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HELPING OTHERS REAPS BONUS AND BLESSING

In 1979, I served as a summer missionary for the Southern Baptist churches in Northern Nevada. I was one of hundreds of college students working nationwide, helping churches conduct Bible schools and summer youth camps.

Each missionary stayed within a region of churches, changing locations each week through a dozen churches. Most pastors hoped their missionary would be an ambitious college kid who could energize their youth group.

The pastors shared a pun among themselves to rate the energy of these workers: “Summer missionaries and some-r-not.”

I was more the “not” kind.

In midsummer, I received my assignment and arrived at my new church. The pastor was a slight, lanky man, prematurely bald, whose matterof-fact way of speaking rang like the gospel truth.

After Sunday service, we sat down in his offi ce where he outlined my upcoming week. Partway through, he noticed the drift in my eyes and asked what was on my mind.

I dropped my missionary pretense and admitted I was homesick and pining over a lost girlfriend while trying to rekindle another. I described a depression that was keeping me out of the helping mood.

“It’s true,” he said. “We won’t always feel like serving others. But the life you save this week may actually be your own.”

He had my attention. This is his story the way I remember it:

“Three years ago, I was here in the offi ce, preparing to leave, when a phone call brought me back to the desk.

“The man on the other end of the line said he was planning to kill himself. He asked if I had anything to say that would change his mind.”

I leaned into the pastor. “What did you say?”

“I said, ‘Go ahead.’”

“What?” I leaned back. “No way!”

“Yup. I told him, ‘Go ahead. I’m fi xing to do the same thing myself.’”

Then the pastor told me how he planned to leave his offi ce that day and kill himself in a deserted location. He’d given away his library. He’d written the note and loaded the gun. He “meant business.”

When his caller went silent, the pastor asserted control of the dead-air space by reversing the caller’s question. He asked the man to suggest reasons why the pastor shouldn’t kill himself.

Miraculously, the stunned man offered a few.

“People need you,” he said.

“Who, for instance?” the pastor asked.

“People like me,” said the caller.

“What about your parents?” the pastor asked. “Don’t they need you?”

For an hour, the two swapped reasons why each man shouldn’t kill himself. Eventually, they made an antisuicide pact.

“See what happened there?” the pastor asked me.

“Umm, kinda,” I said.

“Look, kid. I doubt your love life is edging you toward suicide, so I need you to see how recommitting to helping others with their problems helped me discover a way to work through my own.”

Today, after 40 years in ministry, I’ve come to “see what happened there” in that dusty Nevada offi ce.

The pastor steered me away from clichéd thinking that seeks to reduce the size of your problems by comparing yourself to someone in a worse situation.

He taught me that we aren’t so much broken as we are interconnected with other broken people. In other words, there is scant help for those unwilling to help others.

Christian scripture puts it succinctly in Luke 6:38: “Give away your life; you’ll fi nd life given back, but not merely given back—given back with bonus and blessing. Giving, not getting, is the way. Generosity begets generosity” (The Message translation).

By the way, that girlfriend I was trying to reconnect with is my wife, Becky. See what happened there?

NB

By Norris Burkes Spirit Matters

Norris Burkes can be reached at comment@thechaplain.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. Burkes is available for public speaking at civic organizations, places of worship, veterans groups and more. For details and fees, visit thechaplain.net. n

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