He
is risen!
This
is the wonderful word of life and hope that we share on Easter
morning. Jesus is
risen, the tomb is empty, and we know that life, through the
power of God, is stronger than any other force because our God
triumphs. I am
always looking for stories about people who demonstrate the
life-changing presence of God.
I found the story below about Buck Holloway, and would
like to share it with you. It
is the story of a man whose heart was transformed by the living
presence of God and the impact that one life has made on many
others.
If
we open our heart to the living Christ, and if we open our daily
lives to the living presence of the Holy Spirit, God will do
amazing things in and through us.
May the blessings of our living Lord abide in you.
He is risen!
Pastor Richard
RICHMOND
,
Va.
(BP)--After the long, dark night of winter, Easter’s approach
brings thoughts of new life, new hope, new beginnings.
Buck
Holloway, 83, is waiting for a new beginning, too.
The
morning light of spring washes across the bed and the nearby
easy chair where he spends most of his time at home these days.
Airplane models of all sizes perch, as if ready for takeoff, on
his shelves. Hanging from the ceiling right above his bed is a
spiffy P-40 fighter that looks just like the one Buck trained in
during World War II.
Kitty,
Buck’s wife of 60 years, cares for him with help from other
family members. When he feels up to it, he enjoys visits from
some of the legions of folks he and Kitty have blessed over the
years.
Buck
labors to breathe, but he still grins, still cracks jokes, still
teases visitors. He even struggles out of his chair from time to
time to help with chores around the house and in the rolling
fields on his property. Will he be able to mow his beloved
fields this spring? Just in case, his son Craig has mounted a
bucket seat, salvaged from an old car, onto Buck’s trusty
tractor.
Buck
has good days and bad days. He doesn’t always recognize people
or remember names, but that’s OK. One day soon, Buck will
awake to see a face he surely will recognize. He will behold a
light far brighter than the morning sun of
Virginia
.
Buck’s
heart, which I always thought was big enough and strong enough
to beat forever, has just about given out. We all knew it was
coming, but we didn’t want to imagine a world without him.
Buck slowed down a lot over the last few years. He stopped going
on mission trips. He couldn’t ride his motorcycle (complete
with sidecar) anymore, or pedal a bicycle backward, or pull
laughing kids behind his tractor during the annual church
hayride at his place. He endured multiple operations and
hospital stays related to his weakening heart. He grew thinner
as his Sunday suits hung limply on his stooped frame.
And
now, Buck is waiting to see Jesus – not through a glass
darkly, but face to face.
|
We need to
encourage believers to live for eternity and not just for
time. We don’t have a whole bunch of models around, and
a model is so much more than a sermon. Dad reminds me of
what God can do through a normal person saying, ‘I’m
not my own.'”
Guy Holloway
|
Buck’s
older son is my pastor, Guy Holloway. Our church, Grace
Community Baptist in
Richmond
, began 22 years ago in Buck and Kitty’s living room. He’s a
spiritual father to everyone in the church. He’s also one of
the greatest men I have ever known.
Buck
Holloway epitomizes that “Greatest Generation” of Americans
who served the cause of freedom during the dark days of war –
and went on to serve an infinitely greater cause: the mission of
Jesus Christ.
Buck
grew up riding a horse to school. He never lost his love for
horses, but his true passion was airplanes.
“As
a young boy he was intrigued and mesmerized by airplanes,” Guy
says. “I’ve got wooden model planes he hand-carved that look
like they were made from kits.”
War
raged when Buck finished high school. He joined the military
almost immediately. “There wasn’t much choice,” he told me
with a chuckle the other day. “If you didn’t choose them,
they would choose you.”
By
1944 he was flying P-51 Mustangs and cargo planes with the famed
1st Air Commando Group, ferrying supplies “over the hump”
(the Himalayas) from
India
to Chinese troops fighting the Japanese in northern
China
. The day before his first scheduled mission over mainland
Japan
, the atomic bomb was dropped on
Hiroshima
.
