Like many small towns, my hometown
of Hapeville Georgia
was divided down the middle by rail road tracks. When we went to the Post
Office, to church, to school or to Wilder’s Ice Cream Parlor, we had to cross
the rail road tracks. In those days, many trains went through every day and
waiting at the crossing for a train to pass was a common, everyday experience.
Initially, this was scary for a little fellow because the trains were so big,
fast and loud. But quickly it became nothing more than waiting at a traffic
light for the cars to stop.
When I was 10 or 11 years old, some
older friends taught me this neat trick of placing a penny on the track in
front of the train. After the train passed, you found the penny and it would be
smashed flat. The penny came out oval shaped, looking something like a little
copper football. We would carry this smashed penny around as a lucky coin.
For some reason, it seems we were
not supposed to put the penny on the track until the train was in sight; I
don’t know why this was, except it made the whole experience more exciting. It
would take a second or two to get the penny balanced on the track, and then you
ran as fast as you could to get out of the way of the train. One day Anthony
slipped in the gravel and fell by the tracks, escaping the train by only inches.
We proudly told the story of how
Anthony was almost killed by the train when explaining the game to new-comers.
I guess it made us seem braver or gutsier or something, but it proved to be my
undoing one day when Mama heard me telling the story to Charles. Mama did not
find the game to be exciting, fun or intelligent and I was banned from the game
for life.
I tried to convince Mama that it
was a safe game and explained how “everybody was doing it”, but she didn’t buy
it. I couldn’t guess how many times I
tried to justify something I wanted to do by telling Mama “everybody else is
doing it”, only to hear her say “if everybody else jumped off a bridge would
you jump too” ? She never was one to go
with the crowd.
Mama believed like Ezra (10:11), “…..separate
yourselves from the people of the land…..”
“Wherefore come out from among them
and be ye separate, saith the Lord…..” (II Cor. 6:17)
“Thou shalt not follow a multitude
to do evil….” (Exodus 23:2) As ye have
therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in him. (Col. 2:6).
We all want to be popular and have people
to like us, and sometimes it seems the best way to achieve that is to follow
the leader and blend in. But following
Christ has never been about blending in.