Conversation with a Seminary student over coffee . . .

by Terry 12 Replies latest jw friends

  • James Brown
    James Brown

    Good post

  • Terry
    Terry

    So Terry what is Dubs back story?

    What is his world view being 81 and an ex minister?

    ________________________________________

    Dub was a Baptist preacher who suffered a car accident, I believe in 2003.

    He lost his leg and his eye popped out, but they were able to pop it back in and bolster it in place with a metal plate. (Ouch.)

    He could not continue his duties as minister and his transition became that of a handyman for various churches (within the limits of his physicality).

    Being a people person and being quite a bright fellow, Dub began broadening his interests in reading matter. He experienced the same

    epiphany JW's have realizing TTATT. In this instance, formal religious belief.

    His substitute for Bible beating became a ministry toward others, i.e. those with various 'challenges.'

    I think I'm going to cut and paste a chapter out of my first book and post it here in the next panel. It will give you

    a much clearer view of who Dub is.

    Let me find it and I'll be right back.

  • Terry
    Terry

    Excerpt from I WEPT BY THE RIVERS of BABYLON (A Prisoner of Conscience in a Time of War)

    I motored over to Dub's house. It is early Sunday
    morning and he's ready to go even though I'm early.
    We drove to the rehabilitation hospital.
    "Who can volunteer to provide some Spiritual
    encouragement for the patients on the 3rd floor of
    Texas Rehabilitation Hospital?" Dub’s Bible study
    group at the Unity Church had been asked by hospital
    coordinators.
    Dub jumped at the chance. “Jumped” is perhaps the
    wrong word. Dub has a missing leg. At least the original
    organic part is missing.
    A prosthetic device has replaced it. You might call it his
    "stand in.”
    Dub used to be a Baptist preacher. In fact, he studied at
    3 seminaries. Now, he is eighty-five. Involuntarily he
    "retired" from the ministry after a car crash crushed his
    leg and dislodged his left eye. That was in 2003. It was a
    life changer for him!
    His world and worldview, he had confided, turned
    upside down over night. He was no longer "viable" as a
    Pastor. This was his Church’s verdict. Inevitably, he was
    unplugged from active relevance in not only the church
    but his family as well. His eyes were opened to
    unpleasant awareness. Life was going to be very
    different!

    99
    Dub Horn began questioning things. He set aside his
    rigid mindset. His new self-accepted the freedom of new
    opportunity. A chance to be of some service to others
    doesn't come often (if at all) for a man in his 80's.
    He was eager to take on the special job of visitation and
    morale booster for the third floor at the rehab ward. If
    ever a man was well-suited for such a task it was Dub.
    That's where I came in.
    Although I had never before volunteered for charity
    work, I thought it was time I left my comfort zone and
    offered “mankind” some payback. It was time to care
    about others.
    Dub was a regular customer of mine at the bookstore
    where I worked: Half-Price Books.
    For an avid reader such as me it was a
    dream-come-true.
    My job was to sort and shelve books in the Religion and
    Philosophy sections.
    About once or twice a week, Dub would putter up in his
    motorized wheelchair and meander back to the Religion
    section searching for a chat.
    I could tell right away he was warmly knowledgeable.
    He also displayed a pleasant "people person" manner.
    We clicked. ‘Very cheery man’, I thought.

    100
    Soon after my retirement, Dub and I met for coffee once
    a week and we’d catch up. He turned to me one day and
    said, "I've got a job for you if you're interested. . .”
    Something inside me responded positively to the
    suggestion and I accepted although I confess, I had
    never done this sort of thing before. I had no idea what
    was ahead, but, it isn't too often at my age (mid-sixties)
    I can indulge a fresh, positive experience.
    The third floor of Rehab Hospital is vast. It is dedicated
    to special cases that aren't nominally a perfect fit. As a
    matter of fact, the people who reside there have little
    actual hope of rehabilitation. These particular patients
    have a terminal prognosis.
    Dub and I arrived. I parked in the Handicap zone and
    Dub hung his special sign on my rearview. I unloaded
    Dub’s case and we took the long trek upstairs to the 3rd
    floor. There I unpacked the speakers for music and
    organized his clippings and print-outs and connected
    speaker wires to his iPad.
    This particular Sunday morning, after setting up the CD
    player with soothing Old Time Gospel music (foreign to
    my virgin ears), I took a seat on the nearby couch. This
    room for visitors and patients is arranged comfortably
    with actual home-style furniture.
    After a few minutes, one by one, the cavalcade of wheel
    chairs arrives. Nurses tool them in and position the
    seating arrangement into a spacious semi-circle.
    (Imagine a large den with cushy furniture and nobody
    seated on anything but their wheelchairs.)

