Whatever you're facing...
Heaven Can Begin Now
Foot Traveler
I call it the route ahead a path because that's how I've come to think of this journey.
We're not making a swift trip on an Interstate, slicing through mountains and leaping rivers,
but following a winding trail, intimate, often rough, the route ahead usually obscured by
undergrowth. We cannot hurry to heaven; we can only go as fast as our particular landscape
allows. The verb saunter, Thoreau tells us, comes from the French sainte terre,
holy ground. It's the pace at which he walked the paths at Walden Pond, the pace a traveler
must take along the Way
Kitchen Table
For some, the path at least is well marked. I remember Billy Graham's wife, Ruth, telling me
once that she couldn't recall a time when she didn't know Jesus.
We were sitting by the wood fire in the eat-in kitchen of the Grahams' rustic home in Little
Piney Cove, North Carolina, working on a book for children and discussing what concept of
heaven a six-year-old would have. The daughter of missionaries, Ruth had grown up in the
rural China of the old warlord days, where the Christian community lived in a high-walled
compound. Outside the walls was a world of very visible evil -- rich landlords and starving
peasants, bribe-taking judges, legal torture, little girls sold into slavery. Within the
compound walls, by contrast, were kindness, love, dignity. Microcosms of hell and heaven.
"I had no trouble, at six, picturing either place," Ruth said. "Nor understanding that it was
Jesus who made the difference."
The Pencil Maker
The world I grew up in, on the other hand, I told her, revealed no such distinction between
godly and ungodly. All the citizens of Scarsdale, New York, to a child's eyes anyway, were
equally law-abiding. If some of them went to church, they seemed no different from the rest.
God. . . Jesus. . . heaven. . . such things were never talked about at our house. I remember
only one religious discussion with either of my parents all the while I was growing up. The
summer I was
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