Sunday, April 30, 2017

Second Trail Visit

The attached photo is of Adam and my friend C.A. Southerland. Renee and I met Janie and C..A. and their family in Entebbe, Uganda. They attended the same house church and before we moved back to the USA they began to host it in their house. We had very good times of fellowship.

C.A. is in the aviation industry, along with his son, Justin, and much of their work is located in E. Africa so that is why they lived out there. 
                                                                        
                                                      Adam Crane and CA Southerland
 
 
C.A. met us at Harpers Ferry where the AT crosses the bridge over the Shenandoah River. A beautiful spot. I had sent him an SMS before we met him saying "we are cold, wet and out of food." So Janie went to great lengths to cook us a meal that we will refer to as "THE MEAL." Adam and I made pigs of ourselves.

C.A. gave of himself to carry us to various places for a full day. He and his family really went out of their way to host us and we will never forget their kindness. We had good times of prayer both nights and that element made our time with them even more special.

The Southerlands returned to the USA because of Janie's health. They have had a king hard journey seeking the proper diagnosis and treatment. Please add Janie and C.A. to your daily prayer journal until we hear from him that a final break through has happened.

By the way, the picture was made at the highest prometory in Harpers Ferry. It is a beautiful and historic town and we highly recommend a visit.
 
David Crane

Saturday, April 29, 2017

What We Do When We Come Off the AT

                                                                     


Like many guys who were born in the 1950s, my favorite Westerns to watch on TV were Gun Smoke and Raw Hide. My best friend Chuck Burnham can still sing the whole song that opened Raw Hide, "roll 'em roll 'em roll 'em keep them doggies rolling..."

When the cowboys came off the trail and went into the nearby town, whether in Dodge City or somewhere else, trouble always ensued. They were thirsty, on the lookout for women, ready to gamble at cards, and basically itching to create some mayhem.

So what do Adam and I do when we come off the trail for a night or two? Well I can assure you we aren't creating an exciting enough scenario to make a new series for Raw Hide.
                                                                    
       
 
As the picture attached to this blog depicts, our time off the trail is spent doing things like drying out our gear. We also go shopping for another 3-4 days of food, eating a big meal, taking a glorious shower with hot water, and communicating with loved ones. I also try to type up a few blog entries like this one.

So Marshall Dillon would have no problems with these tired trail hands. It is all we can do to get the chores done and then fall into bed.

Tonight we are in a hotel in Mount Holly Springs, PA. We have another week or so in PA, and everyone we talk to about what awaits us further north in this state sounds ominous. Apparently there is a long stretch ahead filled with big rocks. But they assure us that the effort will help prepare us for the steep ascents found in the White Mountains of NH. Swell! Thanks for the reminder that it never gets any easier.

Thanks for praying for us and know that we are seeing the hand of the Lord in many ways.

David Crane

Friday, April 28, 2017

Third Visit on the AT: Brian Long and Family

                                                                            



Today, April 26, I had the distinct pleasure of visiting with Brian and Carla Long, and their three wonderful children.  They met us at the Pine Grove Furnace State Park which is located near where we are spending tonight, Mount Holly Springs, PA.

Adam and I had exchanged a number of text messages with Brian over the last week.  He had agreed to pick up some equipment resupply for us, and to receive the two boxes we needed to "bump" up the trail.  Brian and Carla came through big time, and supplied us not only with the physical equipment we had requested, but also fed us an outstanding lunch.  He grilled chicken on one of the park's grills.  In addition, Carla had made a wonderful salad and baked potatoes .
Brian Grilling our dinner
  They also brought a lot of snacks which we wolfed down while Brian was grilling the chicken.  Utz potato chips never tasted better.  After we left the park, Brian graciously stopped at a nearby ice cream joint, and we topped off the big meal with ice cream cones. 

I first met Brian and his family in Henderson, NC.  We moved there in 1986 as part of a church planting team.  Brian's parents, George and Francis Long, and their 4 children, were an integral part of that original nucleus of families who dared to give of themselves to such a venture.

Francis Long was one of the best cooks in Vance County.  No, maybe in all of North Carolina!  Her fried chicken, biscuits and desserts were a big draw for our Wednesday night program.  George has one of the warmest smiles you will ever have the privilege of experiencing, and I was blessed to share life with them there in Henderson for 3 years.  The Lord called Francis home in 2006 and at an early age.  I was privileged to bring the message at her funeral.  She left an enduring legacy on many levels.