After
the war, Buck married Kitty, his high school sweetheart. They
settled down and started a family. He attended optometry school
on the G.I. Bill and began a 51-year career as an eye doctor.
Buck eventually opened his own optometry practice, became a
Southern Baptist deacon at a prominent
Richmond
church, served punch and cookies to junior boys every week in
Sunday school.
“He
was a nice guy. He didn’t run around with women or drink or
smoke or cuss,” his pastor son relates.
But
deep down, Buck wanted more. He’d made a commitment to Jesus
as a 12-year-old and been baptized, but he wasn’t growing
spiritually – until he encountered a modern English version of
the New Testament. He read the book of James once, then again
– and again. He began reading the Bible between eye exams. He
read to his patients.
“It
was just going deeper and deeper, and the Holy Spirit was
fanning the flames,” recalls Guy, who at the time was a
college sophomore headed for the ministry. “Dad had this
insatiable hunger for the Word of God. I came back at Christmas,
and I thought I was going to tell him (spiritual) stuff – and
he had stuff to tell me.”
An
even bigger surprise came later. It was the early 1970s, and
Buck couldn’t tolerate hippies or the rebellion they
represented. But the downtown church he attended was reaching
out to longhairs, bikers, and other non-traditional folks.
“I
got this picture from him after Thanksgiving,” Guy says.
“All these hippies were sitting around Mom and Dad’s
Thanksgiving table. Dad’s got this big smile on his face, and
he’s leading a Bible study with all the people he used to
detest, reject, and castigate. It blew my mind. It was a
fundamental value change. He had a love for anybody that had any
sensitivity or interest toward the Lord – and these guys loved
him, too.”
Buck
sold his optometry practice – just when it was beginning to
make some money – and went to Bible school while continuing
optometry on the side. He and Kitty later began a ministry to
singles at their
Richmond
church; it became one of the largest Christian singles groups in
the city. After finishing seminary, Guy (and his new bride, Gay)
returned to lead the singles ministry his parents had launched.
When Guy felt led by the Lord to start a disciple-making church
designed to “raise up saints for ministry locally and
internationally,” his parents opened their home.
Buck
and Kitty, of course, had long been modeling the kind of
missions-oriented discipleship their son had in mind. They
ministered to survivors of the devastating 1976 earthquake in
Guatemala
, led lay witness renewal conferences up and down the East
Coast, and participated in partnership missions projects in
Europe and
South America
.
When
the young church began sending volunteer mission teams to
Central America
, Buck and Kitty went repeatedly. They collected boxes of old
eyeglasses to help needy people see clearly for the first time,
taught children and adults about Jesus, handed out medicine,
hugged orphans. Buck, the tough war veteran, always choked up
when he came back and told church folks about his mission
excursions.
Closer
to home, Buck and Kitty have led scores of people to Christ,
discipled hundreds more – and taken needy folks into their own
home over the years, ranging from young people desperate for
direction to a couple struggling to overcome drug abuse.
They
have experienced many joys, including seeing their children and
grandchildren become committed followers of Christ and mission
volunteers. They have felt great sorrow, such as the day their
youngest son, Jeff, drowned in 1976. But that tragedy enabled
them to minister to many others in pain. They have led more than
40 people to Christ using the evangelistic tract Jeff had in his
pocket the day he died.
I
could go on and on. My point is this: Buck could have lived a
very comfortable life over the last 40 or so years. Instead, he
chose a meaningful one.
“We
need to encourage believers to live for eternity and not just
for time,” Guy reflects. “We don’t have a whole bunch of
models around, and a model is so much more than a sermon. Dad
reminds me of what God can do through a normal person saying,
‘I’m not my own.’”
Jesus
Christ rose from the dead, and he is alive today. You ask me how
I know he lives? He lives within the great heart of Buck
Holloway.
Buck’s
heart might stop one day soon, but it will never die.