Saturday, October 22, 2011

Grave Stone

I dedicate this poem to two of my daughters, Julianna and Ary Anna. Julianna was still born in 1992. This December she would have been 19 years old. Our whole family misses her deeply, even those who were not born when she died. Ary Anna was my daughter, who at six years of age, stood at a grave in Little Bethel Cemetery in Duncanville, Texas and was moved to tears as she grieved for the parents whose child had been buried there.  

My daughter stood there all alone
Face to face with the old gray stone
Weathered and cracked by the hands of time
Chiseled on its face was this simple rhyme,

O blessed little sunbeam,
O child of love and prayer,
We give thee to the keeping,
Of the tender Shepherd's care

She pondered as she traced her finger round the date
What was the reason for this innocent child’s fate?
The carving stated September 22 to September 24
The babe had lived just three days; not a single moment more.

She whispered the word “sunbeam” and then “love and prayer”
She then began to wonder, “Does the Shepherd really care?”
At first it was just a single tear but then she began to cry,
“I don’t understand, God in Heaven, why did you let this little child die.”

There were no words from the clouds up above,
No magical answer on the wings of a dove.
So I came near; put my arm ‘round her shoulder,
Knew she just needed someone to hold her.

She looked up at me with sad, wet eyes,
I tell you I hate it when my little girl cries.
Through her sobs all I heard were the words, “Little child,”
Suddenly I choked on the answer I’d compiled.

She didn’t need some neatly packed answer
Some fantasy story ‘bout a reindeer named Prancer.
She demanded I tell her why were things so,
Softly I answered, “Honey, I don’t know.”

Her face turned to a smile as she pushed up her specks,
Saying, “I didn’t realize it was all that complex.”
“If my daddy, who is so smart, doesn’t even know
Then I’ll just have to accept that sometimes things are so.”

Her heart was still hurting for the mother and dad;
Longing to hold their newly born lad.
But from that very day her heart became tender
Now to the hurting the Shepherd can send her.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

I, You, He

I
You
He
I love
You love
He loves
I love you
You love me
He loves us
I love you more
You love me more
He loves us more
I love you more than you will
You love me more than I will
He loves us more than we will
I love you more than you will ever
You love me more than I will ever
He loves us more than we will ever
I love you more than you will ever know
You love me more than I will ever know
He loves us more than we will ever know
I
You
He
died on a tree

By Allen Bennett

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

A Tale of a Proud Father

Several years ago I got a call from my mom informing me my step-father, Big Jim, was in the hospital and was not expected to live. Doctors had thought he had lung cancer. They treated him accordingly but then discovered he had been misdiagnosed. The inappropriate cancer treatments had actually destroyed his lungs.She said, “Son, if you want to talk to your dad you better call him soon because he is not long for this world.” He was in a hospital just a short distance from my home south of Dallas. I called his wife to ask her if it would be alright for me and my wife to go visit him. She assured me we would be welcome and that he would love to see us.

In our 20 years of marriage up to 2003 my wife Lisa had never met Big Jim. Though she did feel as if she knew him from all the stories I told her about him. Neither of us knew what to expect or what we would say upon seeing him but we were both excited to see the man I deeply admired and had so influenced my life. We carried with us pictures of all six of our children (William, our seventh, had not yet been born).

Upon entering Big Jim’s hospital room I was stunned. The man who had always seemed so big too me was wasted away to what seemed like skin and bones. His face was pale but his eyes flashed with excitement when he saw us. I said a quick hello and then introduced Lisa to him. He cordially greeted her saying, “It is so good to meet you after all these years.” Then he sat up a little and a big smile raced across his face. “Did Allen ever tell you about the first fish he ever caught?” he prodded. To which she responded, “Yes he did.” “But did he tell you how big it was?” he continued. “Why, it must have been this big!” he exclaimed holding out his hands in true fisherman fashion to indicate a fish at least 2 ½ feet long.

