A
God Who Determines the Times
Bill
and I stood perfectly still beneath the glaring overhead lights. We looked like
players in a game of statues, motionless in the act of dressing warmly. The
doorbell rang again and our dogs, a pair of Afghan hounds, came hurtling past
us, springing up against the front door and foyer glass in a frenzy of excited
barking. The straps of my motorcycle helmet slipped from nerveless fingers. I
cringed and made a wild grab for the visor. The helmet bounced once, went spinning across the parquet floor, and then crashed against the doorjamb with a thunk.
Panic
stricken, I glanced over at Bill, who had one arm in and one arm out of his leather
biking jacket. “Oh, MAN!” I hissed. “They must know we’re here, now!"
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Defining
moments alter history. They impact decisions, purpose, even destiny. The choice
to open a door or leave the house a few minutes earlier can forever change the
future—for good or for bad. In a random world, this realization is paralyzing.
However, in a world where faith would have us believe that the LORD knows the
number of hairs upon our heads, the next words we will speak, and the exact moment of
our deaths, we are free to receive His perfect will and trust in His tender
care, timing, and omniscience.
I
was not reared in a Christian home, but I was inexplicably born with a “God
magnet” installed in my heart. From an early age, I gravitated toward the LORD.
I pursued Him up trees on the playground at recess, tramped after Him in the
mountains on Sundays, and wrote letters to Him in my journal late at night. He
was like the wind: evident in His awesome power but completely invisible.
In
my junior year of high school, I brought home a paperback Good News Bible from
a motel room after a Latin Club trip. I carefully printed out Scripture verses
onto my bedroom walls alongside newspaper clippings of boys I admired and
posters I had collected. What did these phrases mean? I read them over and over,
but for reasons I could not understand, I was “looking through a glass darkly."
In
college, I spent my weekends exploring area churches in Eastern Kentucky. Dinner
on the grounds, Mass, snake handlings, liturgy, Bible study, speaking in
tongues, exorcisms and outdoor baptisms became intertwined in my confused
concept of what it meant to be a Christian. During the school week, however, liberal faculty members steadily chipped away at my faith. Man had clearly
evolved. Premarital sex was a smart move. Same sex relationships were evidence
of upward thinking. Euthanasia and abortion were acceptable choices.
My
soul recoiled in dismay, but I had nowhere else to turn. How could so many well-educated people be wrong? As the months passed, I lost the ability
to resist their influence. While my intellectual awareness of the potentially damaging
consequences of smoking, alcohol, and drugs shielded me from disaster, my
desire to be loved did not serve me well. After two unremarkable years of
school and a heartbreaking relationship with an upperclassman, I lost the vision for my future. In its place, I chose the easiest possible “out” at that time—marriage. Perhaps in
this controlled environment I could regain my sense of purpose and decode the
meaning of life.
Within
a year, I became a mother, and the impact of motherhood caused me to renew my
search for kindness, love, and God. My spouse was an intelligent but faithless man
whose inability to love or comprehend a loving God did not dovetail with my own
desire to seek such things. We separated a few months after our son reached his
second birthday, and I found myself back on my parent’s doorstep as a single
mother with no vocation and no vision for the future.
My
relationship with Bill O’Hara began that year, in 1980. He was a tall, handsome
neighbor whose kindness immediately drew me to keep company with him whenever I
could. Bill encouraged me to return to school and earn a degree in dental hygiene.
He also generously provided a strong hand in any practical need I had. After
living together for a season, we were married on his parents' anniversary in November of 1982. By the time
we reached our second year of marriage, however, we were in trouble. We had no
anchor to help us ride out the storms of life, and the same brokenness that
had undermined our previous marriages had followed us into this one.
One
night, in absolute despair, I told Bill that it no longer mattered to me if we
lost our health, life, or possessions. I had reached the place where I would do
anything to know God in a very real
and personal way.
“We
won’t make it another year without something meaningful at its center, and I
think it must be God,” I wept
“We’ll
work this out together,” Bill promised.
The
spring of 1984 found us visiting every church within reasonable driving
distance of our home. We searched for the LORD for months. One Sunday night in October, my eye caught sight of a piece of paper
tucked into the pew rack of a local PCA Presbyterian church. It was a leaflet
about a missionary the church supported. As I drew it out, the image of an
older man with a serious, open face caught my attention. I began to read.
The
biography of Mickey Raia swept over me. He was a New York City Police chief who
had been shot through the heart, lived to tell about it, had a conversion
experience, retired from the force, and entered seminary late in life. He was
now serving as a missionary in South America. What a life-changing story I held
in my hands!
“If
we could just talk to this Mickey Raia,” I said earnestly to Bill that night,
“I’ll bet he can answer my questions and tell us how to become true Christians.”
Bill
agreed with me, but after reading the pamphlet, we knew this could never
happen. Mickey Raia was out of the country in South America, and his home church
was hundreds of miles away in south Florida. We would have to find our answers
elsewhere. That night, I decided to “throw out a fleece” like Gideon did in the
Bible.
“How
about this?” I proposed. “God can do anything, anytime, right? Well, let’s give
Him until midnight on Wednesday to prove to us in some meaningful way that He
is real and actually cares about the hairs on our heads like He says, OK?”
