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A Song in Mama’s Heart

23 Thursday Dec 2021

Posted by Pat Luffman Rowland in Love for God

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

a grandmother's love, faith, grandchildren, grandparents, heaven, hymns, Jesus, joy, legacies, serving God, serving others, singing, study scripture, treasures in heaven, trust

We fall down,
we lay our crowns
at the feet of Jesus.

This was the music playing to call our prayer group to worship. Suddenly came a strong vision of my grandmother kneeling before Jesus with her gaze fixed solidly on Him. She saw only the One she had loved all her life and it was if she were the only one in His presence when she placed her crown before His feet. Tears filled my eyes.

It was fitting that during this sacred moment such a strong vision of my grandmother would come. Seeing her with the Lord, giving back to Him the crown He had given her. While on this earth, she lived daily in His presence. She was constant in prayer and song was one of her ways of praying. 

papa, mama, mother, me 1943

With Papa and Mama and my mother. The little quilted-brim sunbonnet would have been made by Mama or my mother.

My earliest memory of my grandmother, Dulcie Cotton Spencer, is of her kneeling beside her bed at bedtime in a white homemade nightgown. Her long braids that she wore wound around her head during the day were loosened to fall down her back at night. Mama prayed aloud. Maybe that was her way of including Papa in the nighttime prayers.

While too many of us have concern for our worldly possessions, how ours are stacking up against others, Mama’s concern was gathering up treasures for the king of Kings. She was instructing us in the word of God, sheltering us in His and her love, providing for the sick and grieving with pots of her famous Chicken and Dumplings, welcoming all into her home without regard for what she had to show. Mama and Papa lived a frugal life, but they always had money to help others — and they helped many. They had their priorities in order.  

Copy of spencer family about 1951

1950-51

Both of my grandparents had an intimate, abiding relationship with the Lord, but it was Mama who kept a song in her heart and on her lips. Every day, all day, Mama sang about the Jesus she loved. Ephesians 5:19 says speak to one another with psalms, hymns and spiritual songs, and Mama did that. When she cooked, she sang. When she cleaned house, she sang. And when Mama ironed, she sang again. 

Mama Dulcie especially loved songs about heaven. Two of the hymns I remember her singing a lot were When the Roll is Called Up Yonder and Ring the Bells of Heaven. If I close my eyes and sit very still, I can hear her sweet, joyful voice.

Ring the bells of Heaven! There is joy today,
For a soul, returning from the wild!
See, the Father meets him out upon the way,
Welcoming His weary, wandering child.

Glory! Glory! How the angels sing:
Glory! Glory! How the loud harps ring!
‘Tis the ransomed army, like a mighty sea,
Pealing forth the anthem of the free.

Thank you, Mama, for loving Jesus so much and teaching your children and grandchildren to love Him, too. Thank you that you never stopped singing about Jesus. You sang with strong and confident assurance because you knew Him so well. I look forward to being with you again and seeing the mansion Jesus prepared just for you, but for now I sing the song that you sang:

When the roll is called up yonder
When the roll is called up yonder
When the roll is called up yonder
When the roll is called up yonder, I’ll be there.

______________________

I cherish letters from my grandmother. I was not able to be at the family gathering on Christmas of 1986, so she wrote to tell me about it. She closed out her letter with these words: I thank God every day for all my blessings. I know he hears me. I know He heard you, too, Mama, and I’m grateful for every prayer you offered with my name on it. I feel certain I’m still reaping the rewards.

My treasured picture with Mama, 1982, was made by The Jackson Sun when they published an article I wrote about Christmases at my grandparents’ house. Papa had died a few months before.

Mama’s Bible

23 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by Pat Luffman Rowland in faith

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

communion with God, death and dying, encouragement, faith, family, God's love, God's presence, heaven, living example, love, memories, prayer, respect, study scripture, trust, wisdom

. . . take root downward and bear fruit upward. (Isaiah 37:31 ESV)

My grandmother’s Bible was a treasure beyond any price. I had hoped as her oldest grandchild that I might inherit it, however I never discussed that with my grandmother or my mother and so in the end it didn’t come to be.

What made Mama’s Bible so revered? She poured and prayed over its words daily. Her gentle, but sure hands caressed the pages. She wept and rejoiced, she trusted and she practiced. She did what Isaiah said: took root downward and bore fruit upward.

