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Home town tales : recollections of kindness, peace, and joy  Cover Image Book Book

Home town tales : recollections of kindness, peace, and joy / Philip Gulley.

Gulley, Philip. (Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780061252297
  • Physical Description: 219 pages ; 19 cm
  • Edition: First HarperCollins paperback edition.
  • Publisher: [San Francisco] : HarperSanFrancisco, 2007.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Publisher, publishing date and paging may vary.
Formatted Contents Note:
Things you ought to know -- A yardstick of the soul -- Ray -- Clothesline -- Stitches in time -- Cyrus and Doral -- Tender integrity -- Cat-feet quiet -- Vesper magic -- Nativity -- Joy of usefulness -- Going home -- My lawn mower, my friend -- Bedtime stories -- Clyde -- Bath people -- History lessons -- Sally and the Pythagorean theorem -- Margaret and her pennies -- Our resident Noah -- Town mottoes -- Warts and all -- Kindness bestowed -- Sister Rosalie -- Consider the birds -- Day I met Paul Harvey -- Crime wave -- Bernice -- Annice -- A tribute to Ned Ludd -- Information line -- Unclouded day -- Inheritance day -- Heist -- Open door -- Dreamers all -- Fussing, fighting, and forgiving -- Admonition suit -- Dump boy -- Rivers of mercy -- Pam -- Getting rid of things -- State fair -- Birdhouse -- Flowers and weeds -- Leverne.
Subject: Gulley, Philip > Anecdotes.
Christian life > Anecdotes.
Christian life > Quaker authors.

Available copies

  • 13 of 14 copies available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
  • 4 of 4 copies available at Cass County.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 14 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Cass County Library-Archie 242 GUL (Text) 0002203332883 Adult Non-Fiction Available -
Cass County Library-Northern Resource Center 242 GUL (Text) 0002202674145 Adult Non-Fiction Available -
Cass County Library-Northern Resource Center 242 GUL 2007 (Text) 0002203332867 Adult Non-Fiction Available -
Cass County Library-Pleasant Hill 242 GUL (Text) 0002203332859 Adult Non-Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9780061252297
Hometown Tales : Recollections of Kindness, Peace, and Joy
Hometown Tales : Recollections of Kindness, Peace, and Joy
by Gulley, Philip
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Excerpt

Hometown Tales : Recollections of Kindness, Peace, and Joy

Hometown Tales Recollections of Kindness, Peace, and Joy Chapter One Ray I met Ray the first year I moved to the city. He worships at a Quaker meeting near his hometown of Dublin except when the roads are icy; then he worships at our meetinghouse. His Quaker meeting doesn't have a pastor. They sit in silence and wait for the Lord to give them a message, as the old Quakers used to do. Ray is suspicious of pastors and said so within five minutes of meeting me. "Most pastors like nothing more than to bully people," he told me. I replied that we pastors take classes in seminary on how to bully people. Then he told me he didn't believe Jesus is God. That's when I made up my mind I wasn't going to spend a lot of time with Ray. The next morning the phone rang, early. It was Ray. "I'd like to take you to breakfast," he said. "I want to talk with you. Most pastors I've met don't know their theology. I want to see if you're any different." It wasn't a request; it was an order, a command appearance. Ray drove by and picked me up. We went to Bob Evans and ordered pancakes. He asked me what I thought of the Trinity. I told him I believed in it. He disagreed. I started to worry. Ray was nearly eighty years old then, but vigorous. If push came to shove, I think he could have taken me. But Ray is a pacifist; he disagreed with me, then paid for my pancakes. A month later it snowed again. Ray showed up at our meetinghouse. We sang "Are You Washed in the Blood?" It's a rollicking old revival tune. We sing it whenever our worship needs livening up. Ray took me to breakfast at Bob Evans the next morning. "I don't like blood songs," he told me. "That's beastly theology." Now when it snows on Sunday, I make sure we sing "Are You Washed in the Blood?" Ray sits in the front row and grits his teeth. Ray doesn't attend our Quaker meeting in the summer because the road to his meetinghouse is wide open. But once a month, generally on Sunday evenings, the phone rings. It'll be Ray. "Let's go for a root beer," he'll say. "My treat." I drive by and pick him up. We motor over to Edward's Drive-In where they serve root beer in a frosty mug. We sit in the car, sip root beer, and discuss German theologians of the 1930s. I point out to Ray how all of them believed Jesus is divine. Ray thinks about that for a while, then says, "Well, don't forget, those same folks voted for Hitler." Ray has an answer for everything. Initially, I hadn't intended to befriend Ray. I'm just orthodox enough to believe God might zap a man who denies the deity of Jesus as boldly as Ray does. But we have to get our thrills somewhere. Some men have a weakness for fast women. I have a soft spot for eighty-year-old heretics who buy me pancakes and root beer. Before Ray became a Quaker, he went away to World War II. His pastor saw him off to war by telling him to kill as many soldiers as he could. I think that's when Ray started having trouble with pastors. When he came home, he took up with the Quakers. He met his wife, Marjorie. They had three children. The kids grew up and moved away, and Marjorie was diagnosed with Alzheimer's. When Ray had to put her in a nursing home, he sat by her bedside holding her hand long after she'd forgotten who he was. A few days after Marjorie died, Ray came by our house. He sat in the rocking chair holding our baby, Sam. Sam came into this world about the same time Ray's wife left it. I think in Ray's mind, baby Sam is a replacement. Ray calls him "my dear, little Sam." He rocks Sam back and forth, his eyes cloudy with tears. He tells me I'm a blessed man. On this we agree. Ray still doesn't believe Jesus is God. And he still doesn't like blood songs. If orthodoxy were a requirement for friendship with me, Ray and I would be enemies. But it isn't, so Ray and I are friends. Besides, I've always thought that what is in a man's heart is even more important than what is in his head. I got that idea from the apostle Paul, who once wrote that love is the greatest gift of all. Hometown Tales Recollections of Kindness, Peace, and Joy . Copyright © by Philip Gulley. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from Hometown Tales: Recollections of Kindness, Peace, and Joy by Philip Gulley All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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