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"And the people called
out What made the change, we dont understand. Then the auctioneer
stopped, and said with a smile, 'It was the
Touch of the Masters Hand
from Wayne Watson's
"Touch of
the Master's Hand"
First given April 27, 1997, at Middlebrook Pike UMC Contemporary Worship Service
It was fall in the Appalachians and I was
standing on the road above our house at Ripshin Lake.
It appeared to be one of our annual fish fries.
I looked down the hill and there stood old Tom
Morgan with my stepdad at the front door. Startled, I trotted down and called to Tom.
"But Tom ... YOURE DEAD!"
Tom nodded, and pointed toward the sky.
I looked up and what appeared to be an angel in
white came down, took me in its arms and started floating upward. I thought, "Well,
I, too, must be dead," and felt at peace.
We traveled upward , but then
THE ANGEL
DROPPED ME!
I woke up screaming!
Sweat was dripping off of me and I was terrified
beyond words.
It was fall 1979, and Donna and I had only been
together for a short time. And while she loved me, she hated my involvement with drugs.
One night - I think it was not long after the
dream - I was shooting up cocaine with some friends.
I did way too much and was feeling strange;
sweating, but freezing and shaking at the same time. I went into the bathroom and
wasnt sure if I was going to throw up or die, or maybe even both. They put cold
towels on my neck, for whatever reason, and I recovered some time later. Nonetheless, I
was scared out of my wits.
I managed to go to sleep, but sometime during the
night I awoke with a start, sat straight up in bed and saw this haggish apparition
drifting away from me, grinning wickedly until it passed from the room through the wall.
Shooting up drugs, I declared, was going to be a
thing of the past. I had become acutely aware of my own mortality. I believe it was
because I had grown to love Donna and now had something to live for.
Those events plagued me for some time. In
retrospect, I am sure they were spiritual messages. For I believe God speaks to us in a
number of ways through His Word; through servants; through circumstances; through
that still small voice; and, yes, sometimes even dreams though Im still not
sure the hag was a dream. But thats another story.
I believe Satan was having his way with me, much
like when Jesus told Peter, "Simon, Simon, Satan has asked to sift you as wheat. But
I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith will not fail. And when you have turned
back, strengthen your brothers."
I had spent my life running to and from God:
- My parents divorced when I was 9 - smack dab in
the midst of the Sixties. But I dont consider that an excuse for my lifestyle
choice. Im a victim of no one other than myself.
- After the summer of '69, I began attending my
Uncle Russells Baptist Church and, at his urging, was baptized at 13 years old.
Looking back, Im not sure whether I understood the significance of that public
confession.
Nonetheless, I joined the youth group and took
part in some of the activities, but single-parent households were not nearly as common as
today and I felt out of place.
I dropped out of church and started drinking the
following fall at 14 years old, suffering my first blackout not long afterward.
God, through His Holy Spirit living within the
person of my uncle and through the sacrament of baptism, had reached down to embrace me,
but I would not fully extend my hand, my heart, mind and soul to reach up to Him.
And I suffered the consequences of my rejection:
- At 16, I began smoking marijuana and hashish.
- By the time I turned 17, LSD, amphetamines, barbiturates and intravenous drugs had
entered my life.
- At 18, there were few drugs I hadnt done. There were near overdoses and car
wrecks. Im somewhat surprised I lived through it all and I wasnt done.
My only explanation: God had a plan for me that Satan and I were unable thwart.
- Not long after I turned the ripe old age of 19, a Navy doctor told me that drugs
and alcohol had taken their toll on my body. He said I was in the worst shape he had ever
seen for someone my age. I was placed in a substance abuse unit in Jacksonville, Fla., to
dry out.
While in the rehab unit, I went to a revival; spent a
few moments in counseling with a young man and repeated what is commonly called the
"sinners prayer."
Back on base, I couldnt wait to call my mom and
tell her the news. But it wasnt long before I stumbled and the devil was there with
his words of discouragement:
"See, you couldnt do it. And God
doesnt want you unless youre clean."
Knowing the sinner that I was, I bought the lie and
went back TO the drugs and alcohol and AWAY from God.
Again, God reached down to me through His Holy Spirit
in the person of his servants, but I failed to trust Him to do that which I was unable to
do in my own power. When I reached up to take His hand, it was only for a brief moment; my
insincerity became rejection and I paid the consequences.
Eventually, an accident onboard an aircraft carrier
led the Navy to recommend I take medical retirement. Back in the civilian world,
I briefly married and entered
college, but my life grew progressively engrossed in drugs.
One summer, I sold books door to door in Ohio. The
truth is I spent most of my time getting high and drinking Canadian whiskey and yankee
beer.
One night, while hitchhiking back to the boarding
house where I was living, I caught a glimpse of my depravation. In my heart, I wanted to
be clean and threw what pot I had into a field in the dark of night. I was tired of the
high life and wanted out. I prayed for Gods help and made a vow. Within days, I was
back where I started. In my own power, I had no hope.
Somehow, in the darkness of night, God had reached
down to me through His Holy Spirit, but I was blinded by sin, my flesh was weak, and my
hand barely reached up to Him. Again, my failure to surrender had its consequences: I
remained controlled by the very sin I sought to throw off.
I returned to college that fall and went right
back to where I left off. The days became a whirlwind of going to class, getting bombed,
going to bed, waking up and starting all over all the while living a desperately
lonely life.