Monday
passed. We waited eagerly for a sign. On Tuesday, I was a nervous wreck at work
all day. Wednesday evening, we sat at home and waited. At 11:45 PM, I opened
the front door in invitation and listened to the wind sift through the pines as
streetlights reflected brightly on the rain-washed pavement. The grandfather
clock chimed at midnight. Nothing. Finally, at 12:15 Bill got up and closed the
door. We turned out the lights and walked silently back to the bedroom.
Jehovah
God was not real. He was no different than the images of stone that pagans had
worshipped for centuries. Jews must have robbed the tomb of Jesus’s body, after
all. The Bible was historical fiction, just like my college professors had
said. Darwin had been right. Mankind was the beginning and the end. From the
slime of the sea to grave dust, life held no purpose. We were the victims of
modern-day mythology.
I
woke up with a heavy heart on Thursday morning and listlessly went through the
motions of my day. “NO!” my spirit cried out. “I am certain God IS! I knew Him
as a child. I believe in Him still! A silly test can’t change that! Don’t give up!"
I returned
home that evening, exhausted from the futility of my thoughts. Bill and I
mechanically went about our evening routine. As we were finishing dinner around
six-thirty, the telephone rang. I answered.
“Hello!”
a bright feminine voice cheerily greeted me. “My name is Joyce, and I am
calling from Hazelwood Presbyterian Church. We would like to come out and
fellowship with you and Bill around seven this evening. Could you please give
us directions to your house?”
Caught
off guard by the call, I automatically responded and hung up. I looked at Bill,
stunned. How many months had we been putting our names in the plate requesting
a call? Three? “Too little, too late!” I vehemently spat out. “I am not about
to hang around for the benefit of a bunch of do-gooders who are finally paying
us a visit. Forget them!”
“You
got that right,” Bill agreed. “Let’s take the bike up Asheville and grab a
dozen donuts. Those people from church can ring the bell all night for all I
care!”
That
suited me just fine. Hazelwood was thirty minutes away, so I cleared the
remains of dinner while Bill pulled the bike around front. We were in the
process of suiting up when the doorbell rang. We were caught! But it wasn’t
even seven o’clock yet!
“What
do we do now?” I urgently whispered to Bill.
With
a sigh of resignation, he removed his helmet and bent down to retrieve mine.
“Let ‘em in, I guess. Maybe we can get rid of them quickly and still make it to
Asheville in time.”
I took
a breath and opened the door.
There,
ringed by a smiling group of people, stood Mickey Raia.
“Ohhhh!”
I cried out in astonishment as I rushed forward to embrace this poor,
bewildered stranger on the doorstep. “I know who you are! You’re Mickey Raia,
and God has sent you here to explain the Gospel to us!”
And
that is exactly what He did one evening in October 1984.
God
weaves the tapestry of His perfect timing with great skill and control. The
series of events that transpired before Mickey Raia could stand on our doorstep
were staggering. His mother had recently passed away, bringing him home from
South America on furlough two weeks earlier. After settling the affairs of her
estate in New York, he had to dispose of a car she had left him. Mickey decided
to drive it back to Florida and donate it to his church. Since he preferred
rural byways to interstates, he chose Highway 19 for part of his trip.
That
Thursday afternoon, Mickey Raia’s car broke down on Highway 19-23 at the
Hazelwood, North Carolina exit. As Providence would have it, there was a service
garage open just down the street from Hazelwood Presbyterian Church—one of the
few rural churches that supported his ministry. After leaving his car in good
hands, Mickey crossed the street to call on the manse. He was invited to take
his dinner with the pastor and his wife.
During
the meal, a leader in Hazelwood Presbyterian’s recently established Evangelism
Explosion (EE) program knocked on the door. There was a problem, it seemed.
Seven visitation teams were formed that evening, but they needed one more man
to complete the proper team requirements. Was the pastor available?
No.
The pastor had another commitment that evening away from home.
“I’ll
go with you,” Mickey said, rising from the table in the middle of his meal.
After all, EE had originated at his church, Coral Ridge Presbyterian; he was
trained in the method. And so, that night, seven EE teams set out to greet
recent visitors to the church. Of those seven teams, God sent the group with Mickey
Raia to my home. Lastly, in an era
before cell phones, the LORD prompted the team to stop en route and call ahead
from a pay phone just down the road. This detail effectively kept us from
missing their visit.
No
one but Bill knew of my longing to speak with Mickey Raia about the Gospel. No
one, that is, except the LORD. He must
have known that I needed Him to custom-design an unshakable, stirring
testimony, one that would sustain me through all manner of trials to come. The
precious, inarguable experience of my testimony comforts and reassures me daily
that a loving, interactive God cares about all the details of my life.
By
1987, God had changed all my priorities. I left my career to become a full-time
home educating mother of six and devoted helper to my hardworking husband. In
the years that followed, the LORD continued to show His mighty hand through financial
reversal, a terminal diagnosis, an extended illness, and three miscarriages. I
clung to my testimony with all my might as the enemy battered our little
household with challenges.
In
2001, Bill was killed by a drunk driver early one Friday morning while
commuting to work… but not before he made his own clear profession of faith
twelve days earlier. That knowledge has been a source of immense comfort to the
children and me this past decade. You see, though we have our own hidden
timetables and sense of how we would like things to be, I’m here to testify
that God’s unique plan for each of us is still perfect, and He is never late.
Kay O'Hara
September 17, 2013
September 17, 2013