He shrugged. “Sure, why not?”
“Let’s pray for Joe,” I said, beckoning to the Sisson brothers and Bruce Hiddle, my elders, to join me. We laid hands on Joe, and then I prayed. I don’t remember much of my prayer. I said something about Joe wanting a touch from God, and humbling himself in meek petition, and I know I requested that God would just glorify himself in Joe’s body, in the name of Jesus.
And just like that, it was over. “Thanks for coming, Joe.”
“Thank you, Travis,” was all he said as he sat down.
They stayed for the rest of the service, received love and greetings from all of us, and then left.
Monday morning we were framing up the walls of the new stable and wondering how Joe was doing. He never came out of the house and we didn’t hear a thing from Emily or anyone else.
We remembered him in prayer at lunch time.
Tuesday, it was the same thing. We watched the house to see if any cars were gone, and one was. Maybe Joe was in the hospital.
Maybe he was in for tests, chemotherapy, or even surgery to have his colon removed. We couldn’t find out.
Wednesday morning, after we’d put in about an hour, Joe came out to see us, his hands in his jeans pockets, his cowboy hat set firmly on his head.
“Hey Joe,” I said, “how’s it going?”
He looked straight at me, that old Joe Kelmer half-smile on his face, and said, “Guess who doesn’t have cancer anymore?”
The silence that fell over us was just as long and awkward as when we first heard the bad news.
I was being cautious, I guess. I actually said, “Who?”
Joe gave his chest two little taps with his thumb.
We were amazed. That’s all there was to it. “You’re kidding!”
“Praise God!” “Are you sure?” “What’d the doctor say?”
“Went in on Monday.” He laughed. “I told the doc something was feeling different all of a sudden and he got me right in like it was an emergency. They about took me apart trying to find something wrong. They spent two days at it and—” He gave his hands a quick wave like an umpire signaling safe. “It’s gone. I’m clean! They can’t figure it out. But I know.”
We couldn’t believe it. We looked at each other.
He almost touched noses with me. “Jesus healed me. He answered your prayer, and he answered mine.” He backed off and addressed all of us. “So you boys might want to knock off for a while. Emily’s got some coffee on and we can microwave some cinnamon rolls. We’re gonna give our lives to Jesus. You just tell us what to do.”
When the apostle Paul told the Philippian jailer “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved, you and your whole household,” his words could have applied perfectly to Joe and his family. On Wednesday, Joe and Emily knelt in their living room with me, Pete, Johnny, and Tinker, and received Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior. On Friday, Joe and Emily’s daughter, Claudia, and her husband, Nate, knelt in the same living room and turned their lives over to Jesus.
On Sunday, Joe and Emily sat in the same green, plastic chairs, and Claudia and Nate sat right next to them. Their son, Larry, and his wife, Shirley, had come from Oregon to fill out the row, and they dedicated their lives to Christ that morning.
Joe was not a shy man, and if you bought a horse from him or sold him feed or asked him directions or called to sell him a magazine subscription or just pumped some gas for his truck, you heard about Jesus and what Jesus had done for him. He wasn’t one to debate or hard sell, but it was hard to argue with his testimony.
Norm Barrett, the diesel mechanic, along with his wife and three kids, came to the Lord because of Joe Kelmer. Bud Lundgren, our permanent guitar player, got saved while he and Joe were out bass fishing, and Bud’s wife, Julie, our permanent saxophone player, got saved while shopping with Emily. The Barretts and the Lundgrens shared Jesus with other friends, some of them got saved and shared with their friends, and for a while we had ourselves a nice little revival rippling through town.
And it all started with Joe Kelmer.
BRUCE HIDDLE. He was a good-looking guy in his thirties, an electrical engineer for Washington Water Power. He had a sweet wife named Annie and two cute kids, Jamie and Josh. In May of 1990 he displayed a quiet peace and faith in the Lord that became an example to the rest of us.
