteen minutes," she

protested, studying her watch.

"I know. This class is clear on the opposite side of the

building though. It'll take me almost ten minutes just getting

over there; especially with the building filling up with kids."

Finding the door to my class, I checked my watch and wished

there had been more time left to the summer vacation. The effects

of the drugs no longer seemed to bother me but the life style did.

I stood listening to the chatter of the other students in the hall

as they prepared for the first class of the day. Girls laughed

and bang lockers shut. Boys discussed how drunk they had gotten

over the weekend, how poor the band had played, the party which

lasted all weekend, and the people with which they had spent it.

I listened carefully to see if anyone mentioned using drugs but I

heard no such conversation. I suddenly felt strangely alone

again, as I had a few months before meeting Sharon...and what was

I going to do about Sharon now. I couldn't just cut her off. I

owed her some explanation. She had been a good friend; a close

friend; almost my only friend for many months. If I continued to

associate with her, could I keep off the drugs? Could I bring

Sharon to Christ? Would she understand? She had never forced me

to do anything I didn't want to do; she had always stayed close to

me when I had tripped; she had always respected my feelings. As

the bell rang and I moved through the doorway, I still was

uncertain how I would handle this difficult problem; not to

mention what I was going to do about college.

Each day of the new semester seemed more sluggish than the

one before. As time slowed I found myself hating school. As I

looked down through the coming months, I couldn't see the light at

the tunnel's end. I was afraid of college, I was afraid I

wouldn't be able to get a job and support a family, and I was

afraid of life. It is difficult enough for any senior in high

school trying to decide what to do for the rest of their life.

For a blind senior, it is even worse. I had no idea what I

wanted to do.

One night, after deciding to get stoned, I pulled a plastic

bag over my head, and began to inhale fumes from a household

aerosol. When the dangerous chemical began to buzz like angry

bees in my head, fear gripped my heart and I jerked the bag off my

head; flinging it to the floor. I fell on my bed and began to cry

out to God. I was afraid. I wanted to honor my word to the Lord

I had made just a few months earlier but life seemed too big and

too impossible to negotiate alone. I felt isolated from the world

and from people. I was blind and I hated it. Why wouldn't God do

something? Where was He in my life?

At the end of that first semester, I talked with my good

friend Ryan about the classes he was taking. I was getting tired

of feeling blind, walking the building through the maze of

students, bumping into people, and feeling half lost each day.

Ryan told me of all his classes and their teachers. I checked

with my counselor and he agreed to help me get my classes to

coincide with Ryan's. He had been a good reader for me and this

would make my last semester in high school just that much easier.

At the end of Christmas vacation, I called Ryan the night

before school to confirm our arrangements to ride together. As we

talked, he told me that the last day of school he had decided he

didn't like the schedule he had made for himself. He had gone to

his counselor following the final day of school and changed all

his classes. Now we would not share a single class.

The phone suddenly became too heavy to hold. Cradling it, I

collapsed on my bed and tried to blink back the tears. Life

seemed not only impossible but so unfair. I hadn't asked to be

blind but I was faced with experiencing life crippled, broken, and

less than a whole person. I couldn't see how I might possibly

make it beyond this school year. What would I do when the last

semester was over?

Drying my tears, I got to my feet and checked my watch. It

was 11 P.M. I made my decision and climbed the stairs to the

kitchen. Walking through the living room and passed the stereo, I

heard Mom's little TV playing in her bedroom. Since she never

went to bed early, I walked to her room and called her name at

the open door.

"What's the matter Philip? It's getting late. You better

get to bed so you can get up early for school tomorrow."

Stepping just inside her door, I said with finality, "Mom,

I'm not going to school tomorrow or any other time. I'm quitting

school."

"Philip? Why?" I had already turned and begun walking

toward the stairs. Mom followed me; hurling questions one after

another; attempting to discover why I had made such a decision.

She followed me all the way down the stairs and into my room. I

again retreated to my bed and lay down before answering her

questions.

I explained how I had gone through all the trouble of lining

up my classes with Ryan. I began to tell her of my fear of what I

would do for a living and how I would cope with life in college.

Eventually, through my tears, she began to understand how

frightened I was to walk into life blind.

After some talk, Mom got me to agree to talk with our pastor

the following morning. Though I agreed, I told her there wasn't

any way I would ever return to school. She agreed not to pressure

me, and if I was willing to talk with my pastor, she would be

satisfied. I slept restlessly; not wanting to face the morrow.

