FATHER’S DAY: A TRIBUTE
Today is Father’s Day. A day of cologne. A day of hugs, new neckties, long-distance
phone calls, and Hallmark cards. Today is my first Father’s Day without a
father. For thirty-one years I had one. I had one of the best. But now he’s
gone. He’s buried under an old oak tree in a west Texas cemetery. Even though
he’s gone, his presence is very near¾especially today.
It
seems strange that he isn’t here. I guess that’s because he was never gone. He
was always close by. Always available. Always present. His words were nothing
novel. His achievements, though admirable, were nothing extraordinary.
But
his presence was.
Like
a warm fireplace in a large house, he was a source of comfort. Like a sturdy
porch swing or a big-branched elm in the backyard, he could always be found…and
leaned upon.
During
the turbulent years of my adolescence, Dad was one part of my life that was
predictable. Girl friends came and girl friends went, but Dad was there.
Football season turned into baseball season and turned into football season
again and Dad was always there. Summer vacation, homecoming dates, algebra,
first car, driveway basketball¾they all had one
thing in common: his presence.
And
because he was there life went smoothly. The car always ran, the bills got
paid, and the lawn stayed mowed. Because he was there the laughter was fresh
and the future was secure. Because he was there my growing up was what God
intended growing up to be; a storybook scamper through the magic and mystery of
the world.
Because
he was there we kids never worried about things like income tax, savings
accounts, monthly bills, or mortgages. Those were the things on Daddy’s desk.
We
have lots of family pictures without him. Not because he wasn’t there, but
because he was always behind the camera.
He
made the decisions, broke up the fights, chuckled at Archie Bunker, read the
paper every evening, and fixed breakfast on Sundays. He didn’t do anything
unusual. He only did what dads are supposed to do¾be there.
He
thought me how to shave, and how to pray. He helped me to memorize verses for
Sunday school and taught me that wrong should be punished and that rightness
has its own reward. He modeled the importance of getting up early and staying
out of debt. His life impressed the elusive balance between ambition and
self-acceptance.
He
comes to mind often. When I smell “Old Spice” after-shave, I think of him. When
I see a bass boat I see his face. And occasionally, not too often, but
occasionally when I hear a good joke (the kind Red Skeleton would tell), I hear
him chuckle. He had a copyright chuckle that always came with a wide grin and
arched eyebrows.
Daddy
never said a word to me about sex or told me his life story. But I knew that if
ever I wanted to know, he would tell me. All I had to do was ask. And I knew if
ever I needed him, he’d be there.
Like
a warm fireplace.
Maybe that’s why this Father’s Day is a bit chilly. The fire has gone out. The winds of age swallowed the late splendid flame, leaving only golden embers. But there is strange thing about those embers, stir them a bit and the flame will dance. It will dance only briefly, but it will dance. And it will knock just enough chill out of the air to remind me that he is still…in a special way, very present.
©©©©©©©By: Max LucadoFROM GOD CAME NEAR
It made me cry! :(
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