    101
    Unexpectedly, I was rather shaken by my first sight of
    three catatonic patients ferried in and arrayed in the
    front of the room. Each was elderly, frail and contorted
    in some physical manner.
    I held my breath involuntarily until I finally confronted
    them as people and realized what their state of being
    was and how their minds were trapped in unresponsive
    bodies!
    I squirmed inside my own healthy body. (It felt like
    guilt.) I actually had to remind myself: This isn’t about
    you, Terry, this isn’t about you.
    The first catatonic person, a middle-aged lady, merely
    slumped with her head drooped down, with doll's eyes
    partly closed. The second woman’s head permanently
    tilted as if to examine the ceiling.
    One other patient was a stare-straight-ahead lady, inert
    in a way impossible for me to comprehend.
    All the usual possibilities for social interaction did not
    apply. At least, so it seemed to me. Being cordial or
    friendly had always seemed to be about manners and
    conversation, gestures, and formality.
    None of that meant anything in this situation.
    A rude thought intruded: an impression of awkward,
    discomfiting statues and not people. (This was a living
    person?)
    Immediately, other patients wheeled in by nurses,
    wedged the interstices in a loose array.

    102
    Another white-haired lady who hummed or sang
    wordlessly without tune caught my attention. She, for
    an hour and a half, continued the singsong, deeply
    rooted in her own lodged “memory."
    Next to her sat an alert woman actively engaging
    everybody and nobody in particular. Every sentence
    commenced with, "I adopted two kids in Nigeria. … In
    school they call the boy I adopted 'the rich kid' because
    I sent him clothes and shoes. … I have photographs…."
    Over and again this person shared her one essential
    thought with the group, perhaps like a phonograph
    needle, her brain is stuck in one groove….always.
    On her left was a Church of Christ member (so she told
    us) who responded to everything Dub would say by
    repeating it exactly as a human echo.
    When either of us would say something aloud one
    particular lady spoke up to say “You’re a wonderful
    man” It never failed to sound perfectly sincere.
    This woman appeared as though she had just arrived
    home from church. Her grooming was perfect and her
    sweet smile glowed with benevolence.
    Before our hour and a half had ended, she had repeated
    that pet phrase exactly fifteen times. (I know, I counted
    for some obsessive reason of my own!) “You’re a
    wonderful man. You’re a wonderful man.”
    Each utterance was as though for the very first time.
    I had burrowed into myself emotionally at this point. I
    confess I had become an observer, as though I were in a
    strange jungle of indescribable flora and fauna.

    103
    An outsider in a strange new world, I asked myself,
    “What next?”
    ****
    The last man in our crowded parlor was a dignified
    ninety-year-old black gentleman who informed us
    modestly he had been a Deacon in his church for many
    years.
    He confessed he was no longer good at sharing
    conversationally but could express himself in song. We
    did not hesitate to encourage him!
    He began crooning, "He Touched Me," in a mellow, deep
    voice that lovingly caressed each phrase. I listened
    enthralled by the power of his performance.
    Dub’s face shone moist with tears flowing from his eyes
    as I suddenly experienced something unaccustomed
    and unidentifiable inside. An emotion was escaping
    from the prison of my soul as the Deacon’s plaintive
    song ended on a pianissimo of gentle praise.
    Dub choked out, "When I had my head-on collision and
    lost my leg, I was in the hospital for six months. One
    day, a pretty young lady came to the hospital and up to
    my room and sang that same song for me: "He Touched
    Me". I felt like God wanted me to know he cared about
    my suffering. . ..."
    At this point, I should mention an incessant background
    sound floating in the air.
    It was a woman's plaintive voice repeating a phrase
    from a distance. Perhaps she was in another room?

