I just returned home from a funeral.
I have become a sur-realist (as I unwind the knot from my necktie and concurrently attempt to untangle the corkscrew of my thoughts).
Often, there are those surreal moments of epiphany experienced at funerals—as you remember the deceased. But today I am a witness to the living.
Most of us only get to meet people that have died once. And we meet them before they die…
I met a man today that has died twice, and we both stood there living (and breathing) at the graveside of my great aunt, Edna.
It was shared at the funeral that both of my elderly great aunts, Edna & Emma, had loved on this young man named Johnny that began attending the country church there—the Church of God of Prophecy—just off Brushgrove Road, near Willisburg KY.
There was nothing quite like receiving a hug from Aunt Edna (She had arms that did not know their own strength and you could feel the warmth of Spirit). This was a truth that helped change Jonny’s life.
Johnny Hackworth was a coal miner, from Eastern KY, that had also spent some time driving a truck, and had developed some back problems. On the drive over to the cemetery he shared that he had died three weeks ago, during a back surgery that turned south—the second time he had died he lamented (the first time was due to a drug overdose nine years before).
One unraveling thought: what might God have in store for this year-10? Why is Johnny still here?
The medical team lost “J. Hackworth” for 15 minutes…had done everything they could, and the doctors were about to hit his chest with the paddles a second time (just for good measure) so that when they were to tell the family that they did everything they could it would have been the truth—and just before then is when his lungs spontaneously sprang back to life, and fully inflated with air. His heart began to beat, again.
The doctors had never seen the likes of this before. This sudden revival, without a second “jolt”. And the callus, labor-weary nurses that were usually numb to such occurrences had tears welling in their eyes when J. Hackworth opened his eyes and obliviously asked, “Is everything going alright?”
I had a question for Johnny, as we approached Edna’s, graveside on that brisk November day, in 2023. I asked whether he had anything “Prophetic” to report following his journey back from “the other side”.
“All I can tell you,” he said frankly, “is that the first time I felt a cold, dark…and pain, and the second time I died there was only calmness and peace.”
What happened in between, was Edna, and Emma, and a dude that Hackworth used to mine coal with, standing serendipitously in the pulpit…Brother Creech…talking about forgiveness and a guy named Jesus.