It was then that I met Donna. I fell incredibly
in love with her and a little over a year and a half later we were married.
I guess she felt she could change me, and with
Gods help she eventually did but not before some crises.
I believe it was around our second anniversary
that I saw the writing on the wall: I was about to lose my wife and my life. For when it
came right down to it, without Donna helping to pull me to center, death from substance
abuse would likely not be far behind.
It was in spring 1983 that I began to truly face
my spiritual condition, but it started in an odd way.
I came home from work around 1 a.m. and, being a
news junkie (and believe me, you can OD on that, too), turned on Linda Ellerbys NBC
News Overnight. She reported that someone in Germany told police they picked up a
hitchhiker with long hair, dressed in jeans and carrying a backpack. During the ride, the
hitchhiker told the driver he was the archangel Gabriel and the world was going to end in
1984. The hitchhiker then disappeared from the vehicle. No kidding; that was the story and
it wasnt in the Enquirer.
As if that wasnt enough, she said, a person
in Great Britain reported a similar event, except the driver could not recall ever
stopping to pick anyone up; the fellow just appeared, said his words, and disappeared.
I was nearly shaking and questions flooded over
me in a wave of emotion: I knew the hitchhikers were part of some crazy hoax, but what if,
I thought, the world did end in 1984? What would happen to me and my family? I thought,
"Well, Donna would probably go to heaven. David, just a baby, would go, too. But what
about me?" No, I decided, I was not likely to be heaven-bound. Not the boozing
druggie that I was.
Now, its obvious my theology was fairly
flawed, but I was certain of one thing: I was living far from God.
So, I resorted to the only thinking I knew of: I
wanted a relationship with God, but I had to clean my life up first. I know now that I was
only setting the same trap as before.
Nonetheless, I prayed to God that he would help
me overcome the need to use alcohol. He answered and would lead me away in many different
ways whenever the desire came.
But the drug use continued and I substituted that
for the alcohol.
In October 1983, we moved to Port Arthur, Texas,
where I joined the staff of the Port Arthur News as a copy editor. I had decided that a
change in scenery might help me get away from drugs.
The problem was, if I was trying to escape the
drug scene, it didnt work. There were staffers there who got high, too. Still, God
found ways to keep speaking to me.
I would occasionally have to borrow the
company car and the radio dial was invariably tuned to a Christian station. I found myself
tuning in at lunch time to a Christian talk show. I can still remember the name:
"Darrens Coffee Shop." As I listened, I found that many of the people
calling in sounded much like me.
Then one day, in 1984, I answered a television
advertisement on CNN offering a free book called "Power for Living," published
by the Arthur C. DeMoss Foundation. When it arrived I discovered it was a small book of
testimonials from Christians such as Dr. J. Julius Erving, the basketball player, and
other personalities. No hard-sell, just a simple presentation of the Gospel.
I wanted what those people had: peace of mind in
a crazy world; a realization that God was there and loved me; and the salvation offered in
accepting Jesus Christ as Lord.
In 1985, after moving to Knoxville, Donna became
pregnant with Elizabeth, an answer to prayers for a little girl. We began to talk of
attending church, but were hung up over "which church" we should attend.
We kept passing this church, Middlebrook Pike United Methodist, on the corner
and decided to start our search by visiting there. We never left.
After a few Sundays with some wonderful people, I
decided the time had come to take the step and ask Christ into my life.
On Easter weekend, 1985, Donna and I took David
to my familys place on Ripshin Lake near Roan Mountain. On Saturday night, I
realized the desire to get high was already slowly leaving me. I had some pot, but smoked
little. Repentance was taking over - I was finally ready to turn TO God, and AWAY from
sin.
Easter morning, I got up early and drove to the
dam, parking my car at the gate. I turned on the radio and, thank God, found someone
preaching somewhere. I listened and sometime during the sermon, he offered the
sinners prayer. I said it with him. There was a peace in my heart. I knew something
was happening to my life.
I walked out to the dock, fishing gear in hand,
cast my line into the water and simply wondered what was to come.
I had no idea how different my life would be.
What I came to say to you this morning goes far
beyond a woeful tale of how I allowed drugs and alcohol to wreck my life and that of my
family for 15 years.
I know now that trying to clean myself up before
coming to Christ was a mistake. Isaiah 64:6 says:
"All of us have become like one who is
unclean, and all our righteous acts are like filthy rags; we all shrivel up like a leaf,
and like the wind our sins sweep us away."
Even now, as I struggle daily with sin, it is
only the righteousness of Jesus Christ that saves me, nothing of my own.
There is an old hymn, "Just As I Am,"
and it means just that we can come to Jesus just as we are, because hes in
the cleaning business.
In the end - or, should I say, 'In the beginning
of my new life with Christ,' - Gods Holy Spirit reached down to me through:
- Circumstances,
- Testimonials in a book from, of all places, Ted Turners CNN,
- Through a faceless voice on the radio on Easter morning,
- and, never to be forgotten, through this church.
And through the sincere desire of my heart, on that
Easter morning, I kept reaching, and reaching, and reaching until I felt
the touch
of the masters
hand.
Thanks be to God, Amen.
The Rev. Frank
"Buzz" Trexler is managing editor at The Daily Times and pastor
of Green Meadow United Methodist Church, www.themeadow.org. You can e-mail
him at PastorBuzz@nxs.net.
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