by Janette Oke
Kathleen smiled. Little Rachel. She pulled the baby close and gave her another kiss.
* * *
The years had been kind to the family. Never had they faced serious illness or mishap. Except for the loss of baby Taryn, Kathleen had brought all of her babies safely into the world with no problems. They were healthy and ruggedly hardy from farm life.
Donnigan kept their bodies toughened yet agile with a balance of work and play, and Kathleen kept their minds active and alert as they pored over lesson books.
Each morning Donnigan read from the Bible. The children had learned most of the Bible stories over the years, and Kathleen was often amused to hear their childish discussion about God.
“They talk about Him like He was—was a part of their world,” said Kathleen to Donnigan.
“I hope He is,” responded Donnigan—but his voice was still filled with doubts.
“I mean—like He is—is as real to them as—as I am.”
Donnigan nodded. That was how he wanted it to be—but was he doing it right? Was he giving them what they needed? “Oh, God,” he often groaned in times of quiet reflection, “give me wisdom. Show me what to do. It would be a terrible thing to prepare them for only this life.”
* * *
“Why do we always read the Bible?” It was Eamon, their difficult one, who posed the question.
Donnigan laid the book carefully back on the table.
“Because,” he said with great feeling, “that is the only way that we can get to know God—who He is—and who He wishes us to be—how He wants us to live.”
Eamon shrugged, seemingly unconvinced—or else just un-concerned.
“We already know about Him,” said the five-year-old boy. He had been told the same stories often enough that he should know them by heart by now.
“Do we?” said his father. “Maybe we do. Let’s see. Tell me what you know about God—all of you.”
Eamon looked surprised.
It was the outgoing Fiona who responded first. “He made—everything.” She swung her hand in a big arc to include as much as she could.
“He made the waters come down,” said Brenna softly, “an’ all the animals went in the boat.”
“He’s sorta—magic,” said Sean.
“Magic? How?” prompted Donnigan.
“He can do things that no one else can do.”
Donnigan nodded.
“He deads people when they’re bad,” said Eamon.
“Kills people,” corrected Kathleen, and then felt shock at her own statement.
“He doesn’t kill people,” argued Fiona, casting a disgusted look Eamon’s way.
“He does too,” insisted Eamon. “What about the men the earth ate up? And what about when the flood came?”
“The people were already in the big boat,” cut in Fiona quickly.
“Uh-uh. Nope,” said Eamon, shaking his head emphatically. “Only Noah and his wife and them others were in the boat.”
“There were eight,” cut in Sean who always listened well to the Bible stories. “Noah and his wife and three sons and their wives.”
But Eamon didn’t seem to care much about the particulars.
“Well—all the other people got dead,” insisted Eamon.
“That’s ‘cause God was mad,” interposed Brenna softly. The fact didn’t seem to trouble her in the least.
“I don’t dead people just ’cause I’m mad,” said Eamon.
“You’re not God,” Fiona quickly flung back at him. Her voice was shrill and angry.
“Just a minute,” said Donnigan. The little conversation was getting totally out of hand and not at all what he had intended.
“Sit down—all of you. I think we need to discuss this.”
The children all sat down, as told, though Eamon looked reluctant to do so and was the last child to finally take his place on the kitchen floor.
Oh, God, Donnigan found his very soul crying out, help me with this. Please help me.
He turned back to the ring of children—the wonderful yet frightening responsibility that God had given to him. What were the right words? Did he have the truth to share with them? Or was he still dreadfully lacking?
“God made us,” he began. “And He wants us good—like Fiona said. But people didn’t stay good. Remember the story about Adam. He did bad. And after that it was very easy for all men—and women—to do bad, too.”
Donnigan stopped, took a deep breath and licked his lips.
“Now God didn’t stop with just making this world,” he went on, hoping that he had his thoughts right. “He also made a beautiful heaven. It has everything in it to make us happy—and nothing in it to make us sad. God made heaven for people. But He also made a hell. He made it bad. In fact, He made it just as bad as it could possibly be so that no one would want to go there. So that people would try very hard not to go there.”
Donnigan stopped again and looked at the little faces around him.
“I don’t want to go there,” put in Fiona, shaking her head emphatically.
“But people were still bad,” went on Donnigan. “God told them and told them to be good—but they liked being bad, better.
“From time to time, there was a man who wanted to be good. To do what God told him. So when God would find a man like that, He would talk with him, help him, and sometimes God even felt that it was important to get the good man away from the bad people.”
Donnigan stopped and looked straight at the squirming young Eamon.
“It is very easy for even good people to be—be followers of bad people. God knew that. So sometimes He took the good people away from the bad place where they lived. Like He did with Abraham when He called him away from Ur. Like He did with Noah and his family when He had them build the boat. He sent the flood of water to save Noah and his family from the evil around them. If Noah had stayed with the bad people, his family might have soon become bad, too.
“But sometimes, God used other ways. There were many good people—and bad people mixed in with them. Well, God knew that if the bad people were allowed to stay there and do the wrong things—then it wouldn’t be long until other people would be doing wrong things too.