Bruce and his family were returning from a visit with Annie’s folks in Electric City, driving a long, monotonous two-lane late at night. Bruce was at the wheel, Annie was on the passenger side, the kids were secured in child seats in the back.
The last thing Bruce remembers was the oncoming headlights of a large vehicle, most likely a truck. There was nothing amiss.
The truck was in its own lane. They passed each other, going opposite directions.
And then Bruce woke up in a daze, in the dark, his body numb, slumped against his shoulder restraint. The kids in the back seat were screaming. Blood was streaming from his forehead and dripping off his chin. Beads of shattered windshield lay like gravel on the seats, in his lap, on top of the dashboard. The car was leaning precariously, apparently in a gully beside the highway. He reached for Annie, but felt rough wood. A twelve-inch log had come through the windshield and now lay where Annie’s head and shoulders should have been. He twisted around, trying to see the kids. They were spattered with blood, flesh, and Annie’s blonde hair.
A logging truck had lost part of its load just as the two vehicles passed. A log, perfectly timed and aimed, went through the windshield of Bruce’s car, missing Bruce and killing his wife. The truck driver pulled over and became incoherent when he saw what his lost load had done. Another motorist saw the wreck and went in search of a telephone.
I was working as dispatcher for the volunteer fire department that night and took the emergency call. I sent out the dispatch, telling the volunteers there’d been a fatality accident, but I had no idea the accident involved a family from my church. When the aid crew arrived and radioed back, I got the news. By that time, Bruce and the kids had been trapped in their car for over an hour. Numb with shock, I remained at my post, coordinating communications and crews until Pete Sisson burst into the station and bumped me from my chair. “I’ll handle it. Get going.”
Bruce and the kids were airlifted to a hospital in Spokane, and that was where I found them. Bruce had broken ribs and facial lacerations. The kids had minor injuries from flying glass and seat restraints. He was coherent, but we didn’t talk. There were no words, only shock and an insurmountable disbelief.
Annie was gone. Instantly. Before any of us could fathom that we had lost anything, she simply wasn’t there. We could not believe it that night. We could scarcely believe it the next morning.
Shock did not give way to grief until well into the next day.
And then the questions came: With miles and miles of open road, why that truck, that car, together at that time in that place?
Why was the accident so ruthlessly, savagely perfect?
Like everyone else, I drew upon my faith for comfort and tried to share that comfort as best I could. But inside, I was asking the same questions as everyone else, knowing there would never be answers.
There was no funeral, only a memorial service once Bruce had healed enough to attend. All who knew and loved Annie were there, and took turns sharing their thoughts and remembrances.
I spoke briefly about the need to trust God in all circumstances, for his ways are unsearchable. I reminded everyone that Annie, knowing Jesus, was in a better place and just fine, but I could feel my insides quaking and I teetered on the brink of tears with every sentence. After we sang our last song, I stole quietly into a back room, sat down with my face in my hands, and lost it completely.
Oh dear Lord, why? Why Annie? What’s Bruce going to do now? What about Josh and Jamie?
I didn’t hear anyone come in. I just felt a hand on my shoulder and heard a quiet whisper, “It’s okay . . . it’s okay.”
I reached up a
nd touched the hand touching me, then looked into the scarred, black-and-blue face of Bruce Hiddle. He sat down, put his arm around my shoulders and let me cry, not saying another word. I was supposed to be the minister bringing comfort to the grieving, but I was drained of comfort. Bruce, a quiet serenity showing through his scars and his tears, was ready to share what he had.
In the months that followed, Bruce often got tearful, at any time, in any place, usually without warning, but he didn’t seem self-conscious about it. “It’s for Annie,” he would tell people.
“Don’t worry, it’s just something I have to do.” The rest of the time, he was the friend, daddy, and brother we all cherished, with a glow about him that the scars and the stitches could not extinguish.
The scars eventually faded. The glow still remains.