One of the "hats" I wore during that time was to work with the youth and children.  Brian was the only youth I had for some time, so as I explained to Carla today, he got both barrels from David in regards to Bible teaching.  He was an open minded and adventurous youngster, and today I have been super blessed to see him as an outstanding 42 year old adult.

While I was in Henderson, I took Brian and other young people on many a camping trip.  Carla told me today that she credits me to some extent with building into Brian a love of the mountains and of the outdoor life.  She said since her own parents had been accomplished hikers and campers, she knew that whoever she would marry would have to be into all that.  So Brian fit the bill and landed an outstanding catch in Carla Bange.  Sweet!  How heartening to think I may have indirectly played such a role.

So today was special because my former young camping buddy, along with his family, got to meet up with us as we emerged from the woods while walking the AT.  And because Brian has himself walked large chunks of the AT in both W VA and PA, he was able to pull out maps of the AT and give us advice regarding what we are facing further north.

Thanks Brian and Carla.  You have both blessed and encouraged us.

David Crane



Tuesday, April 25, 2017

4-25-17

I received this late yesterday from Renee, Davids wife. 

I am sending this update to Ronald so he can keep our Facebook fans updated.  If you see anything wrong with this info or have any info you would like to add please respond  to all.

                                                                         



April 9   David and Adam started their Appalachian Trail Walk in the Shenandoah National Park in Virginia.  The Appalachian Trail runs parallel to Skyline Drive in the area of Elkton VA.  We stayed in Harrisonburg Va the night before taking them up to the trail.

April 16  By the end of the first week they had made it to Front Royal VA. 

April 23  By the end of the second week they had taken a short restock and relaxation break in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia and continued on to Waynesboro, PA.   They have walked approximately 155 miles their first two weeks.
This second part is from Adam, David's nephew, his partner on this trek and the navigator.
Hi Ron. A little update.  The first week,4-9 to 4-16 we hiked 63.4 miles.  We stayed at Mountain Home b&b on 4/15 and picked up our first mail drop.   The second week we hiked 85.2 miles.  From 4-17 to 4-23.  We took a zero day at Harper's Ferry at David's friend's house on 4-20.  We just relaxed and went to the post office for our second maildrop.  


I spoke with David and Adam late yesterday and they are doing well.  David told me he was getting stronger as the hike went on.  They are cheerful and enjoying their trek.  They have met many people and look forward to each day.

Please continue to pray for them, their health, the weather, and their safety.  

 Ron Ritchie 




                                                                   

Saturday, April 22, 2017

Stability on the AT: What Keeps You Balanced?

When Adam asked me on December 27, 2016 if I would like to join him in doing a thru hike of the AT, I did not know at that time he had been preparing himself for almost 10 months.  A big part of that preparation dealt with buying the proper gear required.

So after I confirmed with Adam that I believed the Lord was leading me to join him, he immediately sent me a long email containing the names and prices of various pieces of equipment.  One item he told me I would most certainly need was trekking poles.  Wow, was he ever correct!  At this point, I do not think it would be an exaggeration on my part to say that my Leki trekking poles are the new love of my life!

As I mentioned in a previous post, the AT is full of rocks.  Big rocks, round rocks, flat rocks, gray rocks, white rocks; well, you get the picture.  It is like an endless river of rocks!  Thus the main way we keep our balance as we hike over and through those rocks, while, I should add, carrying backpacks that can weigh up to 30 lbs., is to utilize well and consistently our trekking poles.

I have at this point lost count of how many times I would have been pitched over a precipice, or fallen flat on my face, or would have certainly sprained an ankle if not for the stability provided by leaning on my poles.  The timing and placement of the poles is definitely a skill we must learn to perfect if we are to avoid the kind of injury that would force us to take time out for healing.

All of this has caused me to think much about the issue of balance and stability in everyday life.  While doing this "dance" with our trekking poles on the AT, we have walked by thousands of tall, beautiful trees of many shapes and varieties.  And when one familiar with Psalm 1 looks at trees all day, while ruminating on the issue of stability,  the answer provided by that particular Psalm just jumps out.  Let me quote part of it below.

