Point-of-View
Home: The first place to suffer, the first to be blessed
By JOE McKEEVER
First Baptist Church, Kenner, La.
Published January 15, 2004
"Paul, can you come to the lobby? There are two teenage
girls down here who need someone to talk with." Paul Jones
led the Christian Life Commission for Mississippi Baptists, based
in the Baptist Building in Jackson. When the receptionist paged
him, he had no way of knowing he was about to have one of those
experiences that confirm all over again the nearness and reality
of a great and gracious God.
"Jane here is pregnant," one of the girls said.
"Help her." Paul said, "Im not going to help
her get an abortion if thats what you had in mind. But we
can definitely help her." The leader was belligerent and
said, "Lets get out of here. I told you we wouldnt
find any sympathy here." And they stormed out.
The next day, the pregnant girl, Jane, returned. "You
said you could help me," she told Paul. "How?"
Paul said, "Tell me your story."
Jane was from the Midwest, the daughter of a wealthy
businessman. Six months earlier, her father had forced her to
have sex with a client in order to seal a business deal. When she
came up pregnant, he cursed her and threw her out of the house.
In time, she showed up in Mississippi, needing help.
Paul contacted a Christian family he knew and they took Jane
into their home. When the baby was born, she decided to keep it.
The family and Paul found her a job and an apartment. The baby
grew and Jane seemed to be managing.
Late one evening, two years later, Paul had spoken at a church
on the Mississippi Gulf Coast and was returning home dead-tired
when he decided to stop in Hattiesburg and get some sleep. The
next morning he walked over to Shoneys for breakfast.
Unshaven and wearing the same clothes he had on yesterday, he hid
in the back behind a newspaper, hoping no one would recognize him.
Nearby sat two gentlemen at a table, having breakfast. A few
minutes later, one of the men approached Pauls table.
"Are you Dr. Paul Jones?" he asked. Paul sheepishly
admitted he was, and began apologizing for his appearance. The
man introduced himself as a local minister. He said, "Theres
a fellow here with a problem, and I thought you might be able to
help." He called his friend over.
The man told Paul his name, then said, "I live in
Missouri. Three years ago, I did a really cruel thing to my
daughter and she left home. Ive become a Christian
recently, and Im trying to find her and see if theres
any way she will forgive me and come back home." Paul
listened to his story, realizing he was hearing the other half of
Janes sad tale.
When the man finished, Paul said, "Would you like to talk
to your daughter right now?" He said, "More than
anything in the world." Paul pulled out his cell phone and
dialed a number in Jackson. A moment later, he said, "Jane,
this is Paul Jones. Would you like to speak to your father? Hes
right here."
It was a magical moment. The family was reunited and Jane and
her baby moved back home.
In the final verse of the Old Testament, we are told that the
prophet of God shall "turn the heart of the fathers to the
children, and the heart of the children to their fathers...."
(Malachi 4:6)
The first place to suffer when a father rebels against God is
the home. The first people to feel it are the children. But when
God changes the heart of a father, the first place to see the
difference is the home, and the children are the first to benefit.
Jesus once healed a crazy man, a fellow so wild no chain could
hold him. He prowled the tombs and townspeople could hear him
wailing in the middle of the night. Mothers threatened their
children, "If you dont obey me, the crazy man of the
tombs is going to get you." When the Lord Jesus arrived, He
recognized that the man was tormented by a gang of soul
terrorists, demons from hell. He wasted no time in casting them
out and healing the man. This beautiful scene is found in Mark 5.
I want you to see what happened next.
The next time we see that poor man, he is cleaned up, wearing
clothes, and sitting calmly at the feet of Jesus, listening to
Him teach, and in his right mind. When the Lord got up to leave,
the man said, "Master, Im following you wherever you
go. Youve done so much for me." Jesus said, "I
want you to go home. Tell your people the things the Lord has
done for you, how He has had compassion on you." The home
had suffered from his absence and his pain, now let it benefit.
Luke 7 tells us that when Jesus raised a young man from the
dead, "he restored him to his mother."
Thats the plan: the children reunited with the parents,
the parents with the kids. Its how a loving God works.