I said, “Dad, it wasn’t that big.” He protested, “Oh, yes it was…if not bigger. You were too young to remember.” Then ignoring me he focused back to my wife spinning his yarn, “Why, that fish was so big and he was so little, I thought for sure Allen was going to be pulled into the water. And he reeled that whopper ashore all by himself…”

He continued his praise for my fishing prowess for several minutes until I interrupted him with something more impressive…I was armed with photos of my children. He delighted as I introduced each one to him via photographic images. I started with the oldest and went down to the youngest telling their ages, interests, and accomplishments. He gave the appropriate “ohhs and ahhs” of a grandfather until I got down to a picture of Abby…our youngest. His face lit up as I revealed the picture of a cute, freckled faced, red-headed, little girl. He said, “Is this your daughter?” “Yes” I replied. “My granddaughter?” He almost seemed confused. “Yes” I affirmed. “She looks so much like your sister, Stephanie. Look at all that red hair.” Abby had clearly garnered my dad’s favor without speaking a word. She did bear a striking resemblance to my little sister who is 14 years younger than me.

Each time we changed the subject dad would find a way to bring the conversation back to Abby’s red hair. I don’t know if he was really all that taken with Abby or just missing Stephanie that much. My heart tells me it was the latter.

Eventually dad began to show his frailty so we told him we needed to leave. Lisa told him goodbye and headed to the door and paused waiting for me. I came closer to him as he lay on his slightly elevated bed. “Can I give you a hug?” I asked. He was clearly pleased I cared for him after all these years. As I leaned over and hugged him he grabbed my bicep of my right arm and squeezed. “Why, boy, you have big muscles,” he exclaimed. I quickly replied, “Well, they should be big. You made me dig hundreds of post holes out on the farm growing up.” He let out a weak but heart-felt laugh as he held onto my arm.

It is funny how a boy can grow into a man, marry, have children of his own, but still desire the affection and approval of his own dad more than all the praise of all the other people in the world. A dad’s few words of admiration can replace the endless accolades of thousands. I truly realized at that moment how much I really missed my dad and just how powerful his influence had been in my life. I became aware in that instant the power of a dad’s approval.

Big Jim…Dad… held the arm he had admired a moment before and looked me in the eye. With a scratchy voice he said, “Son, I’m proud of you.” A tear coursed down his face. He was moved. So was I. I said, “Dad, I love you. I hope to see you again soon.” Knowing all the while his prognosis was grim and he might not even live through the night. He smiled and said, “I love you too.” I turned to the door as Lisa walked out ahead of me.

She met me at the elevator just down the hall from his room. She pushed the button and then turned to me with a big smile on her face as I approached her. “You got to hear what you have wanted to hear all these years, didn’t you?” she said. Playing ignorant, I questioned, “What do you mean?” “Your dad told you he was proud of you. Every boy…every man wants to hear those words from his dad,” she affirmed. She got it. She really understood the heart of a boy…the desire of a man. His words of affirmation had ignited a fire in me I had not felt for some time. I purposed in my heart to be careful to frequently tell all my children I was proud of them. And to this I have been true.

I expected to get a call within the next few days telling me my dad had passed away. Instead, I got a call from him telling me he had been released from the hospital and was back home in Whitney, Texas. He invited me to come visit him. He was feeling much stronger and we had a lot of catching up to do. I went to visit him a few days later. We each had a grand time learning what the other had been doing all those years.

I had become an elementary school principal. He had become a professional fishing guide down on the Gulf of Mexico. I told him tales of the classroom and he told me fish stories that he swore were all true…but then, don’t all fishermen pledge their stories are reputable?

