Monday, April 4, 2011

Bill McChesney Still Lives On in his "My Choice" poem

My Choice
By William McChesney
(This poem was written by an American Missionary to the Congo, martyred due to his faith and US citizenship at the age of 28 in 1965.)



I want my breakfast served at eight


With ham and eggs upon the plate.



A well-broiled steak I'll eat at on


And dine again when day is done.


I want an ultramodern home


And in each room a telephone;


Soft carpets, too, upon the floor


And pretty drapes to grace the doors.


A cozy place of lovely things,


Like easy chairs with inner springs,


And then, I'll get a nice T.V.


- Of course, I'm careful what I see.


I want my wardrobe, too, to be


Of neatest, finest quality,


With latest style in suit and vest.


Why should not Christians have the best?


But then the Master I can hear


In no uncertain voice, so clear:


"I bid you come and follow Me,


The lowly Man of Galilee."


"Birds of the air have made their nest


And foxes in their holes find rest,


But I can offer you no bed;


No place have I to lay my head."


In shame I hung my head and cried,


How could I spurn the Crucified?


Could I forget the way He went,


The sleepless nights in prayer He spent?


For forty days without a bite,


Alone He fasted day and night;


Despised, rejected - on He went,


and did not stop till veil He rent!


A man of sorrows and of grief


No earthly friend to bring relief;


"Smitten of God," the prophet said


Mocked, beaten, bruised, His blood ran red.


If He be God, and died for me,


No sacrifice too great can be


For me; a mortal man, to make;


I'll do it all for Jesus' sake.


Yes, I will tread the path He trod,


No other way will please my God,


So, henceforth, this my choice shall be,


My choice for all eternity.



(Since we do mission work in Kenya, I wanted to know more about Bill McChesney. I have friends who go into the Congo regularly on medical mission trips. The following is an excerpt from an interview with Aldine McChesney (Bill’s mother) for a newspaper in Phoenix, AZ.)
“Bill was one of the happiest young men I have ever known. People often called him “Smiling Bill”. Sunshine seemed to radiate from his face and personality. He had things to live for and hopes for the future. He was well aware that it was dangerous in the Congo. He sent me a photo once in which he was in a very large cooking pot. He was smiling since the picture was a joke about being cooked and eaten by the natives. He had a girlfriend after he arrived in Stanleyville. One of the women missionaries took is eye. No doubt, he would have considered marrying her if he had lived long enough.”


When asked about the healing of her grief after losing Bill, Mrs. McChesney said, “I learned that when you grasp, you lose, but when you give to God, you gain. It took a while for me to give my son to God, but when I did, I gained so much.”


(To read the full interview, see: www.redgage.com/blogs/harcab/slain-missionary-s-mother-accepts-jesus-help.html)

2 comments:

  1. I am a minister and was invited to speak in Phoenix, Arizona at the church camp that he was a part of. A painting of him and the British missionary who perished with him hang in one of the buildings on campus. I was able to meet William's mother just before she passed. I spoke with her and prayed with her. What a privilege!

    James Plank

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wow! That must have been an amazing prayer with and for his mother. Blessings!

      Delete

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