“It’s Jesus,” he always explained. “He knows the answers. He’ll work it out.”
Two years later, the Lord brought Libby McLane into Bruce’s life, and in the summer of 1992, they were wed in our little church on Elm Street. Josh and Jamie stood with their dad and their new mom as I performed the ceremony, and once again, I teetered on the brink of tears with every sentence.
“It’s okay,” Bruce whispered to me as he held his bride’s hand.
“It’s okay.”
MR. FRAMER. He said he’d been to church already and didn’t need any more of it. Well, we saw no need to argue with that, but church wasn’t the question, Jesus was.
But although Mr. Framer didn’t need any more religion, he did need a haircut. Marian volunteered and gave him a trim every two weeks. Having accepted her help, he was ready to accept mine, and so I helped him put a new roof on his house over several weekends.
The next thing we knew, he was mowing the church grass every week without anyone asking him. When we started running a bus ministry around town, he was the guy who provided the bus and kept it running.
Four years after we started renting the church building, he finally came to a Sunday morning service, slipping in behind a group of folks to escape notice. I saw him come in but didn’t make a big deal out of it. I just winked at him. We played that little game for the next few months, long enough for him to discover he could talk to just about anyone in that church without something spooky or “religious” happening to him.
Only when I was sure it was safe did I ask him about Mrs.
Framer, and why she was not attending church with him. He didn’t give me a clear answer that Sunday, but the following Wednesday he gave me a strong enough hint.
He brought over a portable, battery-powered chemical toilet for us to install under the basement stairway. That way, he said, the ladies wouldn’t have to trek out to the outhouse during a service, but could fulfill their natural obligations with some comfort and delicacy. I could tell he thought very highly of his gesture, so I didn’t refuse it. We put the toilet under the stairs and nailed up a plywood wall and a thin little door with a springed hinge.
A chemical toilet is a box-shaped contraption with a toilet seat on top that doesn’t flush to an outside sewer or septic system. It has two tanks inside it, one for fresh water and chemicals, the other to hold all the flushed waste. When you’re finished and you press a little button, the electric pump kicks on, the blue water and chemical mix swirls around the bowl, and the toilet tucks away your contribution in its holding tank.
The toilet Mr. Framer gave us was comfortable. I know that from personal experience, and others would agree. As for delicate, well, that toilet just couldn’t keep a secret. The electric pump was loud, and it would grind on forever, announcing to the entire congregation seated upstairs that a modest user had just finished and would be rejoining the service directly. If that wasn’t announcement enough, the slam of that plywood door was.
And then there was the smell. Though intended for the ladies and their need for comfort and privacy, it’s just a fact of life that one good toilet among forty churchgoers is going to get used by everyone. Our little camping toilet wasn’t meant to handle a load that size, and it didn’t.
No matter. As soon as that toilet was in, Mrs. Framer came to church. The Framers heard the gospel every Sunday for two more years, and finally came forward to receive Christ one Sunday night.
Nothing tragic had occurred in their lives. There was no crisis or desperate material need to make them turn to God. They were just ready, that was all. It was time.
But I do credit the Framers with our board’s unanimous decision to do “whatever was necessary” to get a septic system approved and a real flushing toilet installed. That motion was seconded and carried within a month of the chemical toilet’s arrival, and when we installed men’s and women’s flush toilet restrooms in the basement, the Framers were there to cut the ribbon.
RICH WATKINS. A former biker, now a trucker, with long, black hair in a ponytail and eagles, skulls, snakes, and naked women tattooed all over his huge arms. When we marched for Jesus down the main highway through town with signs and placards proclaiming his name, Rich happened to be in the tavern and stepped outside to watch us go by. Some of his drinking buddies laughed at us, but Rich just read our signs and listened to us sing. I saw the look on his face and thought, Dear Lord, protect us. That guy looks like trouble.
He pulled up in front of our church on his Harley Sunday morning, sat quietly through the whole service, and then said to me afterward, “So this where you find Jesus?”