“So God took the bad people away. Like the big earthquake that swallowed them up. Yes—they were killed. That was the way God could be sure that they wouldn’t—wouldn’t spread their evil—their bad to others.
“You see—God didn’t really kill the bad people because He hated them and was in a temper. Oh, He hated the sinful things they did—the way they lived. But God destroyed them so that they wouldn’t destroy others—so that others wouldn’t learn to be bad, too.”
He looked at the little faces before him. Sean sat listening carefully, seeming to take in every word. Fiona listened with her head tipped to one side, her fingers twisting in the folds of her dress, her toes wiggling impatiently in the worn boots. Brenna sat quietly, one arm cradling her doll. She appeared to be listening, but Donnigan wondered if Brenna, the little dreamer, might silently be humming a little tune to her baby.
Eamon stirred restlessly. His eyes were not on his father’s face. He was watching a spider that crawled up the outside of the window. Donnigan prayed inwardly that Eamon might have heard more of his words than he had let on.
Timothy, at three, wiggled and listened by turn, seemingly catching a word here and there that interested him, then turning his attention back to the small hole in the knee of his pants.
Their baby Rachel, sitting on her mother’s lap, paid little attention to her father’s words, though she was intent on studying his face.
Six children—all different—all in need of heaven, thought Donnigan. God, help me to get them there.
* * *
Eamon continued to be their “tester.” Often they heard the same defense: “You didn’t tell me not to.”
When he cut all the tops off the early spring carrots to feed the bush rabbits in the woods along the creek, when he cropped baby Rach
el’s silky curls with Kathleen’s sewing scissors, when he threw a hen off the barn roof to see if she could fly, when he left the poor pony out in the pasture blindfolded to test if she could see in the dark. At all of these times, and many more, Eamon would shrug his shoulders with the same answer: “You never told me not to.”
How could their minds possibly keep ahead of the young boy’s?
Timothy, on the other hand, was cheery and cooperative. He followed along after his older siblings, grinning at their accomplishments, clapping at their exploits, seemingly thinking that everything they did was terribly right and brilliant.
Kathleen rejoiced in the small boy. He was such a delightful change from the rambunctious, ever-pressing Eamon. No challenging, no arguments, no talking back.
But Donnigan watched his small son and felt concern. Kathleen could not understand his worry. “He’s so easygoing and pleasant. All the others dote on him.”
“That’s just the point,” replied Donnigan. “He might get the idea that’s what life’s about. Pleasing others. Being fussed over. You can’t always please others, you know. Sometimes you have to take a stand for what is right. You have to be one person against the crowd. Timothy is too quick to try to please. Too quick to do whatever he is urged to do. No. I’m thinking that boy might take more wisdom to raise than we think.”
* * *
Rachel, dear little dark-curled Rachel, began by being a happy, docile baby, seemingly content to watch the actions of the older children. Kathleen was quite surprised to discover when Rachel reached about eighteen months that her independence took a nasty turn.
“I do it!” she would scream and insist on doing her own thing—her own way. Though usually happy if left on her own, she was stubborn and difficult to discipline.
“Why didn’t I stop at five?” Kathleen asked herself more than once. But inwardly she knew that she loved the baby dearly and couldn’t imagine life without her.
* * *
“We really should pray, too,” Donnigan told his little family as he closed the Bible one morning.
“What’s pray?” asked Fiona.
“Well, it’s—it’s—” began Donnigan.
“Talking to God,” said Kathleen to help him out.
“Then let’s,” said Brenna simply.
Donnigan felt ashamed. How could he tell his children that he didn’t know how to pray? Didn’t know the words—the procedure? Didn’t have any of the prayer books or hadn’t learned any of the prayers? Little did Donnigan realize that what he cried from the deepest recesses of his heart—many times every day—was prayer.
He was about to try to explain when Brenna spoke again. “I’ll talk to God,” she said simply.
“She does it all the time,” explained Fiona to her parents.
“But—” began Donnigan. He did not want his child to do anything sacrilegious.
“God,” said Brenna, folding her hands in her lap and looking heavenward, “we read all about you in the Book. Sometimes we under-stand—and sometimes we don’t.” She gave her shoulders a slight shrug. “I liked the story about Jesus making the bread grow. And Fiona liked the story about the lions with their mouths tied shut. And Sean—” She stopped and looked at her oldest brother. “What did you like, Sean?” she asked him.
“Making things,” Sean said, his voice almost a whisper.
“And Sean likes how you made everything—like the animals. He likes the horses best. And—” Brenna stopped and looked around the circle. “Eamon likes the—the way you dead people.” Eamon wiggled, then grinned. It made him feel important to be talked about to God.
“And—Timothy likes—”
“The Three Bears,” called Timothy excitedly.
“That’s not the Bible,” said Fiona with chagrin. Timothy looked surprised at the put-down and lowered his face, his lip coming out.
“Timothy likes the bears you made,” Brenna changed it and Timothy lifted his face again, a grin replacing the pout.
Brenna cast one last glance around the room.