     "Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked,
     nor stands in the way of sinners, nor sits in the seat of scoffers,
     but his delight is in the law of the Lord, and on His law he meditates day and night.
     He is like a tree planted by streams of water, that yields its fruit in its season,
     and its leaf does not wither.  In all that he does, he prospers.
     The wicked are not so, but are like chaff that the wind drives away..."

So on the AT, trekking poles are a must.  The balance they provide is literally a life saver.  They help the hiker to stay on the path filled with so many rocks and roots; obstacles which could at any moment end their journey.

And in "real" everyday life, it is the Word of God that provides balance and stability.  The image of a tree with its roots sunk deep in ground located by an ever running stream, versus the image of chaff easily blown to and fro by the wind, is so powerful.

So what are you leaning on as you live out your life's journey?  What keeps you stable and balanced as life inevitably throws obstacles into your path?  Only a personal relationship with the God who has revealed His character and will through the Bible can make you like that prospering tree with deep roots, which is always bearing fruit, and not vulnerable to the shifting winds of the season.

Food for thought provided by doing life on the AT.


So What Do Refugees Really Need?

Adam and I are not walking the AT alone.  We run into people every day who are either walking just a section of the AT, or who started a thru hike of the AT down in GA last January or February, and like us, are headed to Maine.

All the folks we have met thus far have had interesting stories, and we have enjoyed each opportunity to fellowship with them as they are able to make time.  On other occasions, we have met folks not on the AT, but in hostels we have utilized along the way.

Up to this point, when I tell such folks what "Hiking to Help Refugees" is all about, the unanimous response has been, "send Bibles to refugees? Why Bibles and not food, clothing and other things needed by the body?"  Generally those words have been uttered in a manner that implies I am at best uninformed, and at worst some sort of religious nut.

I find it quite interesting that folks who have never been in a refugee camp, nor have ever spent even 1 hour speaking to leaders in a refugee camp about their heartfelt needs, can believe themselves to be such experts on the subject.  Armchair quarterbacks are not just a phenomenon found on Sundays watching NFL games!

What these supposed experts apparently do not realize, is that the American taxpayer, as well as citizens of other countries, have already spent billions of dollars providing for the physical needs of South Sudanese.  And it's not just taxpayers money, but also the money donated by generous souls to organizations like Samaritan's Purse, World Vision, or one of the other charitable organizations.  Such donations have literally kept millions of S. Sudanese people alive, at various junctions in history, for decades.  Yet, despite all that outside aid, S. Sudanese went to war again in mid-December 2013, but this time not against the Islamic dominated north, but against each other.

Most of the aid provided by secular or government funded groups has addressed only the physical needs of people, and have not dealt with matters of the heart and soul.  So in effect, they have addressed only the symptoms of war, not the root causes.

Our partnering organization on the ground is the Baptist Convention of South Sudan.  It has some fine leaders: Edward Dima, Ding Lual, Mathew Dhol, Simon Gatluak, etc.  Almost all of the Sudanese pastors/leaders we work with were once soldiers, or at least were made refugees back in the late 1990s or early 2000s.  The effects and causes of the conflicts which have uprooted them, their families, and their fellow countrymen, are well known to them.

 While they are refugees once again in neighboring countries, they have requested that we help them to obtain Bibles, New Testaments, solar powered MP4 players containing the NT, theological education and Bible related training, so that they can thereby address the root causes of conflict.  They understand like no American armchair expert can, that if they do not address the root causes of hatred, tribalism, greed, etc, which unmask the darkest forms of sin in men's hearts, then their current plight will just be repeated in the future.

So yes, Hiking to Help Refugees is about providing scriptural resources and training to S. Sudanese Christians who are now refugees.  They understand better than anyone what the ultimate antidote to war is; and that is individuals, families, and entire communities living in humble submission to Him who is the Prince of Peace: Jesus the Messiah.

David Crane


Rocks, Roots and Rain: The AT's Big Challenges

When we lived in Kenya back in the 1990s and early 2000s, every now and then down town Nairobi would be basically shut down due to rioting caused by students of the University of Nairobi.  Bob Calvert and I used to joke that it appeared some of the students must have joined the university to major in the "Three Rs" of "Running, Rock throwing and Rioting.