After awhile he had to visit the men’s room. His wife, Christine, came over and set down. She asked me frankly, “Allen, why have you not been in contact with Jim all these years?” I was stunned by her question but pushed out my explanation. “I knew you had a teen aged son when Jim married you. Jim had been a really good dad to me when he was married to my mom.  I didn’t want your son to be deprived of having Jim’s total attention by having me to compete with. And after awhile I was not sure I would be welcome.” Christine, kind and motherly, took me by the hand and said, “Oh, son, I wished I had known you felt that way. You would have been welcomed with open arms around here.” She continued, “Jim talked about you all the time. You do know he thought of you as his own son, don’t you?” As dad came back in the room she added, “Well, now you are back in his life. Make sure you and your whole family stays there, okay?”  I pledged that we would. How refreshing to know I was…we were accepted into Big Jim’s family.

After several hours of talking, showing pictures, and sharing dreams Dad began to fade. He needed his rest. We said our good byes and I headed back home feeling emotionally fulfilled. Four days later I got a phone call that Big Jim had passed away. He had lost his battle with cancer. But he had regained the heart of his son in the process.

My sister, Stephanie and I attended his memorial a few days later. The family was kind enough to allow us to be part of the arrangement process. It was very moving for the two of us to be alone in the chapel with Dad’s body as we reminisced about bygone years. It drew us a bit closer without a doubt. Spending that time with her it was easy to see why Dad adored her so. She is a precious sister and was a wonderful daughter.

I talked to Stephanie on IM tonight. She informed me that her daughter, Megan, who is a member of the Rider High School color guard, will be going to London in December…to play for the Queen of England. Dad would have been proud.

How I Met My Wife

Sometimes the circumstances of life are like a fictitious tornado that blows through a home picking everything up, rearranging it all, then carefully putting things back where the tornado sees fit. My life seemed that way after my mom and my step-father were divorced. Everything seemed to be picked up in the strong winds and was flung around my world. But eventually, piece by piece, things began to be put into place as Providence would have it. It was as though God was saying, “Now, that looks much better. Just the way I like it.” I never would have designed it that way…but who am I to argue with the creator of the universe. He has a plan and sees no need to ask my opinion.

I went to Southern Bible College in the fall of 1976 after graduation from Wichita Falls High School. It took me several extra years to get through college as I did not always pass all my classes and I took a semester or year off every now and then for ministry opportunities that arose. As a result I was 24 years old in the late summer of 1982 working on my junior year when one of those afore mentioned tornados blew into my life.

Ary Lisa Winkler was a petite, “cute as a button” freshman coming to SBC from Tahlequah, Oklahoma. At 17 years of age she was out of her element in the big city of Houston. She had never been away from home and was excited but a little overwhelmed by the change high school graduation had thrust upon her.

Lisa’s high school principal had attended SBC and had encouraged her to attend there also. The night before she left for college her church congregation and small Christian school families held a going away party for her. Her principal teased with her, “Lisa, you will marry the first guy you meet at college.” She protested that she was going to be serious about college and wanted to finish all four years. Marriage was in not in her immediate future.

This incoming Freshman flew from the nearest airport to Houston. The flight from Tulsa, Oklahoma to Houston Intercontinental Airport had a short layover in Dallas. Lisa asked the flight attendant if she was to get off the plane. The helpful attendant asked her where she was going. When Lisa responded Houston she was instructed to stay on the plane as that plane would depart for Houston shortly. Lisa returned to her seat and watched the baggage handlers unloading luggage…some of it was hers. But she obediently followed the flight attendants instructions and stayed on the plane. Had the attendant looked at Lisa’s ticket she would have seen that Lisa was to board a different plane bound for Houston.

The plane Lisa was on did go to Houston but not to Houston Intercontinental. Instead her plane was intersecting destiny and flew her to Houston Hobby Airport…across town from where her greeting party waited patiently for her to arrive. When she got to Hobby Airport there was no one to pick her up. She had no money, no one to call, and no clue what to do. She eventually contacted someone from back home and they arranged for some friends to pick Lisa up and take her to the college.