Seated in the living room, he said, "Phil, listen, I know

this is really a difficult time of life for you and I am not even

suggesting I understand what it must be like. I know I haven't

been hear long as your new pastor but I'm asking that you give me

a chance."

After discussing my feelings with our new Pastor, Tom Hall, I

agreed that I would consider returning to school if my conditions

were met. Those were, first I wanted only a half day of school.

Many graduating seniors only needed a half day of school to

achieve graduation status. If I had to finish school, I wanted

that half day. My other condition had to do with the number of

classes I would be required to take. Talking with my counselor

earlier had revealed I only needed two class credits to graduate.

That's what I wanted; two classes, one study hall, and permission

to leave for the day.

"Phil," Pastor Hall said, "I'm sure I can get this worked out

with your counselor. Will you allow me to go and see him

personally and to discuss this situation with him?"

"Sure," I said willingly, "but unless these two conditions

can be agreed upon, I won't return."

"Fair enough," he said. "I'll call your counselor, go in and

see him, and I'll call you later today with the results."

Later that day the pastor called and said he had worked

everything out with the counselor. The pastor asked me if I would

go with him to school to sit and talk it over. He assured me that

the counselor had agreed to my terms but he just wanted me to come

in and confirm it. I agreed.

"Phil," the counselor began, "I'm really sorry all this

happened. I thought we'd worked everything out with your friend

and his schedule but I understand the whole thing fell apart over

the holidays. If you'd come and discussed it with me first thing,

I know we could have worked it out." He paused for me to speak

but since I remained silently passive, he continued. "Listen,

you are correct. You need only two credits to graduate but I'm

asking you for a favor."

"What," I muttered suspiciously.

"You're not the first teenager that's faced this kind of a

dilemma and here's what we normally do. You need two classes,

that's true, but I'm asking you to agree to one additional class.

Now wait just a minute," he said, holding up his hand in protest.

"You'll still be allowed to go home at 11:30 with other seniors on

half days. You'll have three classes, one of which is an early

7:35 class, then a study hall, and finally two more classes, and

then you'll be free to head home. How's that sound?"

"Why a third class?" I wanted to know.

"Well, it's for insurance purposes. If for some reason you'd

fail one of the other classes, we would be able to substitute that

third one for your needed credits."

That sounded reasonable to me and I said so. As it worked

out, Ryan and I would share the 7:35 A.M. class so I was once

again able to ride with him to school. The arrangements were

finalized and the following day, I was back in school.

The first couple of weeks I enjoyed my free afternoons. Mom

buzzed over each day from her nearby job during lunch and dropped

me home. I fixed lunch and carried it down each day to my room in

the basement. During the late 1960's the ham radio bands were

alive with signals from all over the globe. I worked Europeans

and African's every afternoon both in voice communications and

Morse code. The late afternoons brought in the Pacific stations

and Japanese. I thought very little of graduation and what I

might do with my life. The radio hobby became a drug and I was

addicted.

MaryAnn and Maureen were concerned, however, and eventually

discussed with me the possibility of getting a job during the

afternoons. I agreed, thinking no one wanted a blind teenager for

an employee, but I was fooled. They secured a job at the Good

Will work shop. I soon found myself catching a bus just outside

the high school each day, eating my lunch either on the bus or on

the bench waiting, riding forty-five minutes downtown, walking

four blocks, and setting behind a work bench scooping three nuts,

three bolts, and three washers into a small envelope which I

stapled shut and tossed into a cardboard box all for $1.65 per

hour. The job lasted about a month before I decided my afternoons

were more important doing nothing at home.

"Hi Phil," Maureen said one morning coming through the double

doors into the study room."

"Hi Maureen," I said, lacking enthusiasm.

"What's happening?"

"Not a thing," I reported.

Sitting next to me she opened her purse and took out her

note pad. "Are you still interested in taking drum lessons?"

I had purchased a used set of drums from a friend a few weeks

earlier and had mentioned my desire to take lessons. Setting up,

and suddenly showing interest, I said, "Sure, I'm still

interested. Why?"

"Well," she began, "MaryAnn and I had lunch with someone the

other day who gives drum lessons. She..."

"She?" i interrupted.

"Yes," she continued, "she gives lessons out of her home.

She's also a very attractive lady, too."

"That's pretty unusual," I observed. "Not many women play

the drums."

