THE GOD WHO EMBRACED ME
I believe in God. Not that cosmic, intangible
spirit-in-the-sky that Mama told me as a
little boy “always was and always
will be.” But the God who embraced
me when Daddy disappeared from our lives—from
my life at age four—the night police
led him away from our front door, down the
stairs in handcuffs. The God who warmed
me when we could see our breath inside our
freezing apartment, where the gas was disconnected
in the dead of another wind-whipped Chicago
winter, and there was no food, little hope
and no hot water.
The God who held my hand when I witnessed
boys in my ‘hood swallowed by the
elements, by death and by hopelessness;
who claimed me when I felt like “no-man’s
son,” amid the absence of any man
to wrap his arms around me and tell me,
“everything’s going to be okay,”
to speak proudly of me, to call me son.
I believe in God, God the Father, embodied
in his Son Jesus Christ. The God who allowed
me to feel His presence—whether by
the warmth that filled my belly like hot
chocolate on a cold afternoon, or that voice,
whenever I found myself in the tempest of
life’s storms, telling me (even when
I was told I was ‘nothing”)
that I was something, that I was His, and
that even amid the desertion of the man
who gave me his name and DNA and little
else, I might find in Him sustenance.
I believe in God, the God who I have come
to know as father, as Abba—Daddy.
I always envied boys I saw walking hand-in-hand
with their fathers.
I thirsted for the conversations fathers
and sons have about the birds and the bees,
or about nothing at all—simply feeling
his breath, heartbeat, presence. As a boy,
I used to sit on the front porch watching
the cars roll by, imaging that one day one
would park and the man getting out would
be my daddy But it never happened.
When I was 18, I could find no tears that
Alabama winter’s evening in January
1979 as I stood finally—face to face—with
my father lying cold in a casket, his eyes
sealed, his heart no longer beating, his
breath forever stilled. Killed in a car
accident, he died drunk, leaving me hobbled
by the sorrow of years of fatherlessness.
By then, it had been years since Mama had
summoned the police to our apartment that
night, fearing that Daddy might hurt her—hit
her—again. Finally, his alcoholism
consumed what good there was of him until
it swallowed him whole. It wasn't’t
until many years later, standing over my
father’s grave for a long overdue
conversation, that my tears flowed. I told
him about the man I had become. I told him
about how much I wished he had been in my
life. And I realized fully that in his absence,
I had found another. Or that He—God,
the Father, God, my Father—had found
me.
***Elder
John Fountain
Taken from: NPR “All Things
Considered,” November 28, 2005

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