“It sure is,” I said.
“Well, I’ve decided I gotta square up with my old lady, but I’d better get right with God first, know what I mean?”
I prayed with him, led him to Christ, and eventually met his wife, Clarice, and their four children. Now this guy was one monumental discipling job. He’d never been to Sunday school or had any kind of Christian upbringing, so Marian and I and our church family had to do it all. We had to teach him the subtleties of doctrine, concepts such as, You don’t usually lead a person to repentance by breaking a beer bottle over his head, and such fine points as, Turning the other cheek doesn’t mean you walk up and moon somebody you don’t like.
He’s still growing in the Lord, and recently took a big step we were all proud of: He volunteered to go into the public schools and give the kids a no-holds-barred lecture about staying off drugs.
The kids love his presentations. The parents and teachers do too, especially since we finally broke him of the habit of referring to Satan as “that dirty SOB the devil.”
If I ever needed a mental image of the early Simon Peter, I just imagined Rich Watkins and I had it.
GUY FORBES. He ran the local movie theater. When he showed an X-rated movie, I got some of the other pastors and their churches to join us in picketing the theater both nights. I thought he’d be mad at us—many of the folks going into the theater were—but he called me that week and apologized for showing the movie. We got together for lunch after that, got to know and trust each other, and later started up our own, impromptu movie rating committee between the two of us. He didn’t always go along with the other half of the committee, but we reached more agreements than disagreements, and our town enjoyed a little more peace because of it. He has yet to get saved, but we have a strong, mutual respect.
BOB FISHER, Paul Daley, the Sisson brothers, Jake Helgeson, Rudie Whaler, Tinker Moore, and twenty other guys and gals who showed up the night our house caught fire. You never appreciate your neighbors quite so much as when you’re in trouble, and that night, when Marian turned away from some French fries to answer the phone and a grease fire broke out, we owed those folks everything. The fire took out most of the kitchen and blackened the rest of the house, but thanks to the faithful folks of the volunteer fire department, most of our belongings made it through. After the fire, the town almost buried us in clothing, food, dishes, and utensils to replace what we had lost. I’d done a lot of visitation around town, knocking on doors to get acquainted with people, but I don’t know that I ever met as many folks as when we were in need and t
hey came by to help out.
Antioch’s a great town, it really is.
THAT FARMHAND—I never learned his name. Tom something. He was working for George Harding during harvest and got his foot caught in a combine auger. I was driving the truck and heard him screaming. By the time we shut the machine down and got him out, his ankle had made at least two full rotations.
“Pray for me, preacher!” he kept screaming.
I touched his ankle—very gently—and prayed, “Lord, please heal this leg, please restore it in Jesus’ name.”
He was back at work the next day, climbing all over that machine as if nothing had happened.
He moved on after harvest. I don’t know if he ever got saved.
LANCE MONTGOMERY; Tiger, Cecily, and Moira Bradley; Ron and Vicki Hanson and their sons, Ned and Tom; the rest of the youth group and a fair share of the town. One of the kids got an old 8mm home movie camera, and I got an idea. I wrote a script and our youth group made a movie, a fifty-five minute epic shot on location in and around the town of Antioch. The whole production cost us five hundred dollars and took a year to film. We staged a big car wreck, burned down a barn painted to look like a house, kept our characters in constant peril until they got saved, and pulled in as many people as we could to be extras and walk-ons. By the time the movie premiered in the high school auditorium, at least a hundred folks came to see it because they were in it. The film was grainy and jerky. Sometimes our actors sounded like munchkins and sometimes they sounded like dopey giants talking through molasses.
Sometimes the movie camera picked up the local radio station and we got music and news along with dialogue, but our show was a hit and we broke even. I don’t think the showing of the film won any souls to the Lord, but the making of it helped us get to know a lot of folks around town, and they all heard the gospel in the process.
The Frank Peretti Collection Page 89