"True, but this lady is pretty unique."

"How old is this lady?" I asked.

"She's twenty and she's blind."

"Blind?" I said incredulously. I didn't finish my thought.

The last thing in the world I wanted to do is connect with another

blind girl.

"Yeah," Maureen said suspiciously, "anything wrong with

that?"

"Oh, no," I said satirically, not a thing."

"Somehow I get the feeling..." she stopped. "Well, no

matter. Here's her phone number. I think you should call her and

talk with her about taking lessons."

I pressed the keys on my Braille writer mechanically; writing

down the numbers as she recited.

"Now give her a call tonight," Maureen said invitingly, "I

think it'll be worth your while."

I agreed but knew I would do no such thing.

"have you called Sandy," Maureen prodded me two weeks later.

"Sandy?" I said totally at a loss. "Whose Sandy?"

"You know...she's the drum teacher."

"Oh, yeah," I muttered. "No I haven't called her."

"Come on Phil. I thought you wanted to take lessons.

Sandy's really a neat lady."

"Yeah, yeah, I know...I will."

"When? When you gonna call her then?"

"Well," I said hesitantly, "I'll call her tonight I guess."

"Good! Let me know what you find out."

That night I sat at my ham radio desk with the phone in my

hand, dialing Sandy's home number. The last thing in the world I

wanted to do is take drum lessons from a blind girl. Those I had

known at the school for the blind were not all that sharp. They

were scholastically ok but socially...

Suddenly someone was on the other end of the line. "ahhhh,

hello," I stammered, "is this Sandy?" For the next ten minutes I

did all the talking to someone who barely spoke. They were all

yes and no answers with nothing in between.

Hanging up the phone, I walked from my basement room and

climbed the stairs to the kitchen. "Well," I said out loud, "I'll

never talk to that blind girl again as long as I live."

By the end of the week, Sandy had realized I had been calling

for drum lessons and had to contact MaryAnn for my phone number.

She had been sound asleep when I called and couldn't even remember

my name after my phone call. Since she needed the extra money for

the lessons, she obtained my number and called to see if she could

convince me that she was the right one for the drum lessons.

As I talked with her over the phone, I found it nearly

impossible to believe this was the same person to whom I talked a

few days earlier. She was bright, cheerful, sharp, and fun.

During the next four hours, I learned that she had been

raised on an Iowa farm and since my home was Iowa, we seemed to

have much in common. I likewise found out the reason for her

lethargy a few days before. She had been on tranquilizers for a

few weeks and she had just taken one an hour before I called;

making her sleepy and drowsy.

the following night we visited again for almost another four

hours. We finished our conversation by deciding we would get

together at her apartment within a few days. I found myself

strangely drawn to her even though she was blind.

"Sandy, how long have you been blind?" I asked.

"I've never seen," she replied candidly.

"Never?" I said dubiously.

"No, never," she said firmly. "I was born two and a half

months premature and weighed just two pounds ten and a half

ounces. They put me in an incubator for oxygen and that caused my

blindness. I've never seen in my life."

The reason I found this difficult to believe was do to her

keen perception. She seemed to be able to understand and

comprehend things once described to her. I had found that most

blind people who had been born blind were often unable to perceive

things they had never felt. I eventually decided that such

ability was due to her parents. They never isolated Sandy from

all they did on the farm. She was allowed to do chores with them

including feeding the animals, gathering eggs, riding and driving

the tractor with her father, and tending garden, cooking, and

washing and house keeping with her mom. All this made her ability

to comprehend seem innate.

As we continued to talk on the telephone over the next few

weeks, I shared with Sandy my past involvement with drugs. As a

medical transcriptionist in a local hospital, she had unique

insight to such drug involvement. I went further, however, and

began to tell her of my Christian life. To my amazement, I

discovered that she had just been led to Christ by a friend who

began taking her to church. Her friend was a fellow employee at

the hospital and felt drawn to Sandy because of her loneliness.

Sandy had been working in Omaha for nearly two years by the

time we were introduced. She had lived most of her life away from

her family and home sickness was almost a way of life for her.