    104
    It grew louder until her bed appeared at the doorway as
    the floor nurse wheeled her in and trundled her to the
    back of the room and locked the brake on the bed’s
    wheels.
    We heard her voice so often it became the patter of rain
    or the sound of wind in an uncomfortable downpour.
    She called politely but beseechingly!
    "Help me, please. Somebody help me. Please help me,
    somebody."
    None of the patients blinked an eye her way. Dub gave
    me a searching look.
    Shortly, I couldn't bear it any longer. I jumped up and
    went in search of hospital personnel. I caught up with a
    nurse. She listened to me and then shook her head
    despairingly. "She does this. She can't help it. We aren't
    ignoring her. It is just her thing; part of her symptom."
    Let me tell you, if you are hearing it for the first time
    you feel like a monster for not rushing over and trying
    to do. . .what? Something. Anything. The awful reality of
    it is: there is nothing to be done!
    One middle-aged fellow who had suffered a stroke sat in
    his wheelchair. His wife stood behind him constantly
    patting him on the arms or rubbing his shoulder in
    perpetual reassurance and consolation.
    She was unfailingly encouraging and tender. I recited to
    myself silently, "In sickness and in health. . ."
    The man's face owned one expression and it never
    changed: oblivion. He might well have been a drawing
    of a man.

    105
    Dub stood and explained to everybody we were not
    there to preach to them but to "encourage them.”
    Dub Horn is very good at this. Let me tell you; what he
    says and does is outside of my experience as the
    Jehovah's Witness I once was for 20 years. There had
    been no such thing as charity for strangers, only fellow
    members.
    You might say we thought our message was charity
    enough.
    Dub’s manner is tenderly personal yet neutral as to an
    agenda. He smiles genuinely and asks simple questions
    and gives affirmations. He has no reading material to
    peddle in order to acquire a convert. He is a beacon and
    there are always troubled ships foundering out there on
    rough seas. Unglamorous and yet, magnificent…my
    friend is anonymous, invisible as he speaks.
    "We are here today because God wants us to be
    together to encourage one another. We don't have to get
    out and go to a big fancy church to do that. We just
    gather and His Spirit is with us."
    There are a few nods and an old fashioned "amen" or
    two from the Deacon. I am amused.
    Dub continues…
    "Why are we still here? Why are we living so long with
    so many discouraging problems in our health? I'll tell
    you why: God still has something important for each
    one of us to do with our lives before he calls us home."

    106
    I immediately call to mind the line in Rime of the
    Ancient Mariner: “He listens as a three years child; the
    Mariner hath his will.”
    Among our tight group are faces which are mostly flesh
    facades. The patients seem impassive at first, yet… do I
    see a flicker of change?
    (This is not possible, I’m projecting and not seeing
    anything.)
    Dub smiled. He was light and conversational. He sat on a
    tall cushion about 3 feet off the floor at about eye-level
    to those seated in wheelchairs.
    "What does God want with us? What is our purpose
    now that we can hardly move about any longer? Well,
    what are we doing today? We are just sitting here,
    right? Did you know, by YOU being here with me, you
    have encouraged me? That's what you've done for ME

    That's what you've done for ME today.
    I hope I can do the same for you and tell you: “God
    knows you and loves you and will never leave you in
    your time of distress."
    What I like about his delivery is that it has no
    “preacher” in it at all.
    He is just a person, a civilian, a fellow sufferer who has
    spent his last 8 or 9 years struggling against setback
    after setback. He is real.
    The faces of the catatonic listeners reflect. . .something. .
    . again, I can't exactly say what it is. . ..but, it is definitely
    a change of character or mood. . .or. . .

