Some
14
years
ago, I
stood
watching
my
university
students
file
into
the
classroom
for
our
opening
session
in the
theology
of
faith.
That
was
the
day I
first
saw
Tommy.
He was
combing
his
hair,
which
hung
six
inches
below
his
shoulders.
My
quick
judgment
wrote
him
off as
strange
- very
strange.
Tommy
turned
out to
be my
biggest
challenge.
He
constantly
objected
to or
smirked
at the
possibility
of an
unconditionally
loving
God.
When
he
turned
in his
final
exam
at the
end of
the
course,
he
asked
in a
slightly
cynical
tone,
"Do
you
think
I'll
ever
find
God?"
"No,"
I said
emphatically.
"Oh,"
he
responded.
"I
thought
that
was
the
product
you
were
pushing."
I let
him
get
five
steps
from
the
door
and
then
called
out.
"I
don't
think
you'll
ever
find
Him,
but I
am
certain
He
will
find
you."
Tommy
shrugged
and
left.
I felt
slightly
disappointed
that
he had
missed
my
clever
line.
Later
I
heard
that
Tommy
had
graduated,
and I
was
grateful
for
that.
Then
came a
sad
report:
Tommy
had
terminal
cancer.
Before
I
could
search
him
out,
he
came
to me.
When
he
walked
into
my
office,
his
body
was
badly
wasted,
and
his
long
hair
had
fallen
out
because
of
chemotherapy.
But
his
eyes
were
bright
and
his
voice,
for
the
first
time,
was
firm.
"Tommy!
I've
thought
about
you so
often.
I
heard
you
were
very
sick,"
I
blurted
out.
"Oh,
yes,
very
sick.
I have
cancer.
It's a
matter
of
weeks."
"Can
you
talk
about
it?"
"Sure.
What
would
you
like
to
know?"
"What's
it
like
to be
only
24 and
know
that
you're
dying?"
"It
could
be
worse,"
he
told
me,
"like
being
50 and
thinking
that
drinking
booze,
seducing
women
and
making
money
are
the
real
'biggies'
in
life."
Then
he
told
me why
he had
come.
"It
was
something
you
said
to me
on the
last
day of
class.
I
asked
if you
thought
I
would
ever
find
God,
and
you
said
no,
which
surprised
me.
Then
you
said,
'But
He
will
find
you.'
I
thought
about
that a
lot,
even
though
my
search
for
God
was
hardly
intense
at
that
time.
But
when
the
doctors
removed
a lump
from
my
groin
and
told
me
that
it was
malignant,
I got
serious
about
locating
God.
And
when
the
malignancy
spread
into
my
vital
organs,
I
really
began
banging
against
the
bronze
doors
of
heaven.
But
nothing
happened.
Well,
one
day I
woke
up,
and
instead
of my
desperate
attempts
to get
some
kind
of
message,
I just
quit.
I
decided
I
didn't
really
care
about
God,
an
afterlife,
or
anything
like
that.
I
decided
to
spend
what
time I
had
left
doing
something
more
important.
I
thought
about
you
and
something
else
you
had
said:
'The
essential
sadness
is to
go
through
life
without
loving.
But it
would
be
almost
equally
sad to
leave
this
world
without
ever
telling
those
you
loved
that
you
loved
them.'
So I
began
with
the
hardest
one:
my
dad."
Tommy's
father
had
been
reading
the
newspaper
when
his
son
approached
him.
"Dad,
I
would
like
to
talk
with
you."
"Well,
talk."
"I
mean,
it's
really
important."
The
newspaper
came
down
three
slow
inches.
"What
is
it?"
"Dad,
I love
you.
I just
wanted
you to
know
that."
Tommy
smiled
at me
as he
recounted
the
moment.
"The
newspaper
fluttered
to the
floor.
Then
my
father
did
two
things
I
couldn't
remember
him
doing
before.
He
cried
and he
hugged
me.
And we
talked
all
night,
even
though
he had
to go
to
work
the
next
morning.
"It
was
easier
with
my
mother
and
little
brother,"
Tommy
continued.
"They
cried
with
me,
and we
hugged
one
another,
and
shared
the
things
we had
been
keeping
secret
for so
long.
Here I
was,
in the
shadow
of
death,
and I
was
just
beginning
to
open
up to
all
the
people
I had
actually
been
close
to.
"Then
one
day I
turned
around
and
God
was
there.
He
didn't
come
to me
when I
pleaded
with
Him.
Apparently
He
does
things
in His
own
way
and at
His
own
hour.
The
important
thing
is
that
you
were
right.
He
found
me
even
after
I
stopped
looking
for
Him."
"Tommy,"
I
added,
"could
I ask
you a
favor?
Would
you
come
to my
theology-of-faith
course
and
tell
my
students
what
you
told
me?"
Though
we
scheduled
a
date,
he
never
made
it.
Of
course,
his
life
was
not
really
ended
by his
death,
only
changed.
He
made
the
great
step
from
faith
into
vision.
He
found
a life
far
more
beautiful
than
the
eye of
humanity
has
ever
seen
or the
mind
ever
imagined.
Before
he
died,
we
talked
one
last
time.
"I'm
not
going
to
make
it to
your
class,"
he
said.
"I
know,
Tommy."
"Will
you
tell
them
for
me?
Will
you .
. .
tell
the
whole
world
for
me?"
"I
will,
Tommy.
I'll
tell
them."
-(Author
Unknown)