She had been separated from her parents at the age of four to

attend the Iowa School For The Blind. Because they lived a

hundred and fifty miles from the school, she only came home every

third weekend and, of course, on major holidays. Now that she was

working, she again was separated from her family. She was very

lonely and began drinking. Though she was only eighteen when she

first moved to Omaha and was thus under the state's drinking age,

she often asked cab drivers to stop on the way home to buy

alcohol. Eventually she was old enough to make purchases herself

and often drank herself to sleep at night to ward off the awful

loneliness. Most weekends she frequented bars with those with

whom she knew to keep from being home alone. She was also a hyper

active person and eventually was prescribed three heavy

tranquilizers to be taken daily. It was in the middle of this

that she came to know Christ as her Lord and Savior.

The end of my last semester in high school was approaching.

I was spending more time with Sandy and one night while setting in

her living room, I said, "Sandy, I can't say I like you any more.

What I feel for you is something much more, much stronger, than

the word like can described."

"Don't say it," she said.

"I love you," I said, ignoring her warning. She agreed her

feelings for me were equally strong. I told her that I felt the

Lord was calling me to full time ministry and that such was quite

a different life than her up bringing. She, however, was growing

in the Lord and had no problems excepting what I was trying to

say. A few weeks later I asked her to marry me and we were

engaged.

We had agreed to at least a year, if not two, years of Bible

college before we married and in the fall of 1970, I enrolled in

Bible college. Since the school was in Iowa, I often came home

weekends to spend with Sandy. I found school, however, to be very

lonely and once again I was faced with the reality of life. I had

no problems soliciting volunteer readers, taking oral exams, and

functioning in the every-day routines of college life. My two

years of high school experience had helped me acclimate to such

circumstances. The question, however, that continually haunted

me was, "You can graduate from college but can you make a living

and support a family?" Because of this, we decided to get married

following the third semester of Bible college.

After getting married in January of 1972, I shortly

thereafter obtained a job working in the county welfare

department of Omaha as a case assistant. My boss was totally

blind and had started a special department within the welfare

agency which was especially designed to help the handicapped

secure jobs. My responsibility was to assist another social

worker in obtaining jobs for forty-five blind welfare clients.

Much of our days were spent visiting factories and offices

attempting to educate sighted employers to the abilities and

advantages of hiring the blind. I had never directly felt the

effects of rejection due to my blindness until I began trying to

help other blind people get jobs. I was amazed at how many

employers simply didn't think the blind could do the same job

others did. I was even told by one employer that if a blind

person and a sighted person both applied for the same position,

and even if they both had the same previous experience and skill,

he would hire the sighted person instead. Why? He said it was

because the sighted person posed fewer problems. He was unable to

explain himself further and because I poised myself like a wild

mountain cat ready to spring, my partner cut the conversation

short and removed me from the building.

"Fred, I said with no little irritation in my voice, "why'd

you cut me off? I was about ready to kill that moron!"

Laughing, he said, "...And that's exactly why I pulled you

out of there. I was afraid you'd kill him."

We walked in silence down the corridor of the employers

building, our foot falls echoing off the walls. Finally I spoke.

"Fred, you're black and probably have experienced what I just did

back in that man's office."

"yeah," Fred agreed, "I've seen it before...you're right."

"There's only one thing," I said, "that could be more

frustrating than being blind."

"And what's that," he encouraged.

"Being blind and black at the same time." We both laughed,

realizing the force of my statement, but it wasn't really that

funny because we had clients who were in fact blind and black. As

we left the building that day, I wondered how we would be able to

help them get jobs.

After working in the welfare department for a few months, I

began to see how the philosophy of the world was beginning to

effect my Christian values. I had never really been in a secular

work environment. I felt the pull of the world hard against my

relationship with the Lord and decided it was time to make a

change; one which would bring me closer to perhaps going into the

ministry. After discussing it with my wife, we decided to move to

Denver where most of my family lived. They had left Omaha the

same week I had gone to Bible college. Mom had taken a job in a

Christian day school where my oldest sister was a kindergarten

teacher. I had visited their church a couple of times while in

college and liked what I saw. Their stand for the Lord was firm

and they had a burden for the lost; something I, too, felt.

Furthermore, their Christian day school was solid and it would be

a good place to raise our children in later years. Making the

arrangements, we moved in the fall of 1972 to Denver.

After Sandy obtained another medical transcription job in a

local hospital, I went into the vending stand program through the

Colorado Services For The blind. This training program allowed

the blind to learn how to run and operate snackbar lunch counters

and cafeterias throughout the state. After the three months of

training, I began working in a partnership with another blind man

at the Denver University Law Center. Our full service cafeteria

was opened from 6:00 in the morning till 10:00 at night. I

supervised the evening shift. Do to the way the vending stand

program operated, I was able to obtain my own snackbar a few

months later and began operating independently.

