I was watching a car show the other night. These shows do what I would love to do, rebuilding old jalopies. My love for building cars started when I was in the fifth grade. I got a model car kit from a classmate for Christmas. Over the years, I had a pretty good collection that I lost when our home burned. In that collection I had a ’55 Chevy Nomad, a ’50 Ford, a ’57 Chevy, a ’40 Willis, two ’32 Fords, the Batmobile, ’53 Ford pickup, and a few others. Some of these date back to my teens. I built them until the government regulations forced glue makes to change the formula and ruining its sticking power.
My dream car is a ’32 Ford Vicky, yellow convertible or five-window, 350 Chevy engine, saddle colored leather interior, and Crager junkyard mag wheels. Trouble is, they are out there, but beyond a retired Director of Missions means.
These car-rebuilding programs have the mission of saving old cars one at a time. The closest I have come to rebuilding an old vehicle is when my youngest son Aaron and I rebuilt my ’77 GMC pickup, and I understood the statement, “They don’t build them like that any more” a little better. It is an era of American history that is fleeting away. A friend of mine said that it makes him sick to watch classic cars headed to the scrap metal place.
My ’77 GMC is actually a 2009-13 pickup. It looks old, but it has experienced a transformation. No, it is not a Johnny Cash Cadillac. It is a completely restored truck. It is a work of love and labor. I will always cherish the time that Aaron and I, father and son, spend together transforming a ragged, rusty, multicolored hunk of junk into what most call a “sweet ride” or a “clean” classic.
Transformed classics make up the body of the church. Men, women, boys, and girls that experience the transforming power of God are new creations. The power that raised Jesus from the dead is the power that transforms all those who trust Jesus as Lord and Savior. It is the same power that carries believers to virus pandemics.
As I thought about restored vehicles and changed lives, I cannot help but to think about Brother Arch Crumpton. He was a classic when speaking of a man of God. He was an old classic that you don’t see anymore, a one of a kind. Brother Arch was a giant pillar in my home church. Brother Arch, two other deacons, and the pastor were the only men in my home church when I was boy.
I heard stories how Brother Arch would walk four miles to church on Sunday morning to start a fire in the old pot-bellied stove, then walk back home, hitch the mule team to the wagon, and then bring the family to church. It makes those coveting toilet paper during corona virus panic a little silly. We have grown too soft in our living.
Brother Arch always sat on the second pew on the preachers left. He wore a dark blue suit, white shirt, a tie, and a fedora every Sunday. He could pray some of the sweetest prayers. I never heard anyone say a bad word about Brother Arch.
One of the most interesting stores about him was when he was a young man in his twenties. I remember as a kid thinking that Brother Arch was ancient, being well into his seventies when I was a teenager. He was tall and frail, but always sported a smile. In his twenties, which would have been in the 1920’s, he had an appendix attack. By the time the doctor arrived, he had gangrene and the doctor said there was little or no hope.
The doctor did something that most would think repulsive. He opened Brother Arch, took out his intestines, and washed them in warm soapy water. Once they were clean, the doctor repacked them. I remember that Brother Arch always had a flat stomach.
Somewhere along that time, Brother Arch accepted the Lord as his Savior and the Lord removed the gangrene of sin from Brother Arch. He was transformed and became a model for the men in our church and our community.
One of my fondest memories of Brother Arch happened one Sunday afternoon at my Aunt Edna’s. My cousins and I were playing football in the front yard. Brother Arch and his wife, Mrs. Blonnie, shuffled their way toward the house. They walked along our goal line, which was the sidewalk to the house halting the game for a few moments. Suddenly, Brother Arch called for the football. One of my cousins tossed it to him and Brother Arch kicked the football. He laughed and told us to have fun. We all had a little more respect for him seeing that old man could kick a football. Brother Arch will never know how much of an impact he had on my early Christian walk. He was an inspiration and an example of what a Christian should be. He was a Christian Classic. He has always been a man of hope. Our churches would much better with more men and women like Brother Arch.
And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord's glory, are being transformed into His likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit (Second Corinthians 3:18 NIV).
Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new (Second Corinthians
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