I’ve never known anyone that Jesus was as real to as He was to Dulcie Spencer. She sang songs to Him throughout the day and talked to Him as if He were right at her elbow. I’ve walked into her home and overheard her talking and thought she had company, only to find out it was no visitor but her best friend and permanent resident: Jesus. Mama relied on Him completely for every matter and that reliance gave her a radiance that cannot be duplicated by anything of this world. Mama had a heavenly glow. THE_SPENCER_FAMILY_001 - Copy

My grandmother had no earthly riches. She lived a simple life, but a life marked with beauty because of how she lived it. Mama’s standard was to do exactly as God’s Word said for her to do: she loved God with all her heart, soul, strength and mind; she loved her neighbors as herself; and she believed God’s word that when we trust Him completely, He will never forsake us. Mama’s family saw and respected that trust. I believe we were all, in fact, hugely affected by her rock-solid trust in God. My earliest memory of Mama is of her kneeling by her bed for prayer at end-of-day, long dark braids falling down her back and over her homemade gown. Mama always prayed aloud and just as I have visual remembrances of Mama, I have auditory ones, too.

wedding pic - CopyWhen I married in 1989, Mama wasn’t physically able to be with us so she sent her Bible to me for the ceremony. I can’t think of better representation of this woman that I loved more than ever I could express.

Though I didn’t get to keep the book she loved above all others, she did give me her faith and for that I am eternally grateful. Mine isn’t as beautiful as hers, but it is as confident. And what she passed on to me, I passed on to my daughter Kristi. I know because I have witnessed it.

I truly cannot imagine my life without this great woman’s influence. I have often said if I could choose to be like anyone in the world, it would be my grandmother. I wish I could say I had lived a life like hers, but I can’t. My journey has been one of much stumbling, failing, and starting over, however no one’s persuasion of faith has had a greater hold on me than that of Dulcie Spencer. I thank her for showing me a Jesus she never doubted and pointing the way to heaven’s door. You are my crown jewel, Mama.Copy of spencer family about 1951

Here are a few lines from a letter Mama wrote to her children not long before she died in 1991 at 91 years of age: The dear Lord has been so good to our family. I can’t thank him enough and that he lives in me all the time.  I’ve prayed to him all my life and He answers my prayers day and night. Please don’t grieve after me when I’m gone for I’ll be safe with our dear Lord and all my loved ones in heaven. 

 

Saying Goodbye to Grandma

09 Tuesday Sep 2014

Posted by Pat Luffman Rowland in death

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

communication, faith, family, heaven, strength, wisdom

From 1984 to 1998, I worked closely with patients, family members and their health care providers at Methodist Healthcare in Memphis. For most of those years, I wrote the stories of some of the people I met in those patient rooms and critical care waiting rooms. The following is taken from a story published in 1989 and the name of the husband has been changed. 

Mr. Markle, the husband of a patient who died in our hospital two months ago, came to see me last week. He stopped by to let me know how he and his family were doing after the death of his wife. A very close family, they stayed near wife, mother and grandmother for those weeks before her death.

Mr. Markle said his wife told him the morning he brought her to the hospital that she would die there and she was ready to go. She had battled illness for 15 years.

Those weeks in the hospital the family would gather daily to share a devotional reading. The morning she died, the devotional was on death and the willingness to peacefully give to God sick and hurting loved ones.  One of the daughters remarked how significant the devotional was for that day.

Mr. Markle said the very hardest thing for him during his wife’s illness was a conversation he had with his five-year old granddaughter. With tears in his eyes, he told me this story:

“Papa, I love you and I love Grandma. And I love God most of all. Isn’t that right, Papa, to love God most of all?” “Yes, honey, it is.” “I know God doesn’t want Grandma to be sick and He will do what’s best for her.”

That little girl’s words paved the way for another tough conversation just days later when Mr. Markle decided to tell his two young granddaughters (the other was eight) about their grandmother’s imminent death.  He took the girls into one of our chapels and placed them on either side of him, then asked the youngest if she remembered what she had said about God doing what was best for their grandmother. She did. He told them that he thought God was going to take Grandma to be with Him so she wouldn’t have to be sick anymore. They nodded their heads and bravely accepted his words.

What Mr. Markle did for those little girls was a courageous gift. By telling them what the rest of the family knew, he showed respect for their need to know. That kept the little girls from feeling isolated and afraid, as often happens with children when loved ones die.