The main way we avoided the rioting down town when it occurred was to seek alternative routes out of town.  On one occasion back in 2000, I was expecting two young men, Bruce and Steve, to arrive at the airport around 10:00 p.m.  Renee and I were staying at a Guest House, which is located in the north of the city, and the airport is to the south.  The rioting that day had been especially bad and all of us were warned not to even think about venturing through the city.  So I left the guest house early enough, I thought, to make it to the airport in time via alternate routes.  Boy, was I proved wrong!  Every other driver in Nairobi, or so it seemed, had the same idea, and thus the traffic jam on those smaller streets was horrible.  Soon I realized I'd never make it to the airport in time.  What to do?

So I called Bob and some others on my vehicle's HF radio and told them I was going to plow through down town and to be praying for me.  I'll never forget the sights I saw as I zipped and zagged through the carnage on Nairobi's major artery.  Buses and cars were burning, windshield glass was all over the road, and there was all sorts of evidence that a big battle had taken place that day between the police, students, and perhaps others who sought to join in the mayhem for whatever reason.

I made it to the airport and walked into the Arrivals area just as Bruce and Steve walked out of Customs.  Afterwards we drove right back through the city, and contrary to my instructions regarding keeping their heads down to prevent being hit by a thrown rock, the guys hung their heads out the vehicle's windows and stared at what certainly looked like a war zone.

Well, now that I am on the AT, the "Three Rs" Adam and I are constantly having to deal with are: Rocks, Roots and Rain.  If the trail did not have so many rocks the energy and endurance required to walk it would probably require only %40 of what is actually demanded.  AND we have been told that it only gets worse starting in PA all the way to Vermont.  What???

So at this point I feel like I did after making the U-turn on that Nairobi street, and calling for prayer cover after reaching the decision that my only choice was to plow through the chaos caused by the "Three Rs."  Thus I am requesting that you pray for us as we plow ahead through these particular challenges.

Pray that our feet will remain strong and healthy.  Pray that we will make thousands of good, split second decisions each day regarding where to place our feet.  Pray that when the rains soak us, our clothes and our gear, that we will not grumble and lose heart; but rather embrace such conditions with a cheerful mindset.

Above all, pray that I personally will at all points keep uppermost in mind that this hike is about raising awareness of the plight of our South Sudanese brethren.  My challenges are self-imposed.  I could leave the AT whenever I choose and return to a comfortable home. Their plight has been imposed on them.  Such a condition is much worse that the "Three Rs" many times over.

David Crane

Saturday, April 15, 2017

First Trail Report

Adam and I have made it to Front Royal, VA and are staying in a hostel tonight. So it is my first chance to post.

We are doing very well. We have stuck to the hiking plan Adam had predetermined and that on average is around 10 miles.  We have decided on the trail names: Uncle and Nephew.  Not very original, but relevant to our context.

God willing, we will attend an early church service and then head back to the AT. Our next stop will be in Harper's Ferry. There we will stay with friends we met in Uganda who, like us, are now living in the USA.

Thanks for praying. God is definitely blessing. One example relates to the two instances we lost site of the trail. On both occasions we immediately ran into someone who could direct us. The trail is 2,181 miles long so what are the odds? Providence of God for sure.

He is risen!

David Crane

Sunday, April 9, 2017

The Toughest Part of the AT Hike

This picture was taken of Renee and me in 1979 in the yard of the old home place on Old Post Rd.  We were 23 years old and had been married going on 5 years.  Every time I look at a picture from that era I think of the book title "We Were Soldiers Once... And Young,"  Yep, we were indeed once young.  Isn't that gal gorgeous?  Thirty eight years later she still is the most beautiful woman I have ever met.

Through the years she bore me three healthy, beautiful children, and in our later years we are enjoying our four grandchildren.  Being married to me has forced her to literally move halfway around the world.  It's tough to even count the number of moves we have made.  Each move presented her with a new set of challenges: new neighbors, pursuit of new friends, finding another church family, a new culture, one new language (Swahili), and the list goes on.

At one time or another we have lived in all sorts of dwellings.  Our first year of marriage was spent living in a motel room in Maggie Valley.  Later on we lived in a 35 foot camper for 4 years.  The list includes: mobile homes, apartments, a flea infested house, and houses in Kenya surrounded by Maasai neighbors and lots of both domestic (cows) and wild animals.  Go to the Maasai Mara to see the wildebeest migration?  No need, we use to watch them run by the hundreds right by our house!