    107
    I'd compare it to looking out upon a lake and the water
    is reflecting the movement of the clouds.
    Dub continues. . .
    "I'm here to encourage you to love. God is love. He lives
    in us when we love. Some of you cannot move and yet
    your mind moves. You can hear. You can think. God has
    your undivided attention you might say.”
    "Search in your own heart.”
    “Is there somebody in your life who has wronged you?
    If you say to yourself 'I hate so-and-so,’ you aren't
    hurting them one little bit. But, you are hurting
    yourself.”
    “Let go of that. Forgive. Feel love instead of hate for that
    person who wronged you. It won't do anything for
    them—but I'll tell you truly: it will allow the love of God
    to shine inside you."
    The energy in this visiting room has as a kind of
    weather change occurring between sunlight and clouds
    before a rain. I think I am sensing something.
    Dub grins and starts to sing: "This Little Light of Mine,
    I'm gonna let it shine. . .."
    He waves his hands like a maestro before a motionless
    orchestra as he sings… and slowly…a few voices join
    him!
    As this goes on, more wheelchairs with more patients
    are pushed into the room. One new lady is profoundly
    affected by some sort of palsy.

    108
    Her head and eyes roll constantly. It is disconcerting to
    encounter for the first time! One of the other ladies cries
    aloud: "She's crazy!"
    Dub stops singing and calmly holds his hand toward the
    unkind remark palm down and quietly remonstrates:
    “We don't say that. . .we say. . .she has different
    opportunities than the rest of us. . ."
    The offending lady immediately sees wisdom in this.
    "Yes. Yes she does. She has different opportunities than
    the rest of us."
    And the singing continues, "Let it shine, let it shine, let it
    shine."
    By the end of our time in that Visiting room, I can feel all
    sorts of things happening inside of me I file away for
    thinking about later. Mostly, I reflect on how very little
    of my life spent as a Jehovah's Witness was an actual
    outreach to somebody with profound physical needs to
    gift them with anything simple like companionship or a
    word of encouragement. It seems my purpose before
    was more of prospecting for customers. (Peculiar
    thought!)
    It shook me and rocked my world on that amazing 3rd
    floor. So little can really mean so much!
    I called to mind a moment when I sat with a Witness
    friend in a shopping mall food court sipping coffee years
    earlier. A deaf man approached our table as we were
    talking.

    109
    The man silently offered my companion his card with
    American Sign Language printed on it. It requested a
    donation.
    My JW friend looked toward him appraisingly and asked
    slowly: "You can't hear?" He watched the fellow as he
    articulated his gestured reply.
    Then, my JW friend shook his head "No."
    He handed the card back. The deaf fellow nodded at him
    and walked off to another table. The friend turned to
    me, apparently pleased with himself.
    “I watched his eyes as I spoke to see if he was reading
    my lips or not. If he’s really deaf, he will. If not, he’s
    faking.” What made me uncomfortable about that at the
    time? I thought about it today for some reason. Why
    must we judge the needs of others? Why had I just sat
    there like a stone?
    Dub has experienced a wonderful visitation this
    amazing Sunday and so have I. I speculated to my
    cheerful companion making remarks concerning each
    person we met up on the 3rd floor. Who are they now
    compared with what they once were? What sort of life
    was theirs?
    I jabber compulsively for a while. Relief is needed. It is
    as if I have to debrief myself and talk endlessly about
    our experience to deal with the feelings I'm
    experiencing. One part of me wanted to flee in terror
    when I first got there and the other part wanted to hug
    everybody.

    110
    Dub sums it all up nicely. "When we give we always get
    more in return."
    Why hadn't I ever felt this way before? I had to ask.
    Dub smiles and shakes his head saliently, “It isn’t about
    you.”
    And then I suddenly see as if for the first time
    It is back!
    The tickle of original feeling from when I was only five
    has returned!
    The original God who didn’t need a name is present in
    the act of giving, caring.
    Perhaps I am like the Samaritan apostate who listens to
    conscience?
    Perhaps I don’t have to be the Priest after all.
    *****
    <Snip> End Excerpt

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