I was with the family the morning Mrs. Markle died—they called for me to come. What a privilege it was to be with them as they said their goodbyes. Though they were sad, there was a very strong sense of peace about each one. I saw, and the nursing staff saw, their powerful witness of faith. But most of all, two little girls witnessed their parents and grandfather’s way of dealing with death, and they understood that Grandma going home to God wasn’t the end, just a temporary separation.

praying3

I Believe in Heaven

20 Sunday Oct 2013

Posted by Pat Luffman Rowland in Christian service

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

heaven, kingdom service, near-death experiences, what counts for God

I am reading a book of near-death experiences, I Believe in Heaven: Real Stories from the Bible, History and Today. Written by Cecil Murphey and Twila Belk, it is a compilation of many people’s stories of going to heaven and returning to tell about it. In each case the individual did not want to return, but did so because there was work still to do.

This is a captivating book and gratitude is due the authors for skillfully summarizing numerous stories on what heaven is like. The similarities are there: the glorious and indescribable beauty of heaven, the sounds of music like we have never heard, the appearances of Jesus, being greeted by family or friends now living in eternity, the total, embracing love of God and joy in being with Him. But it is the reasons for return that give pause to ponder—that work left undone.

One person’s story says the sins he believed most grievous were not what was of concern in heaven; rather, it was the things he should have done and didn’t, the missed opportunities for service. And therein lies something for we who remain earthbound to think about.  Not to discount any sin, but to consider what we are passing by and leaving undone and the potential value of those deeds.

It is a normal thing for individuals to want great things to accomplish. It gives a sense of knowing one’s purpose in living, provides a marker for their existence once gone. However it is important to remember man cannot see great things the way the Lord does, for God sees the beginning and the end of things and all the blessed offshoots along the way. An incident we may see as insignificant could lead to a trickle down effect of tremendous greatness for the kingdom of God.

Colossians 3:17 says Whatever you do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus. We are admonished to regard every action we take as opportunity to touch someone’s life in a positive way, to sow for the harvest of God, and build up personal treasures in heaven. Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might; for there is no activity or planning or knowledge or wisdom in Sheol where you are going (Ecclesiastes 9:10). In other words, a time comes when the door of opportunity is soundly closed.

Holy Spirit, Counselor of God, we implore You to remind us moment by moment that we are the instruments of God. Press upon us the things You would have us do that we might not miss opportunities to do the work of the kingdom before us. Reform our hearts to submission and obedience and remove from us our attempts to determine what is valuable. In the name of the One who alone is worthy, amen.

A Visit with My Mother

24 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by Pat Luffman Rowland in dementia, family

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

dementia, family, heaven, love, memories, mental confusion, respect

I sat by her bed and held her hand.  Mother smiled and said how proud she was to see me.  I told her how glad I was to see her, too.  Then she looked off and was quiet a while, as if in another place.  Looking back at me, she told me again how glad she was that I had come, saying she didn’t know when she had last seen me.  Mother no longer has a concept of time and she doesn’t remember when any of us have visited or if we have visited.  She asked about my husband and then remembered he had died and said how sorry she was.  She asked about my daughter, calling her by my name, but I knew who she meant.   Then we would begin the same conversation all over again.  Mother’s dementia doesn’t allow her to hold on to what she has just said or heard.

She gazed out the window and said how pretty the dogwood trees were.  But there were no dogwoods in view.  I supposed someone had wheeled her to a window to see them and she was remembering.  Mother always loved the outdoors; it was her favorite place to be.  She was a natural gardener and roses were her favorite things to nurture in the soil.  Most all of her rose bushes were produced by the way she learned from her mother:  Cut off a length of stem from the variety of rose you want, bury it in an inch or two of dirt, give it some water, turn a canning jar over it, and wait for it to push through the ground.  It worked for her every time.

Mother looked up at me and said I was pretty.  I told her that her nurse exclaimed she knew who I was the minute she saw me, because I looked just like my mother.  She said she had never heard that before, but it made her smile.  I’m so grateful for her smiles.

Mother asked when she could go home and I told her as soon as she was well.  She nodded her head, then talked again about the pretty dogwoods.

Mother’s feet and ankles were terribly swollen.  Her right foot remained heavily bandaged due to a wound resistant to healing.  An infection developed after Mother nicked herself with scissors shortly before her hip fracture and while she was still semi-independent.  She was wearing TEDS (tight-fitting socks) to reduce the swelling in her feet and legs and decided she didn’t want to wear the TEDS anymore so she took her scissors, cut them off, and told no one.  By the time it was noticed, infection had set in.  Mother eats very little now and doesn’t get the protein she needs for healing, even with supplemental nutrition.  She says she just isn’t hungry.