During the next two years, we were faithful in the church we

had joined and I was eventually asked to be a deacon. I was only

twenty-one years of age and was the youngest deacon they had ever

asked to serve. It was a great honor for me and I appreciated the

opportunity to serve the Lord in this way. It was one more step

to full time ministry. In early 1975 I felt the call to the

ministry so strongly that I quit my snackbar job and began to

travel as a guest speaker; holding revival meetings.

Riding home from high school one afternoon, Mom said,

"Philip, have you thought any more about what you are going to do

when you graduate?"

"Well," I said reluctantly, "I've thought about going to law

school but I don't know if I could really handle something like

that. I know a lot of blind guys have gone into law and have

done well but I just don't feel comfortable about it. I've also

thought of teaching. Lots of blind people have gotten teaching

degrees and are able to get jobs in schools. I really don't feel

comfortable with that either."

"If someone were to ask you," she said turning left on to our

street off of Maple, "what you really wanted to do in life, what

would you say?"

Without hesitation, I replied, "I want to be an evangelist

and travel; holding meetings in churches."

"Then," Mom said with quiet confidence, "you simply need to

go to Bible college and prepare."

Leaving the snackbar for the first time never bothered me. I

was looking forward to going into the work for which I felt

called. Over the months, serving in our church, I often

considered when I might go full time into the ministry. Although

I had already attended Bible college, I had not graduated and that

made some people nervous including my pastor. When I discussed my

intentions with him, he was reluctant to indorse my desires. It

was generally concluded by many that no one could be used of God

unless they had graduated from Bible college. Finally one day I

left my place of business for the last time in February of 1975

and by April I was traveling across the midwest preaching.

My first meeting was in Chandler, Arizona where one of my

Bible college roommates was an assistant pastor. Following the

full week of meetings, I remained in the area, staying with my

friend and his wife, and preached single day engagements around

the Phoenix area. At the end of the month, after spending four

weeks away from home, I returned to Denver. Such began my life as

a full time traveling evangelist.

Though it was extremely difficult to obtain meetings, most

pastors preferring guest speakers able to sing and play musical

instruments, perform carate feats, or gospel magic tricks, I

eventually, with the help of my pastor, began to be able to

support my family. Sandy traveled with me at first and for awhile

after the birth of our first child, but eventually I began

traveling alone because of the expense involved. Traveling by

plane was always expensive and to make my trips pay for

themselves, I often had to stay away for several weeks.

My wife and I always seemed to face objection and rejection

by those who felt blind people were not capable of living normal

lives. When people learned we were starting a family, some were

horrified that two blind people would bring a child into the

world. It was too late, however, by the time they found out.

In light of such opposition, Sandy and I decided that we

would not invite anyone to stay with us upon bringing our first

child home from the hospital. This ruffled a few feathers in the

nest of both our families but as it turned out, this was the

wisest decision we could have made. The first night alone with

our new son was quite interesting, to say the least, but he, and

we, survived the ordeal. So did the other two children the Lord

gave us over the next few years. The biggest fear people had was

that we might bring other blind people into the world by our

selfishness of wanting children of our own. All three of our

children were born normally and none wear glasses.

The more I traveled, however, the more desirous I became to

minister with people on a more personal level. Traveling

preachers are in a church for a few days and then leave; often

never to return. I wanted to minister to people and see the

changes in their lives as they continued to walk with God over the

years. I had never really consider pastoring a church until

December of 1977.

We had flown to Iowa to visit Sandy's family for the

Christmas holidays. Traveling evangelist usually have few

meetings during the summer months, except for church camps, and no

meetings are generally scheduled for the entire month of December

for obvious reasons. I had become discouraged during our stay

with Sandy's folks. I sat and considered all of my abilities,

gifts, and talents one day and listed them in my mind. I

enjoyed, and loved, to sit and visit with people concerning

problems they faced. I enjoyed teaching the Word of God to people

and attempting to show how it applied to every-day life. I liked

people and enjoyed being with them. I felt compassion for others

when they were facing difficult times. I loved to win the lost to

Christ and especially to teach them the doctrines of the Bible.

As I mentally listed all my good qualities, I decided I would

return to Denver and attempt to employ those character traits in

my ministry. IT NEVER CROSSED MY MIND that those were the traits

of a pastor.