Through all the moves and their various challenges, she never ceased to amaze me with her ability to adapt.  She turned each new living situation into a real home.  She learned to cook dishes whose origins hail from at least a dozen different countries.  The list of life long friends she has accumulated via her vivacious spirit and compassionate heart is very long.  Many Maasai friends remember her as the woman whose Southern accent made it tough for them to understand, but they knew she loved them through all the meals and acts of kindness she performed on their behalf.

When one talks with others of hiking the entire Appalachian Trail, generally speaking the topics that are quickly mentioned deal with the challenges of the trail itself: steep trails, blisters, animal encounters, ticks, etc.  Sure, those things are realities and have to be accounted for, but they pale in comparison when laid side by side with the thought of being far from Renee for such an extended time.

So why do it?  Because Renee and I both have met so many South Sudanese women who are now widows.  Their husbands were killed in some scenario, and afterwards they were forced to flee their home and all that was familiar to seek refuge in another land.  Along the way some of them lost children.  Some were raped.  All saw and heard things that will leave scars for life; both on them and their children.  The list of daily challenges living as refugees forces upon them is daunting.

Such women and their children need to hear the same Good News of Jesus which has transformed mine and Renee's lives.  They need to know that there is a loving, gracious, sovereign God who can give them a future and a hope.  In short, they need to have access to God's Word so they can enter into a personal relationship with the only One who can wipe away all tears, conquer all fears, and enable them to know the joy associated with the promise of Jesus, "I have come that they might have life, and that they may have it more abundantly."

Please donate to Hiking to Help Refugees, so that we might have the means to supply more S. Sudanese refugees the opportunity to read or hear God's Word.  That goal is worthy of much sacrifice.  It won't be easy, but then again Jesus never promised us easy.  He just promised to be with us every step of the way.

Remember, you can donate online or by sending a check directly to Calvary Road Ministry.  Just make the check out to "Calvary Road Ministry" and earmark it for "Hiking to Help Refugees."  Mail it to: CRM, 4100 Fulton Road, Corryton, TN  37721.


Jay Mundy and Mission Aviation

The picture is of David with Jay Mundy standing in front of  one of the flight simulators Jay uses for instructing/certifying pilots with Dynamic Aviation.
____________________________________   

As Renee and I traveled to Harrisonburg, VA on Friday April 7, we received a most pleasant surprise.  Susan Mundy called to say that she and Jay lived in Harrisonburg and wanted to visit us while we were there.

Wow, my first trail related visit and I haven't even started walking yet!

Renee and I moved to Entebbe in November of 2009, after agreeing to take on a leadership position which would see us responsible for supervising personnel in 4 countries, and working with the national convention in one other (Burundi).  Little did we know at the time how important a role mission aviation was going to play in our lives and ministry.

The Mundys moved into a rental house just a stone's throw from ours in 2010 and stayed there until AIM moved their operation to Arua.  Before they moved, we attended the same house church, shared a lot of meals, swapped a lot of stories, prayed with and for each other, and flew several times into South Sudan with Jay.  In short, Susan, Renee, Jay and I became good friends.

Like every pilot I personally flew with, Jay had served as a pilot for many years before sensing a call to serve by flying personnel around the African Continent.  Jay was different than most in that he had already put in a career with the US Air Force.

When the current conflict began in South Sudan, Jay's role became even more strategic for our teams living and serving on the ground there.  Our teams were able to stay in place, first of all by the grace of God, but secondly because we knew our fearless AIM Air pilot friend, Jay Mundy, was on standby should things go sideways.  He and I talked often during those days, and the only thing he asked of our teams was that they call him before the bullets started flying.  At times the S. Sudanese government put out a temporary ban on all air travel.  When I heard of the first ban, I called Jay and asked if that would prevent him from going to rescue our guys should they holler for help.  His answer let me know that our guys could rest in the knowledge Jay would do whatever it took, as long as they always bore in mind that he also had a wife and children.

Jay now has a job with Dynamic Aviation of Bridgewater, VA.  The company is one he is very proud to be affiliated with.  He now does a lot of training in addition to flying; his second love after Susan and his kids.  Renee and I are were so pleased to hear how our Lord has guided their steps since they left the field.


Friday, April 7, 2017

The Power of Legacy: What Compels You # 3

The picture is of my mom, Mary Etta, and my step dad, John (Jack) Wesley Stephenson.  Yeah, as his name implies, he has been a life long member of the Methodist Church.  They are members of the First United Methodist Church of Cherryville, and mom still plays the organ for them.  She would have retried by now, but whenever the subject comes up, the reaction that ensues can only be compared to what happens when a rock band plays their last song at a live concert.  If you have attended one you know what I mean.  The audience all stand and cry out "play more!" until the group returns to the stage.

