BALLENGEE
An Introduction
When the hour brings stillness, even in the midst of confusion, I think that allot of us, if not all, has a private sanctuary hidden within our conscious being. Nothing complex or difficult to reach, just a state which we can readily retreat to and sort out the experience of life. Perhaps for most it is an unnamed region that we find ourselves when deep in thought. It may be the product of meditation or contemplation or imagination or whatever four or five syllable words you may choose. But it is real. It may not be a tangible substance such as wood, stone or iron, but to our spirits it is an anchor to weight us to the realities of our life. It is, in spite of our hopes and dreams, our escape within us bearing a reality that can carry our hopes and dreams to truth. It becomes a vision with out the physical eye, which empowers our ability to see beyond which is seen, and view that which can be. It is the bedrock of faith. Faith is the immeasurable substance that allows us to know God and to accomplish that which is beyond our reach. If I have faith, then I can dream. If I can dream, then I have hope. If I have hope then I can have life worth living. My point of refuge then is called Ballengee. Ballengee, a small community tucked away in the rolling peaks and valleys of my imagination.
Ballengee is the place that my imagination resides. I realize that you see me here, or hear of me there, but it is in Ballengee that I resolve the question of life. Perhaps it is a strange state of being my choice to linger there, as Ballengee is a fictional place, but it also is the reality of my imagination. Ballengee is fashioned not so much by my dreams as it is by the realities of past reflections. This is just, as all fiction, I believe, is born in the truth. So I shall simply define Ballengee as the small town my imagination lives within and is manifested to you in the words I have written.
Ballengee is the place that my imagination resides. I realize that you see me here, or hear of me there, but it is in Ballengee that I resolve the question of life. Perhaps it is a strange state of being my choice to linger there, as Ballengee is a fictional place, but it also is the reality of my imagination. Ballengee is fashioned not so much by my dreams as it is by the realities of past reflections. This is just, as all fiction, I believe, is born in the truth. So I shall simply define Ballengee as the small town my imagination lives within and is manifested to you in the words I have written.
I once was a truck driver. A navigator of an eighteen wheeler trekking across the great backyard of America. Throughout the years of my road adventures I made it a practice on Sunday’s to find a church to attend. I’m basically a non-denominational guy so the major consideration for a church was a large parking lot. Well that would get me in the door but they had better be preaching the Bible if they wanted me to stay. It was very interesting visiting all those churches across this great land.
One thing of great interest was found in a small church located in Lodi, CA. A Baptist church if my memory is correct. As I was leaving I noticed a phone on the wall of the foyer with a sign beneath which read one thousand dollars a minute. I inquired with one of the members to learn that this phone was a direct line to God. To say the least I was impressed.
I have sense then in any churches across the country noticed the same phone with the sign one thousand dollars a minute. At my inquiry the answer always the same. “A direct line to God.” My adventures finally brought me to the Church on the Knoll located in the lovely community of Ballengee, West Virginia, the almost heaven. They too, even in this small church of only twenty-four members had that phone a direct line to God. The only difference was that the price was only twenty-five cents. But as I shared in the worship service the personal testimony and witness of each member further impacted me. I felt that I had been brought into a sacred family of God. The Love of each for each was overwhelming. The welcome I felt was a measure beyond genuine.
I found this to be also true of the whole community of Ballengee. Here with my fellow members numbering only twenty-one hundred, I truly felt apart of each and every life there. Perhaps I enjoy most the simplicity of Ballengee. It is a place where folks have not strayed far from the moral fiber that binds society together. There is no question to what is right or wrong. Our Fathers placed the code in our hearts and we deny them not their wisdom. The elders here still lead knowing that where there is breath of life, there is duty. The young are taught early the joys of obedience and the despair of disobedience. Here the woman loves her man and the man serves his woman. It may sound as if Ballengee is a perfect little town but in truth it is not. We do have our imperfections, our misfits and injustice. Yet the foundations are seldom cracked and love and forgiveness wins the day. For here in Ballengee the white horse still wins the race. I had then decided to settle down and become a citizen.