Frustrated and confused, Lisa was explaining to Mimi, the Women’s Dorm Mother at Southern Bible College, that evidently her luggage had gone to a different airport than she had. She needed someone to take her to Houston Intercontinental to claim them. At that very moment, I came walking down the stairs. Mimi called me over and demanded, “Allen, take this little girl to the airport to pick up her luggage.” I started to protest but Mimi gave me the look that let me know she meant business. I agreed and invited the new Freshman to follow me.

There is more to the story than I will tell here…her huge Samsonite bags, my beat up Ford LTD, attending church together, becoming friends, doing laundry together, and late night study sessions. But we eventually became interested in each other and started dating. By “dating” I mean we took youth at the small church where I was youth director to various church functions. Before Thanksgiving of that year I asked Lisa to marry me. She agreed, as did her parents who we visited in Oklahoma to ask permission. On June 18, 1983 we were married. Lisa had fulfilled the fateful words of her school principal…she had actually married the first guy she met at college.

Later I found out when Lisa was nine years old she prayed every day for the man she would someday marry. I was 16 at the time. On November 29 of that same year (1974) I gave my life to Christ. I earnestly believe it was the prayers of that nine year old girl that softened my heart and made me willing to respond to my dad’s invitation to join him at church that pivotal, autumn night.

Do You Think of Me?

Do you think of me when you’re chilly?
When you feel a little silly
Do you think of me?

Do you think of me when you’re lonely?
You are my one and only.
Do you think of me?

Do you know I really care?
Know I will always be there?
Do you think of me?

Do you ever want to hold me;
Sometimes just to scold me?
Do you think of me?

Do you think of me when the sun comes up?
When you’re drinking coffee from a cup?
Do you think of me?

Do you think of me when you drink sweet wine?
Do you know I think you’re really fine?
Do you think of me?

You are my wife and dearest friend
And I‘ll be with you to the end.
Do you think of me?

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Why?

First person:
Why?
Why are some of us “better” than others?
Why are some of us so encased in our little bit of pain that we don’t see the harsh trials the “invisibles” go through every day?
Why are some of us the “perfect picture” and others not worth looking at?
Why are some of us so involved in ourselves that we aren’t aware that we’re not the only ones leading lives?
Why are some of us simply “more mature”?
Second person:
Why?
Why are some of us discounted simply because we’re “different”?
Why do some of us act like a splinter in the hand is worse than a bullet in the chest?
Why don’t some of us even own a second glance?
Why are some of our lives nonexistent to others, like we’ve never lived and we never will?
Why are some of us simply “idiots” and “nerds”?
Both people:
There’s beauty in the voice
There’s beauty in the calling
First person:
Whether we’re picture perfect
Second person:
Whether we just blend in
First person:
Even if we’re the life of the party
Second person:
Even if we’re hardly there
Both people:
We’ve been shown, in perfect love,
There are no favorites
There is no special treatment
Only the love that saves lives!


This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins. 1 John 4:10 NIV


By Ary Anna Bennett


This poem or dramatic reading was written by my 13 year old daughter. 

Thursday, October 6, 2011

My First Fish

My step-father, Jim Downs, introduced me to fishing. He loved going to any body of water, be it river, lake, pond, or ocean, to try his hand at reeling in a catch. And he didn’t particularly care what the size of his object of affection was…he just liked catching fish. Bass of all types, perch, crappie, even gar and buffalo were accepted by my dad as worthy opponents for his rod and reel or trot line.

I remember he was so excited to take me fishing for my very first time. I must have been around 11 years old when he purchased a Zebco 77 rod and reel combo, a few lures, and a tackle box for me. We headed out to an area below the dam on a local lake where shallow streams weaved among huge boulders.

