My grandfather went to his heavenly home at the age of 89. I'm honored to have been his granddaughter. He was a man of God, a leader, a fighter, our Daddy Vell. I 'm thankful that my boys got to know their great-grandfather. Below are some of my favorite pictures. Beneath the pictures is a blog post that our dear friend, and preacher, Danny Dodd wrote about my grandfather. I cherish these words. Daddy Vell and Danny were the dearest of friends even though their friendship had only been for the past 4 1/2 years.
The Power of an Ordinary Story
Ordinary is an interesting word. It was a word once used
for some of Christ’s disciples (see Acts 4:13). It usually denotes “nothing
special,” “average,” “normal.” Nothing to see here, so just keep moving on.
An ordinary story? I’ll pass. Give me the
extra-ordinary; the dramatic; the one filled with exciting special affects; the
tearjerkers. Those move the needle. Those create blockbusters and best sellers.
Ordinary is just not interesting.
Until it is.
Until ordinary reveals something else.
Those Jesus followers in Acts 4 certainly were
ordinary guys without any special pedigree, but yet there was something quite
different about them.
What was it?
It was noted that they “had been with Jesus.” Jesus
has a way of making ordinary interesting.
I am not sure that LaVelle Travis (L.T.) Blevins would
ever be considered just ordinary, but his story has ordinary beginnings. Born
during the Great Depression in the small backwater Arkansas delta community of
Gordneck, L.T. grew up like so many others of his era—poor but happily
surrounded by a loving family.
Again like thousands of his contemporaries, L.T.
answered his nation’s call and served in the U.S. Navy during both WWII and the
Korean conflict. He married his sweetheart, began a family, started a
successful small business and worked diligently to provide and care for
them.
On the surface—this describes an ordinary life. It was
the kind lived all across America. Yes, he lost his first wife too soon. He
retired early to care for her. Later he had serious health concerns of his own
from which he was not expected to survive. But really that is all fairly common.
It is normal. L.T. Blevins? Not much interesting to see here, so let’s just
keep moving on.
But before you do, I ask you to look a little closer.
There is more to this ordinary story. Remember how I stated that Jesus has a
way of making the ordinary interesting? If you spend any time around L.T.
Blevins it becomes obvious. He has “been with Jesus.”
He just turned eighty-eight years old. The
ever-present twinkle in his eye reveals a joyful soul shaped through the years
by his relationship with Christ. He has this wonderful adventurous side that once
led him to wrangle horses on the back lots of Hollywood movie westerns after
WWII; ride across the country on a Harley knucklehead motorcycle; fly (and
crash) without lessons or licenses in small planes; and physically build a lake
house with his second wife, Kathleen, while in his seventies. He has all kinds of extraordinary stories to
share.
But his most extraordinary stories are about being
with Jesus. They are about his beloved Levy Church of Christ in North Little
Rock, Arkansas; it’s beginnings; it’s growth; it’s ministry. He has been here
through it all—serving as teacher, shepherd, cook, missionary, and everything
in between.
Always here. Always faithful.
He reared his family here—now into their fourth
generation. He carried the burden of leadership. He made personal and financial
sacrifices for the Levy family. He mentored the current generation of leaders.
He did not waver. He never created any drama. He is a peacemaker, a visionary
and a great friend to preachers.
He has been with Jesus. Just an ordinary man in some
ways, made extraordinary through faith in the Christ; just another boy from the
Arkansas countryside, but one whose legacy of quiet dedication to God, family
and church continues to shape and influence them.
He is a part of what has been tagged “the greatest
generation.” Great—because of sacrifice, hard work and personal integrity. Once
this was just considered ordinary and normal. It was simply how you were
supposed to be.
It certainly does describe L.T. But that is not why
this “ordinary” man is great. Rather:
The greatest among
you will be your servant. For whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and
whoever humbles himself will be exalted. – Matthew 23:11-12
The power in this story really is found in the Christ
and in the good, humble man who allowed Jesus to do the extraordinary within
him.
L.T. inspires me. Throughout his life he just
consistently did the right thing without any big fuss. It is an ordinary story,
but it is not. It is a story of quiet and consistent faith lived out through
the normal variations of life, but never wavering.
I remember one summer camp session where several
people shared their faith stories with the campers. All were dramatic and
meaningful. One brother showed the needle marks on his arm and gave God the
glory for empowering him to overcome his addiction. It certainly was a powerful story.
But there is also the need to share the power in stories
absent of all of this—a story of faith that never ventured away. That is the
power I see in L.T. Blevin’s story and in his person, which is why it is so
meaningful to me.
It is the kind of life I wish to live and for my
children—just consistently being with Jesus everyday in a normal, ordinary,
drama-free, yet incredible kind of way.