“And—Rachel likes—she’s still too little,” she explained to God, shaking her head.
Then she lifted her hands in front of her, looked around the room once more, shrugged her little shoulders and announced, “And that’s all.”
The prayer was over.
From then on, Donnigan encouraged his children to pray their own simple and original prayers.
Chapter Twenty-two
Eamon
Donnigan eventually knew the Bible well enough to know where to turn for the stories the children would understand—the stories that he thought they needed to know.
They had covered both the Old and the New Testaments a number of times. But Donnigan found himself flipping back to the New more and more often. The stories about the Son God sent to earth held fascination for him—and interested the children.
Kathleen hardly realized how much she had changed over the years she had spent with her family in studying the Bible. She no longer felt the same bitterness, the same resentment toward God, that she had when she had lost baby Taryn.
But when the letters came from Edmund wondering if “they would be kind enough to share the wealth that America had afforded,” Kathleen would rage inwardly, looking at the six children round her table that had to be fed and clothed. But she said nothing, and knew without asking that Donnigan always managed to find some way to send a bit of money from their meager savings.
Deep inside there was still an uneasiness in Kathleen. Why did she have to struggle so? Why did her temper still flare when things irked her? Why wasn’t she able to put the past behind her and forgive Madam? She believed the Book that Donnigan read each day. She even tried to live by it. So why didn’t God help her with her struggles?
Donnigan, too, had inner battles. He had never been troubled by deep anger. It simply was not his temperament. But there were other things that bothered him. He wondered if his offspring didn’t get some of their independence from their father. Donnigan always liked to be in charge—make the decisions for those in his care. Hadn’t he nearly smothered Kathleen in the first year of their marriage? Was he doing the same now with his children? No, surely not. It was important for them to have the right training. Donnigan felt strongly about it. It was the most important thing in the world to him. But was he doing it right? Doing all he could? He was sure in his heart that God really existed. Sure that the Bible held the truth. Why then didn’t he find peace for his own soul?
* * *
“I don’t understand it,” said Sean thoughtfully.
He and his father were excitedly surveying the new colt that had just made his appearance in the far pasture.
“Don’t understand what?” asked Donnigan, turning to the boy.
“If—God—creates everything—then why—why—how come animals keep making them? Who really makes them—the mothers or God?”
Donnigan smiled.
“God created all things—in the beginning,” Donnigan explained. “But when He did—He designed them special so that each thing—in all His creation—could reproduce itself. That is, could make a baby—of whatever it is. The pigs have pigs—the horses have horses.” He didn’t need to go on. Sean was a farm boy, he knew about reproduction.
“God still has a very real part in everything that is born. He is the ‘giver of life’ just like the Bible says, but He allows the parents to bring forth young. That’s how He made them. Remember those words God spoke in Genesis, ‘Be fruitful and multiply’? That’s what they mean.”
Sean nodded.
“That’s how life continues on,” Donnigan went on. “Animals, birds, fish, even plants, are still obeying God’s command. Are still reproducing. Why, I’m told that the drive to reproduce is even stronger than the drive to eat,” he went on frankly. “But without it—life would cease. The old would die off and there wouldn’t be any young—any new life—to take their place.”
Sean nodded again, willing to accept whateve
r his father told him. His eyes had not left the new foal.
“He looks like Black,” he said, turning Donnigan’s attention back to the new colt.
“Young often look like their fathers. Or mothers,” said Donnigan, nodding his head in agreement. “But sometimes they don’t. Guess the important thing—and sometimes the scary thing—is that they often act like their father—think like their father.”
Again Donnigan felt keenly his responsibility to his children.
A young gelding approached the new colt in curiosity and the mare tossed her head, bared her teeth, and flew at him, turning him aside and driving him away with nipping teeth and flashing hooves.
“Why did she do that?” asked Sean. “She knows him. He’s just another horse. He wouldn’t hurt the foal.”
“Parents can be very protective,” said Donnigan. “A new mother will often give her life to save her young.”
Sean nodded his agreement. He had seen new mothers protect their babies before.
“Guess she’ll take good care of him, huh?” he commented as they prepared to leave.
But Donnigan continued to ponder their conversation even after they had turned their mounts and were on the ride home.
Reproduction? It was a strong drive. Animals risked their lives to fulfill the inborn command of God. And that was just to bring an offspring into the temporary world. How much more important that one reproduce spiritual children—children who could be taken to heaven for that eternal life that the Bible spoke of.
That was his job—as a parent—and yes, he would be willing to give his life to see that it was accomplished—that his children not be barred from the heaven God had prepared.
Yet, what he was doing—what he was struggling to accomplish—somehow seemed to be falling short. And Donnigan did not understand why.
* * *
Of all of the children, Eamon seemed to need the tightest rein. Donnigan often felt at a loss as to how to properly guide the young boy. To discipline after the fact seemed like shutting the barn door after the horse got out. If he could only instill in his son a desire to do right. But how? Eamon seemed to thrive on controversy—on bucking authority—on testing his parents. Why? Why? Donnigan asked a dozen times a day. Why so much defiance in a child who was loved?