The following is an entry from my personal journal about an event that unfolded in the life of my family twenty years ago this weekend. I think God is still chuckling...
Labor Day Weekend 1993
It was
Thursday, September 2, 1993. I had
a problem. I had promised my
oldest son, Scott, that this would be the year that I would take him to Wrigley
Field in Chicago to see the Cubs play in their home environment. Scott was born in the suburbs of
Chicago and even though we moved away when he was just 4 months old, he
considered himself a true Chicagoan.
More importantly he was for now and forever more, a Cubs fan. He had seen the Cubs plenty of times in
our local ball park, Busch Stadium in St. Louis. But there is just something about Wrigley Field.
Well,
the problem was that there were precious few Cubs games left at Wrigley Field
in the 1993 season. The kids were
back in school. We were ready to
celebrate Labor Day weekend by kicking back and vegetating. I talked with God on Thursday and asked
Him what to do. There were plenty
of reasons not to go to Chicago.
Most of them had to do with laziness on my part. I could find a million excuses...all of
them good. But none of them were
good enough when God reminded me that Fathers are suppose to keep their
promises. Not only that but
Scott's view of his Heavenly Father would be shaped, in part, by his view of
his earthly father. If I proved
myself untrustworthy wouldn't he have reason to believe that his Heavenly
Father might let him down also? I
had to go to Chicago.
Friday
morning dawned and we were in the old blue van early. We didn't have tickets and we thought we would get to
Chicago and buy cheap seats, maybe arrive early enough to watch batting
practice and let the kids spend some souvenir money. We arrived in Joliet at 11:00 a.m. Game time was 2:20.
Plenty of time! We didn't
really need gas but I figured we might as well buy it here so we wouldn't have
to stop in the city. As usual,
nothing went as planned. When we got back into the van to head on to Wrigley Field it wouldn't start. It just sat there. A mechanic was summoned from a local
Amoco station. Closer inspection
revealed that we needed a new alternator.
Not to worry, a quick tow across the street, $280.00 worth of repairs,
and we would be on our way in an hour.
Right.
Three
hours later the van was repaired.
It was 2:00 p.m. on the Friday before Labor Day. The game was set to begin in 20 minutes
and we still had 40 miles to travel on one of traffics busiest Fridays in
Chicago. Debbie and I consulted
briefly and decided that we had to go on.
The decision was made to get to the ball park as quickly as possible,
buy the cheapest seats possible, and try to salvage a tough situation.
As I
drove I had a talk with my Father.
You know the one. The one
that said fathers always keep their promises. I wanted to know why He has sent us all this way, in
obedience, only to allow the van to break down so close to our goal. Did He get a kick out of seeing Scott's
spirit crushed? Did I
misunderstand Him? Was this a
frivolous trip. Would He rather we
had spent our time back at home, sacked out in front of the tube? I just didn't get it. The more I asked the less I heard from
the creator.
We
arrived at Wrigley Field in the middle of the 2nd inning. I was carrying Christopher by now
because he had one of his famous stomach aches. It was easier to carry him than to listen to him
complain! This was turning out to
be a really swell day.
When I
reached the ticket window I heard myself telling the man "Give me the 5
best seats you have left."
Debbie looked on in horror as the man asked, "Would you like box
seats?" and I responded with a weak "Yes.". She handed me $85.00 in stunned
silence. I paid the man. (Today it would take more than $85.00 to buy a families lunch at Wrigley!)
We
entered the gate without a clue concerning where we should go. I just walked toward daylight in the
closest tunnel I could find. We
emerged into the sunshine directly behind home plate. As Scott stepped
out of the shadows a pitch was delivered to Sammy Sosa, the current Cub
batter. Scott’s first view of
Wrigley Field was a blur. A
ferocious swing, the crack of the bat, and the ensuing flight of the ball over
the left field fence. His mouth
hung open (so did mine) as one of his hero's trotted around the bases. By now I had managed to find an usher
and present our tickets to her, expecting to be pointed up and out to seats
similar to those we usually occupied at Busch Stadium. Instead she said, "Follow me,
sir." Shock turned to
disbelief. She was going closer to
the field. As a matter-of-fact she
was walking toward the visiting Mets dugout. She didn't stop until she reached the front row. She pointed to our seats and walked
away. The five of us looked at
each other not knowing what to do.
Eventually we made our way down the aisle, Scott and Kelli on the front
row and Debbie, Chris and I directly behind them in the second.
I
honestly didn't know what to do. I
thought somebody had made a mistake.
They had to have given us the wrong tickets. I turned to the man next to me and asked him if tickets in
this section were always available on game day. He turned rather pale.
Making a quick recovery he asked if I would mind telling him what I
had paid for my tickets. I
explained that I had just purchased them 5 minutes earlier at the ticket
window. Clutching his chest he
told me that he had bought his two months earlier from a ticket broker ... at
$85.00 per ticket. I didn't know
what to say! Trying to make him
feel better I told him that we had missed the first inning. His response left me trembling. "It's a good thing you were
late," he said. As he pointed
to the seat Scott was sitting in he said, "Last inning Ryne Sandberg hit a
rocket into that seat. If he had
been sitting there then he would, at best, be on his way to the hospital right now. As a matter-of-fact, a photographer was
sitting next to it. He got so
shook up he left."
I had to bite my
lip for a second before I could relay this information to Debbie. It seems that our Father had known best
after all. Not only did He save us
some of the best seats in Wrigley Field, but He slowed us down just enough to
insure our safety. God is
good. All the time.
Oh yeah,
the Cubs won.
(Father,
thank you for loving my children.
I did not know that anyone could love them more than I do but somehow
you manage it. Scott knows where
those tickets came from. All of
the children do. When I have
enough courage to obey you exciting things happen. Usually it involves situations that make my pulse beat
faster and my "fight or flight" impulses scream! But always, just before the unexpected
disaster, whether it is a baseball to the head or the unexpected repair bill,
you show yourself strong and loving.
And you meet my
needs. Thanks.)
0 comments:
Post a Comment