A few months before
I was born, back in the early 1960s, my Dad met a stranger who was new to our
small town. From the beginning, Dad was fascinated with this enchanting
newcomer, and soon invited him to live with our family. The stranger was quickly
accepted and was around to welcome me into the world a few months later. As I
grew up, I never questioned his place in our family. Mum taught me to love the
Word of God, and Dad taught me to obey it. But the stranger was our
storyteller.
He could weave the
most fascinating tales. Adventures, mysteries, and comedies were daily
conversations. He could hold our whole family spellbound for hours each evening.
He was like a friend to the whole family. He took Dad, my brother, and me to our
first major league football game. He was always encouraging us to see the films
and he even made arrangements to introduce us to several stars. The stranger was
an incessant talker. Dad didn’t seem to mind, but sometimes Mum would quietly
get up - while the rest of us were enthralled with one of his stories of faraway
places - go to her room, read the Bible, and pray. I wonder now if she ever
prayed that the stranger would leave?
You see, my Dad
ruled our household with certain moral convictions. But this stranger never felt
an obligation to honour them. Profanity, for example, was not allowed in our
house - not from us, from our friends, or from adults. Yet, our longtime
visitor, however, used occasional four letter words that burned my ears and made
Dad squirm. To my knowledge the stranger was never
confronted.
My Dad was a
teetotaler who didn’t permit alcohol in his home - not even for cooking. But the
stranger felt like we needed exposure and enlightened us to other ways of life.
He offered us beer and other alcoholic beverages often. He made cigarettes look
tasty, cigars manly, and pipes distinguished. He talked freely about sex. His
comments were sometimes blatant, sometimes suggestive, and generally
embarrassing. He spoke of homosexuality and other sexual deviances as though
they were totally acceptable, to him affairs and divorce were the norm. He
encouraged race-mixing and neo-communism, though before he came I had a natural disinclination to these ideas. I know now that the stranger
influenced my early concepts of the man/woman, black/white
relationship.
As I look back, I
believe it was the grace of God that the stranger did not influence us more.
Time after time, he opposed the values of parents, yet he was seldom rebuked and
never asked to leave. Nearly forty years have passed since the stranger moved in
with us, but if I were to walk into my parent’s home today, I would still see
him sitting there waiting for someone to listen to his stories and watch him
draw his pictures.
His name?.......We
just called him TV.
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