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by Mike Leisner
My wife Jan’s anticipation was contagious. “This is
going to be our biggest party ever!” My daughter and I had
arranged the specialty salads, hors d’oeuvres and all the
fixings.
It was Sunday, December 26, 2004 – Boxing Day. We had spent
Christmas Day with close friends in our country house, our dream
home. You know–brick, shake roof, fireplaces, sauna and hot
tub–all nestled in a storybook setting. I often told people “the
only way I’m leaving this place is in a pine box, or if they
cart me off to the madhouse.” One friend was cautious, saying, “I
wouldn’t put any money on the box.”
Whitney pointed at a recessed light above the kitchen island. “Dad,
that light is starting to steam!” I lunged for the wall switch,
flipping it off. The last thing we wanted was shattered glass in
the food. The room seemed hazy, but the fireplace was roaring and
a fat turkey and juicy ham merrily roasted in the double oven.
I walked by the oven near the garage service door and heard a blowing
sound like a blowtorch. Instinctively, I had a flash of revelation.
I knew that sound would change our lives. Without thinking, I threw
open the door and was greeted by a hot, boiling, swirling ball
of fire.
Jan recalls my shout ripping the silence of her nap, “The
house is on fire!” It was just seconds later that the four
startled children were clustered by the front door. Two ran out
into the icy sixteen-degree coldness to see the blaze. They needed
their boots on! “Get in here and put your boots on!” I
clasped my mouth, “What am I saying?” “No, stay
outside and put these boots on!” I began to toss boots and
coats out the door without regard to whose was whose!
Neighbors quickly appeared and fire was now pouring out of the
roof. It took five men to push an old Chevrolet away from the garage
to the street. It was only possible because it was on ice. The
second Chevy was easier–it didn’t have a flat tire.
Ten minutes after the 911 call, the fire trucks arrived. It seemed
like 25 minutes. From the front yard we watched our dream house
burn down. Jan lamented, “And it was all clean!”
We spent the next 39 days down the road at the AmericInn. The
first few days Mike was across the street at Wal-Mart so much that
people thought he worked there. For the first time in their lives,
our children marched off to school with backpacks and uniforms
in the early morning and came home on the yellow bus. Home school
was over and life had changed.
A
couple of days after the fire, I stood in the cold, looking at
the charred area. Thankfully, our family pictures and albums had
been kept safe in the basement, but nearly 20 years of daily and
weekly Gospel radio shows, all the master tapes and some real vintage
stuff burned into oblivion. Over 25 years worth of original copies
of flyers and pamphlets that I had used on campuses and elsewhere
all turned to ashes. I noticed a final draft of a humorous “How
To” book lying in the ashes. Original cartoons and computer
discs were reduced to a mound of black soot. This stuff represented
hundreds, yes, several thousands of sweat and blood in the Christian
arena–now landfill fodder. Later that day in the hotel, the
realization came that most will wait until eternity to have God
put the torch to their deeds, their activities, their stuff. I’ve
had the rare privilege of the Lord doing it ahead of time.
Months ago, while at some friends for a special prayer meeting,
the guest speaker went around the room praying for and giving each
person a specific word from the Lord. He came to Jan and said, “Jan,
God has taken you at your word and you’ve passed the test!” She
laughed out load. You see, over the years, when one of the kids
would tear, scratch or break something, she used to say, “It’s
okay; it’s all going to burn anyway. It’s all going
to burn!”
My prayer for each of us is that we pass the test. Our life is
not a trial run. When the smoke clears, may we come forth as gold.
Our society loves, is driven by and even worships “stuff.” How
tightly do you hold to the things of this world? Have you recently
spent time asking God to help you prioritize your life ambitions
and desires? We never know when we may encounter a life-changing
experience such as this family did. Is your life in order? Are
you ready to face the test? Perhaps 2006 will be a good time to
lay your “stuff” at God’s feet and allow Him
to “fix your eyes fully upon Jesus”? Unlike the “stuff” and
circumstances of this life, He is our only constant. His ways are
the only real investments worth the sacrifice.
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