Pastors

SAINTWATCHING

With patience and a sharp eye, you can spot them in the wild.

My grandaddy spent a lifetime as a devoted bird watcher. His greatest moment came late in life when he and his partner identified, deep in the Everglades, a bird long thought extinct.

Although the find was verified and published in National Audubon Society news, he never revealed the exact location of the rare and fragile bird.

Ethel is like that bird. She would never allow me to write about her, so I have changed her name and a few details of her life.

And I am like my grandaddy, except I am a saint watcher, and Ethel is my rarest find to date.

Where I found Ethel

I was pastoring in rural Indiana when I met Ethel. She was still living in her little house then. But the talk was all of nursing homes. I can still see the off-white shingles and tin roof on her four-room house. The living room held a big furnace in one corner, snapshots of her family, scattered books, and a garish painting of Jesus, his heart shining from his chest in a sunburst that filled the frame.

I asked her about the snapshots, and she told me of her family. One by one she pointed to the old black-and-whites of handsome young men. This son had died behind the wheel of a truck in 1937. That one never came back from the war. She had buried three of her four sons. She had lost her husband years ago.

Ethel could not talk about her family without baring her soul. The deepest wounds life had inflicted hung there on her walls.

All I had to do was listen.

She had little formal education, but she loved to read. And she wrote gospel poems, metrical lyrics like Fanny Crosby might have written:

Where the little stream meanders

Through the meadow in the wood,

There’s a place that’s very special

To my soul;

It is there I talk to Jesus

When the storms of life descend

And He meets with me

And straightaway I am whole.

When she discovered I appreciated her gift, she would close her eyes and recite her poems. I wasn’t listening to an old woman chant devotional poetry-I was observing a saint at prayer. How could I help but respect this woman who had suffered so much, whose sorrows had built a faith that my easy youth could only touch from afar.

How she loved that little house! Two years later, failing eyesight forced her to give up her reading, and her home. When she moved, she gave me a set of bookends that now sit in my office.

Ethel’s secrets

Our visits continued as she adjusted to life in the nursing home. When I walked into her room, she would stare up at me from her rocking chair, squinting through the fog of her failing vision to identify the newcomer.

“Ethel!” was all I had to say.

“Oh-it’s you!” she would reply. “I was hoping you would come. Come here, hold my hand.”

Even pastoring a small congregation in rural Indiana, I was busy with many things. I chaired committees, directed boards, presided over our county’s council of churches. Ethel could have fallen through the cracks of a busy schedule. But the lessons life had taught her in her pain seemed more important to me than most of my administrative workload.

She would then close her eyes and recite her latest composition. I took down the words on my note pad to publish in our church newsletter.

One day Ethel handed me an old, brittle newspaper clipping. Dated from the turn of the century, it told a lurid story of rape and tragedy. Some ninety years ago, a little nearby town had taken a handicapped girl under its wing. She had no parents. She was a dwarf, and she never progressed beyond the mentality of a three- to five-year-old.

A drifter had come through town once, riding the railroad. He stayed a few days. He raped the young ward of the town and then disappeared on the next train.

“Those were my parents,” Ethel confided.

Then she spilled the story of her life to me in earnest. Her mother, the handicapped dwarf, had died in childbirth, being far too small to deliver a baby. Ethel was raised by an uncle some of the time, by friends around town for the rest.

She told me of her uncle’s insistence she marry a man she did not love, and her compliance. When her first husband died, she was alone, raising four boys. Well-intentioned officials tried to take her children away as wards of the state-but she refused to give them up. A kindly neighbor took the struggling family in and went on to become Ethel’s second husband.

She spoke of heart-stopping knocks on the door, policemen reporting the death of first one, then another of her boys, and of the son who came back from the war a cripple. Bitter and broken, he abused her and himself until he died an alcoholic.

When the time came for me to leave that parish, Ethel was my hardest farewell. She said she remembered the pain of sending her sons off to war, not knowing if they would come back-and this was harder.

I promised to come back.

I think of Ethel now. I see her there in her rocking chair-her smile, her outstretched hands, her delighted “Oh-it’s you!”

My holy hobby is saintwatching. I look for saints, listen to them, enjoy them, pray for them. I touch their lives by letting them touch mine.

-Charles Denison

Second Presbyterian Church

Newark, Ohio

Copyright © 1993 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal. Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.

Also in this issue

The Leadership Journal archives contain over 35 years of issues. These archives contain a trove of pastoral wisdom, leadership skills, and encouragement for your calling.