Mom was a self-employed piano and organ teacher during most of her working life, and had the pleasure of training a host of men and women who went on to excel in various music related vocations.  My brother and I were not among that "host."  Mom required us to take piano lessons for a minimum of 5 years when we were kids, aged 8-13.  After 5 years we had the option to continue or opt out.  We both opted for football!  Mom received some great advice from colleagues, "do not try to teach your own children."  She followed that advice.  Good move mom!  Raising two rowdy, rough-and-tumble boys on your own was hard enough without throwing that into the mix.

Yeah, my mom had to raise us alone because her first husband died when I was age two and my brother only a few weeks old.  She remained a widow for going on 40 years before remarrying.  How I thank God He brought Jack into her life.  He is a class act.  He has added so much to my life personally, and to the life of our family at large.

Mom and Jack now live with us in a mother-in-law suite connected to our house.  When God was ready for their personal house to sell, he sent a neighbor lady to knock on their door and ask "I hear you want to sell your house.  May I buy it?"  The papers were signed a few days later.  Yep, God is still in the real estate business (got that line from Nathan Cothen of Beaumont, TX).

The last time I climbed Mt. Kenya (17,000 plus feet in elevation) with my youngest two kids, the going got tough for me on the home stretch.  When approaching the top, the slope is not only extremely steep, but it is very cold.  Plus one tackles the last stretch after waking up a 1:00 a.m. so he/she can be on top for the sunrise.  What helped me to get to the top was envisioning mom and Jack standing in front of me, encouraging me not to give up.  Sound weird?  Maybe.  But I swear I could hear their voices. And it worked! What a glorious sunrise that was.

They will celebrate their 20th wedding anniversary while I am doing my thru hike of the AT.  I want them and the world to know just how much the power of their example as individuals and a couple has meant to me.  They have exemplified in a multitude of ways, which space does not allow me to wax eloquent on, what it means to be God fearing, other-focused servants.

So Jack, you might be walking around these days at times with the aid of a walker and cane, but know that in a way that is real to me, you and mom will also be making this AT hike with me.  If nothing else, the power of your life's legacy will supply the power my feeble legs will need on many a steep slope.

Remember, you can sponsor me on this AT thru hike by sponsoring me at X amount per mile walked.  The AT is 2,181 miles long.  Or you can make a one time donation.  Checks made out to "Calvary Road Ministry" and earmarked for "Hiking to Help Refugees" should be mailed to: CRM, 4100 Fulton Rd., Corryton, TN  37721.  Or donate on line at: https://www.generosity.com/faith-religion-fundraising/hiking-to-help-refugees/x/16376073 

Thursday, April 6, 2017

The Tables are Turned: Adam Grew Up!

The first picture was taken approximately 33 years ago when Adam was a baby.  You can tell it was long ago as well by the fact that I have a head full of hair and do not weigh around 200 lb.  How about those circa mid-1980s glasses?

Adam's father is my only brother, Stephen.  His mom is Kim Austell Crane.  During Adam's childhood, his dad moved them around a few times while working for Carolina Freight Carriers.  They moved back to our home town just a few years before we moved to Kenya in 1993.  They built a house right beside my mom and great aunt, which was a blessing from the Lord.  They supported us %100 all those years we lived overseas, and were an extremely important part of our personal lives and ministry team.  They came to visit us in Kenya around 2001, and Adam and my two sons had fun together.  We enjoyed showing them some of Kenya's most beautiful sites. 

But as you can see from this second picture, Adam grew UP to be a big man like his dad.  Dare I say a 210 pound plus on a 6 ft. 2 in. frame man.  Uncle David will not be carrying him around anymore, that's for sure!

Adam spent the last 4 years teaching English to children in South Korea.  He just returned to the home town on April 3.  Since then he has, like me, been scrambling to complete tons of last minute
preparations.  He has, however, been preparing for this AT hike for around 10 months.  That's great news for me because it means he will be our navigator on the AT, having studied well the ATC Trail Guide, and having read the blog entries of others who have successfully navigated an AT thru hike.