He helped me attach a hula popper lure he had purchased for me and showed me how to cast. He sent me out to a big, rust-colored boulder in the middle of a little stream. On my second cast a big largemouth bass hit my lure and the battle was on. I pulled and reeled and jumped up and down as my dad cheered me on from another boulder. After several minutes and constant coaching, I had reeled in an 18 inch trophy. My dad was so proud of me. He took pictures of me and my first fish. And then he started showing it off to all the people on the shore. “Look at this fish…it’s my son’s very first fish. First time he’s ever been fishing. Caught it on his second cast…” Everyone seemed duly impressed. I just wanted to get back out there and catch an even bigger fish.

When I was 21 my step-dad and mom got a divorce. He married a woman who had a 14 year old son. I did not want to be an intrusion on my dad and his new family. I also wanted to give his new son a chance to have a good father without competing with me so I did not contact my dad for several years. Looking back now I realize what a grave mistake that was.

When I was 23 years old I was living in Danville, Kentucky without work and no money. I talked with a friend in Houston, Texas that agreed to let me stay with him and his family until I could find work and get back in college. All I had to do was get back to Houston. I didn’t even have enough money for a bus ticket. I had a friend take me and all my belongings to a local pawn shop. There I was able to sell almost everything I owned for $20. That gave me enough money to purchase a one way ticket to a brighter future.

Two years later I married Lisa, my wife of 28 years. One year later on Father’s Day I got to thinking about my dad and how much I missed him. I pondered all the fishing trips my dad and I had enjoyed together. Then it hit me. When I had sold all my belongings in Kentucky I had sold my tackle box full of lures. That box contained the hula popper on which I had caught my first fish. I was overcome with emotion and began to cry. Lisa walked in and put her arms around me and asked what was wrong. I explained I had not realized how important something like a lure could be but now, after all these years, I did but now it was too late. My hula popper was gone and along with it a connection to my childhood and my father.

Some of you reading this may think I am being a little too sentimental. But you probably never caught a fish and had your dad cheer for you because of it. I had and I was missing him in the worst way. I needed my dad at that moment and for maybe the first time in my life I actually realized what a loss I was experiencing. Lisa hugged me and encouraged me to call Big Jim and tell him how I felt and wish him happy Father’s Day. I called him and talked for a few minutes. Our conversation seemed a bit awkward so I cut the conversation short.

A couple of years later I was fishing with my older brother, Tony, when I began recounting the story of how I had sold my lure and had not realized how important that kind of a thing could be to a man. He stopped me and motioned me over to his truck. He took out a big tackle box (he had several) and began going through compartments. He was a man on a mission. Retrieving his prize, he held up a hula popper lure. He said, “This is the kind of lure you sold…this is what you caught your first fish on.” It was exactly like the one my dad had bought for me. My big brother pumped out his arm and held open his hand and said, “Here, it’s yours now. You can have it. I understand how much it means to you.” I was overjoyed to get the exact model of lure as I sold but even more impressed that Tony remembered me catching my first fish.

Several years later my half-sister, Stephanie, had gone to visit my dad with her husband, Shawn, and her two children, Mason and Meagan. Mason was about five years old. Dad thought the boy needed his own rod and reel so he went to his garage and searched for awhile then reappeared with a Zebco 77 rod and reel combo. He thrust it toward Mason and said proudly, “Here you can have this rod and reel. Your uncle Allen caught his first fish on this very rod.” Mason was elated. When they got home later that evening Shawn told Stephanie that Mason could not keep the rod and reel. Stephanie protested, “Why not…my dad gave it to him?” Shawn responded, “Your brother caught his first fish on that rod and reel. It is special to him. He would want it. He will want to give it to his children someday?” Stephanie continued to protest. But Shawn insisted saying, “Stephanie, you will just have to trust me on this…it is meaningful to him. This kind of thing is important to men.”

Stephanie eventually agreed and brought the rod and reel to me on her next visit. I could not believe it when she brought it in. It was like I was seeing a long lost friend for the first time in 30 years. Those of you who know me well know what I did…I cried…and I told them the story of my hula popper and my first fish.