Such as it is for Sarah Abrams. Her life is a witness of overcoming the imperfections that come upon us with seeming injustice. She is a dear sweet elderly lady who lives in the cellar of Lou’s Five & Dime. Sarah for most of her years has been deaf and unable to speak. But it was not always that way.
Sarah was the daughter of a corn farmer named Joseph Abrams. Sarah the son that Joseph never had after school would work in the fields with her father. Sarah would help in the harvest, she would gather the stalks, shuck the ears of corn and help her mother can and store the corn. Sarah was gifted with a beautiful voice and a great ear for music. Her mother’s hope was that some day Sarah would sing in the opera or become a great gospel singer.
It has been said to me by many when Sarah would sing in the choir at Grace Baptist Church it was as if an Angel had filled her voice. It is true that there is a special quality to a youthful voice that is unmatched. I believe from what others have said that the Angels of Heaven must have paused to listen as Sarah sang here on earth.
Sarah being a child had the fascination of youth to explore the world and stretch her imagination. She loved to go off and run through the fields and meadows around her father’s farm. I imagine she would sing and dance her way through fields of corn stalks and meadows filled with milkweeds. One time she strayed over the stone fence of Angus Miller’s farm and frolicked in his fields. I certainly understand the desire to see newer places than where she had been.
Angus Miller is a cattle farmer and in that field was a large Holstein bull named Bud. I have heard that bulls care little for flutter about them. Nervous creatures the cattle with little defense against the fox or panther. So I suspect when Bud saw Sarah dancing about he became confused and reacted in defense. Bud charged Sarah and she was caught beneath his hoofs and received a hard hit on her head splitting it open. Sarah lay there bleeding and unconscious long past dark before Joseph and Angus Miller found her. They took her to the hospital in Capitol City where the doctors worked to save her fragile life.
Sarah survived but from that day on was unable to speak or hear. It is said the whole town of Ballengee gathered when Sarah came back from Capitol City and welcomed her home. It is said that Sarah’s mother was devastated and Joseph was bitter. But Reba Maxwell told me that Sarah was filled with a smile upon her face once seeing the entire town coming to welcome her back.
I’ve seen people quite for a lot less. Wrap themselves up in a blanket of self-pity and stop living. As if it was useless now that they had lost so much. We have a tendency to count only our trials and not our blessings. Yet I do believe that if anyone were to take a correct inventory they would find the blessings always out number the trials.
This tragedy has been many more years ago than I have been on this earth and I don’t know the pain and suffering that Sarah must have gone through. I don’t know if what came about was immediate or was a product of time. I do know Sarah, as she is a regular at the Church on the Knoll, and blesses us each Sunday. For Sarah’s talent was not her voice nor her ear but her heart. Sarah became a great writer of poetry and she wrote often of her greatest love, Jesus. The uniqueness of her talent was not in the fact that she wrote on paper but embroidered her words upon cloth.
You can come to Ballengee and buy handkerchiefs with Sarah’s poetry of praise sown upon it. Or a lampshade, a towel or wash clothes. In every church in Ballengee there are banners with Sarah’s poetry sown upon it. Who knows the value of her service to her Lord? Who knows how many hearts have been swayed or blessed by her words written to Jesus? I don’t know, but God does and I am sure He shall honor Sarah’s work. I do know that I have been blessed many times.
It is then the simplicity of Ballengee that we have learned the simple truth of the Kingdom to come. That where God guides He also provides. It is when we step out of the chosen path the troubles rush in upon us. But to those of us who muster one seed of faith know that no matter how far we stray the path home is never more than one step away. Though Sarah stepped out and lost so much of her dream and hope, she stepped back in and found her life. Here in Ballengee it is never too late, in the almost heaven, to find our way back home, for God is just a local call.