So now it's time for Adam to carry me.  Sure, not physically pick me up and haul me around.  However, I have a feeling there are times ahead where he will hear his uncle begging for help with this or that.  Plus if any rough and threatening characters impose themselves on us, it will be my absolute pleasure to stand behind his massive frame and say "better not mess with us if you know what's good for you!  Right Adam?"

Please write our names down in your prayer journal and pray for our health and safety.  Pray that we will enjoy all the sights and people we will encounter along the way.  Pray that whenever one is down, the other will be up and willing to handle whatever extra burden might be required that day.

Remember, you can sponsor me on this thru hike at X amount per mile.  The AT is 2,181 miles long.  Or you can make a one time donation.  A check made out to Calvary Road Ministry, and earmarked for "Hiking to Help Refugees" can be mailed to: CRM, 4100 Fulton Rd., Corryton, TN  37721.  Or you can donate online at https://www.generosity.com/faith-religion-fundraising/hiking-to-help-refugees/x/16376073.

David Crane


Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Turning Trauma into Triumph; What Compels You? # 2

The picture is of Gary Price Adams, born May 2, 1963 and died on May 2, 2004.  He is surrounded by some of the nieces and nephews who absolutely adored "Uncle Gary."

My in-laws, Dare and Morris Adams, had four birth children and then adopted 3 boys.  Gary was the eldest of the latter 3.

Gary loved sports and played linebacker on Cherryville High School's varsity team.


Gary joined the US Army not long after graduating from high school.  During the final year of his first stint, he and his unit were based in Germany.  In the final days of his deployment, he was on medical leave following a simple medical procedure that required some down time.  His intent was to sign up for a second tour of duty while on base.

One night while on leave, he and 3 friends went off base in a car owned by one of the other fellows.  The car had no seat belts in the back where Gary and another guy were sitting. While returning to their barracks, and on base, they topped a hill and came upon military truck doing a U-turn.  They slammed into the side of the big truck.  The two men in the front died from their injuries.  The other fellow in the back with Gary was paralyzed for some time, but ultimately recovered the use of his limbs.  Gary's only real injury was a break in his spine at the base of his neck.  He remained a quadriplegic until the time of his death, almost 20 years later.

Gary's condition required that my in-laws, and everyone else in the family, learn as much as possible about how to care for someone in his condition.  He had a great support system, including not only family and close friends, but also from the V.A.  He was enabled to build a house designed just perfectly for wheel chair access.  He was supplied with a motorized wheel chair with the features which matched the very limited ability he had in his arms.  He ultimately even acquired a van equipped so that he could drive it.

During his short life, Gary Adams was as beloved as anyone I have known.  Now things could have played out differently.  Had he allowed his circumstances to make him bitter and hard, his life, and the lives of those who loved him, would certainly have been much different.

Gary had received Jesus as his personal Lord and Savior before the accident. After it, of course after wrestling with all the feelings and thoughts associated with coming to terms with his condition, he came to find peace and purpose as a result of the power of the grace and mercy of His Lord in his life.

Gary's house was always open to his large family.  He lavished love and gifts on his nieces and nephews.  They loved to hang out with him.  He really and truly became a center piece of the family.  By the grace of God, his traumatic experience resulted in triumph.  I do not mean to imply that his life was rosy every day, or that he did not continue to experience physical pain and mental anguish.  However, it is no exaggeration to say that Gary's life exemplified the truth of Romans 8:28, which says, "We know that in everything God works for the good with those who love Him, who are called according to His purpose" (RSV).

Why am I thinking about Gary as I approach the start date of my thru hike of the AT?  Because I and my family have seen up close and personal how the Word and grace of God can transform what the devil would like to twist and use for evil purposes, into something beautiful and edifying.

The forces of evil would like to use the conditions our South Sudanese refugee brethren are living in to produce a generation of bitter, hardhearted people.  That is why we must do all we can to supply them with access to the Word of God, and Bible based training, so that their current traumatic experience can also ultimately result in a triumph of God's grace, one person at a time.

Remember, you can sponsor me on my AT thru hike at X amount per mile, or make a one time donation.  The AT is 2,181 miles long.  A check made out to "Calvary Road Ministry" and earmarked "Hiking to Help Refugees" should be mailed to: CRM,4100 Fulton Road, Corryton, TN  37721.  Or you can donate on line at www.generosity.com.  Just look for my fund raiser, "Hiking to Help Refugees."  All donations are tax deductible via the nonprofit, Calvary Road Ministry.