I never knew a grandfather.
My mother’s dad was killed in a hunting accident when my mother was six-years-old. That was 1934. She
barely knew him. I never had the
chance. My father’s dad also died a
violent death. He was City Marshal in
Lake Village, Arkansas, when he answered a disturbance call in a local café to
deal with a man who was drunk and disorderly.
Tragically, he was also armed. He
shot and killed my granddaddy on the spot.
That happened in 1928. My dad was
only 14 at the time.
On the way back from the beach, Dayna and I passed through
Lake Village, Arkansas. That’s where my
dad’s family settled in the 1920s when they left the farm in Union Church,
Mississippi. My grandfather and
grandmother are buried there—as is the uncle for whom I’m named. I’ve passed through Lake Village a few times
across the years, but I never visited the cemetery. This time I did. I wanted to visit my granddaddy’s grave. I’ve visited the grave of my mother’s father
numerous times. My mother is buried in
the same family plot. But I’d never
visited the grave of my Granddaddy Samuel Tucker McCallum.
Dayna and I made the short drive to the local cemetery
though we had no idea where his grave was.
We figured it would be in the oldest part of the cemetery. We weren’t there two minutes till Dayna
spotted it. We walked to the graves and
stood over them. I took a couple of
pictures.
I so wish I had known him.
He was obviously a man who loved his family and his community. He was a man of courage and a man of
faith. I share his name. But I never met him. Never heard his voice. Never felt his touch. Never sat in his lap. All I know of him is what I learned from his
six children.
My life has been diminished, I think, because I never knew him. My father had his issues, and once my parents
were divorced we didn’t see him much for the rest of his life. It would have been nice to have had a positive
male role model in my life. A grandfather
would have fit the bill nicely. But it
wasn’t to be.
I have two consolations in this matter. First, God has given me the pleasure of being
granddaddy to seven grandchildren. No
one is going to vote me “Grandfather of the Year,” but I think I add to the quality
of my grandchildren’s lives. They surely
add to the quality of mine. I was never
grandfathered, but I’ve had the opportunity to grandfather my grandkids. I’ve enjoyed that experience from one side
anyway. That’s a consolation.
And so is this. My
grandfather is a believer. He loved
Jesus and trusted him for salvation. He
is with Jesus now. And when it comes my
time to join him on the other side, I will have plenty of time to get to know him. There are many on the other
side I so look forward to seeing again.
Strange that I may look most forward to meeting a man I never saw for
the first time. Right now, that meeting
feels a little awkward, but in that moment, it will probably feel as comfortable
as a feather bed. That’s a consolation
too.
Granddaddy, I never knew ye.
But because of what Jesus has done for us both, because of his death and resurrection, and because
Jesus is the resurrection and the
life, that’s going to change. I’ll be
too big to sit in your lap, but I look forward to hearing your stories and sharing
with you how your faith continued to thrive in the generations that followed
you. I hope you’ll feel like I carried
your name well—your two names actually:
McCallum and Christian.
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