Bound by Wisdom
Sometimes, it's in the quiet exchange of ideas and the mutual respect for each other's growth that we find our most profound connections.
I have gathered a posie of other men’s flowers, and nothing but the thread that binds them is mine own. –John Bartlett
When my dad told me he wanted to begin reading the Bible near the end of his life, I gave him mine. It was full of highlighted passages and notes I’d written throughout its pages – most of which I thought probably wouldn’t mean a whole lot to him.
A few days later, I asked him how his reading was going. He told me he had read the entire book of John and he said he had a lot of questions. But first he wondered about the blank pages in the back that I’d filled up with various quotations.
“There is a lot of wisdom on those pages,” he said.
“Whenever somebody says something that helps me understand myself – or anything – better, I jot it down,” I said. “I transferred those quotes to my Bible one day so I could have them all in one place.”
I asked him which ones spoke to him. He said he liked the quote: “Don’t let the dirt of your yesterdays bury your tomorrow.” And he liked this one too: “If every man swept his own back porch, the whole world would be clean.” (Unfortunately, I cannot give you a source for either quote because I didn’t record one.)
By expressing his interest in my list of quotes, I got the feeling he was reaching out for a life preserver for the first time in a long time. The words offered him hope – partially, I think, because he knew I’d found hope in those many quotations; and partially, I think, because he was beginning to read the Bible and he was learning that as long as we breathe, redemption is close.
After he died, his Bible became my Bible again. I would have loved to have found a page on which he jotted quotations that spoke to him, but that wasn’t the case. Instead, I found this on the “Special Events” page near the front, “This Bible was given to me by my oldest son Lee, July 6-98.”
If a collection of quotes is what Bartlett said – a posy of other’s men’s flowers that are bound together with thread that is our own, then I think the collection of quotes that can be found in the back of the Bible that became my dad’s was bound together with mutual respect between a father and a son for the people they were becoming.
It became a record of our separate journeys converging. The wisdom I had gathered, the questions my father explored, and the simple act of sharing this text created a bridge between us.
Sometimes, it's in the quiet exchange of ideas and the mutual respect for each other's growth that we find our most profound connections.
Check out Lee’s omnibus Finding Common Ground. It’s a three-book collection of heart-felt essays that explore love, loss and the deep need for human connection.
Here are some tidbits you might find interesting this week:
Check out this phone-free cafe.
“The greatest legacy one can pass on to one’s children and grandchildren is not money or other material things accumulated in one's life, but rather a legacy of character and faith.” - Billy Graham
I came across Homeless George’s gold watch recently, so I’ve been thinking about him quite a bit. Maybe this is a good time to share a tribute I wrote to him last year.
I’d like to think we all have a Mr. Saggio as Kevin Nash writes about in this tribute to him. For me, it was Mr. Martin.
“Perhaps the most remarkable characteristic of our God is his willingness to condescend to us.” - Tim Challies
When Lee isn’t writing essays, devotional books, or Christian fiction, he is a freelance editor, as well as a freelance journalist who has written hundreds of articles for various newspapers and magazines. He’s also a fan of NASCAR, baseball, tennis, books, movies and coffee shops.
I read you post about Homeless George. Of course that tweaked my heartstrings. And tears. I have a thing for old homeless guys. And young ones. What a blessing for you to have had that spiritual time with your dad. Mine passed away without knowing for sure. I couldn't speak to him about it. He just got mad. But a few years before he died he had a near death experience with a tractor and a tree. He started going to church after that. So maybe there's hope. It's always difficult with our parents isn't it? Especially from that time. My own kids have no problem talking about spiritual things with me but if I didn't know the Lord it might be different.