WRAPPING UP A LONG PASTORATE

ANIMAL INSTINCTS

PEOPLE IN PRINT

ICONS EVERY PASTOR NEEDS

WHY WON’T I PRAY WITH MY WIFE?

TIME TRACKING

REGARDING RESULTS

GOOD FENCES MAKE GOOD PASTORS

FROM THE EDITORS

KEEPING CONNECTED TO SPIRITUAL POWER

THE POWER OF COMMUNION

STORIES FOR THOSE WHO MOURN

10 Reasons Not to Resign

IDEAS THAT WORK

TESTS OF A LEADER’S CHARACTER

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COMEBACK

THE LEGAL LANDSCAPE

A STRUCTURE RUNS THROUGH IT

GREAT EXPECTATIONS

MINISTERIAL BUNIONS

A GREAT PLAINS MINISTRY

CONTENDING FOR THE TRUTH...IN CHURCH PUBLICITY

FROM THE EDITORS

WHEN NOT TO CONFRONT

ZONED OUT

THE LANDMARK SERMON

WHEN TO SPEAK IN PUBLIC

The Unique Network of a Small Church

GOING TO YOUR LEFT

HOW PASTORS PRACTICE THE PRESENCE

CLOSE UP

TO VERIFY

A CLEARER CALL FOR COMMITMENT

ADDING BREADTH AND DEPTH

WHEN'S IT'S A SIN TO ASK FOR FORGIVENESS

SUCCEEDING A PATRIARCH

WEIGHING THOSE WEDDING INNOVATIONS

PASTORING STRONG-WILLED PEOPLE

Case Study: The Entrenched and Ineffective Worker

A WOUNDED PASTOR'S RESCUE

THE SLY SABOTEUR

TO VERIFY …

WHAT THE WORLD NEEDS NOW

CLASSIC CREATIVITY

THE TOP-10 “LAST WORDS IN YOUR CHURCH”

MAKING SENSE OF THE TRAUMA

Standing in the Crossfire

BENEFITS OF AN INTENTIONAL INTERIM

THE BACK PAGE

WARS YOU CAN'T WIN

UNLIKELY ALLIES

THE HIGH-TURNOVER SMALL CHURCH

Handing Your Baby to Barbarians

TO ILLUSTRATE…

PEOPLE IN PRINT

TO VERIFY…

ARE PASTORS ABUSED?

BUILDING YOUR ALL-VOLUNTEER ARMY

HEART TO HEART PREACHING

HIDDEN EFFICIENCIES OF PRAYER

IDEAS THAT WORK

WHEN YOU TAKE A PUBLIC STAND

REKINDLING VISION IN AN ESTABLISHED CHURCH

WAYS TO SHAKE OFF THE DUST

WHAT’S DRAMA DOING IN CHURCH?

THE DANGER OF DETAILS

THE BACK PAGE

NEW AND NOTEWORTHY

SQUEEZE PLAY AT HOME

A POWERFUL PRESENCE

PRACTICING THE ORIGINAL PASSION

MAKING PEACE IN A WAR ZONE

THE WELL-FED IMAGINATION

RAISING YOUR CREATIVITY QUOTIENT

LET THERE BE WIT & WISDOM, WEEKLY

TO ILLUSTRATE

THE PREVENT DEFENSE

FROM THE EDITORS

THE BACK PAGE

CAN YOU TEACH AN OLD CHURCH NEW TRICKS?

Spiritual Disciplines for the Undisciplined

BREAKING THE GRUMBLERS’ GRIP

WHEN YOUR CHILDREN PAY THE PRICE

THE CONCILIATION CAVALRY

DANCING WITH DEFEAT

IDEAS THAT WORK

THE TIGHTER ZONING DEFENSES

BUSTING OUT OF SERMON BLOCK

PEOPLE IN PRINT

How to Spend the Day in Prayer

REVERSING CHURCH DECLINE

THE JOY OF INEFFICIENT PRAYER

IF YOU HAVE A GRIPE, PRESS 2

CULTIVATING CLOSENESS

WHEN YOU FEEL LIKE A FOREIGNER

BAPTISM IN A COFFIN

SONGS THAT FIT THE FLOW

FROM THE EDITORS

THE QUEST FOR CONTENTMENT

THE CUTTING-EDGE TRADITIONAL CHURCH

CAN SERVANTS SAY NO?

PEOPLE IN PRINT

THE BACK PAGE

CARING FOR THE CONFUSED

A MODEL WORSHIP SET

WIRING YOURSELF FOR LIGHTNING

A Pastor's Quarrel with God

DIAGNOSING YOUR HEART CONDITION

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