Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Hero - Heroine, by Phillip Hoyle


My dad deeply respected two ministers who pastored the church I grew up in: Brother W.F. Lown and Brother Charles Cook. Both highly educated men were skillful preachers, fine administrators, and dedicated ministers. Brother Lown baptized me at a rather early age because I insisted on it. Several years later he spoke to me about becoming a minister. I was eight years old when he planted that seed. I started paying attention to what was being said around the church—sermons, lessons, conversations, and discussions. When Lown left to become the president of a nearby church-related college, I got to know Brother Cook, our new minister. I watched him carefully and was surprised (and probably disappointed) one weekday afternoon at junior high choir rehearsal when some girls were paying no attention and talking mindlessly while we were practicing. He yelled, “What in the Sam Hill do you think you are doing?” He made it clear he wanted us to work not gab. Although I was mildly shocked, I realized that ministers were people with a full range of emotions. That was probably the main experience that made it possible for me to actually become a minister. That day I realized that ministers are human beings not heroes, well all but one of them.

My hero a minister I started hearing about when I was a few years older: The Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King, Junior. I paid attention to his career, preaching, and activism. He eclipsed my attraction to Billy Graham whom I also greatly respected. King’s power as a speaker got my attention, but mostly his message of equality for all people made great sense out of the old gospel message of salvation I had heard since the first Sunday after my birth. And his message of racial equality filled a void made in my life by our family’s move from the Army town where I was born to a small county seat town where there were no African Americans, no persons of Asian descent, and only two Hispanic people—a mother and her daughter. I missed people who looked, thought, and lived differently. I missed people who were recent immigrants from Germany, Japan or Puerto Rico. I missed many friends and neighbors who, thanks to Kings preaching, I realized weren’t getting a fair shake in America. I liked the practical, daily, living, moral message of his preaching. And of course I liked his oratory and forceful leadership. I had a real hero—one who was a warrior, a leader, a strategist, a public figure who served his people—the whole people of the United States of America—and who paid the ultimate price for his courage and leadership.

Years later, when my African Son whom I was visiting in Memphis, Tennessee took me to the MLK Memorial at the place King was murdered, I realized this man, unlike activists I met in the late 1970s, was not living high on the hog. He was staying in an old motel in downtown Memphis. Nothing fancy. He lived with the least of these his brothers and sisters. And he was a real human being with the full range of human emotions and experience. King became my first hero and to date my only one.

© 30 January 2017 

About the Author 

Phillip Hoyle lives in Denver and spends his time writing, painting, and socializing. In general, he keeps busy with groups of writers and artists. Following thirty-two years in church work and fifteen in a therapeutic massage practice, he now focuses on creating beauty. He volunteers at The Center leading the SAGE program “Telling Your Story.”

He also blogs at artandmorebyphilhoyle.blogspot.com

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