Much of the time, Mother thinks she is at her grandparents.  She also believes the furniture in her room belongs to her Grandpa and he is letting “all these people” use his furniture, so we talk about how nice that is of him.

She isn’t up for long visits anymore.  She signals that by mentioning that I shouldn’t stay too long, that I should get back to my home.  After the third time of saying it, I ask if she is tired and she says she is, so I know I need to leave and let her rest — which means sleep.  She tells me again how glad she is I came and I assure her I will be back very soon.

Mother is 93 now.  She and Daddy married at 15 and 18 and I loved to hear Mother tell about how they started out, living in a house that you could see daylight through the walls – but they were happy.

Just like her mother before her, my mother was an outstanding cook.  We enjoyed freshly made bread three meals a day.  Her yeast rolls would practically float off the plate and I was never able to duplicate her light hand with her biscuits that were tender perfection.  We ate vegetables and fruits from the labor of her hands in the backyard garden.  Her desserts were a work of art, and again like her mother, there was fresh dessert every day.   I would be hard pressed to declare a favorite, but the hot plum cobblers served up at noon, the biscuit puddings made from the leftover morning biscuits, and her special apple roll baked in sweetened milk and spiced with cinnamon are immediate recalls.  I know my love for baking was passed on from my mother and grandmother, however I use recipes where they created by a handful of this and a pinch of that.  Those who say baking is a formula that must be accurately measured just didn’t taste the wares of Dulcie Spencer and Louise Spencer Luffman.

Mother was always happiest when she could be outside working, and it was that love for the outdoors that led to her loss of independence.   One morning while raking leaves in the backyard, Mother decided to move the picnic table.   A bone in her back gave way and that led to hospital and rehab stays.  Mother’s dementia worsened significantly due to unfamiliar places and we were told she could not return home to live alone.  So she went from a rehab facility to an assisted living residence, a decision Mother vehemently opposed.   We did everything we could to make it homelike for her, but nothing made up for the loss of her independence.

It is hard to see Mother like she is now.  She says she doesn’t have any pain, but she is frail and 23 pounds lighter since the hip surgery in January.  The hands that turned out delectable breads and pastries now have a slight tremor.  The woman who loved working and staying busy now spends her days in bed or a wheelchair.  She lost more memory with the surgery, but maybe there is a positive side to that, as she seems more content in the nursing home than in assisted living.  The nursing home staff provides her with a lot of kind, personal attention and maybe that fits with the childlike state her mind is often in.

The years have passed so quickly.  It seems strange to find myself in the reversal of the parent/child role.  I look through old photos and see the march of time.  I am particularly drawn to Mother’s pictures in her 20s; the carefree look of youth, the excitement of having her own family.  It would be easy to cry for the loss of that beautiful woman, the mother who doctored scraped knees and put into form every dress design I could imagine.  But she seems to be pretty much at peace with how things are and that is a tremendous blessing.

I know the story of Mother’s salvation and I know her place is secured in heaven.   When the time comes to wave goodbye on this side, many loved ones will be waving hello on that other shore.  And the best part of all is this:  We know there will be One with arms opened wide to receive His children.  Mother will make it safely home to the arms of God.  And in view of that, we will have peace with a temporary farewell.  Parting will only be for a moment; goodbye will only be “goodbye for now.”

Thank you, Father, for your amazing grace that gives victory over death.   Thank you for your Son Jesus that declared that victory.  We gratefully bow our knee and confess with gratitude that Jesus Christ is Lord.   We shout hallelujah to our risen King! 

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The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law. Galatians 5:22-23 ESV

If you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. Romans 10:9

God has not given us a spirt of fear, but of power and love and of a sound mind. 2 Timothy 1:7

Enter His gates with thanksgiving and His courts with praise; give thanks to Him and praise His name. For the Lord is good and His love endures forever; His faithfulness continues through all generations. Psalm 100:4-5

If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. 1 John 1:9

© Pat Rowland and Prayerful Pondering, 2010 - 2013.
Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Pat Rowland and Prayerful Pondering with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Hope must be in the future tense. Faith, to be faith, must be in the present tense. Catherine Marshall
Everything over your head is under his feet. Dr. Tom Lindberg
What an excellent ground of hope and confidence we have when we reflect upon these three things in prayer--the Father's love, the son's merit and the Spirit's power! Thomas Manton
Our Christian hope is that we're going to live with Christ in a new earth, where is not only no more death, but where life is what it was always meant to be. Timothy Keller

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