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Irene Navis ate several meals from a different table this summer. A giant map of 1967 Vietnam spread across her dining room table didnā€™t leave much room for food.

Navis has been spending countless hours retracing the year that her husband, John, who died in September 2018, spent in the Vietnam War. Using Johnā€™s letters, pictures, and postcards, she carefully pinpointed locations on her map and recorded a detailed timeline. She has also been typing each of Johnā€™s 100-plus letters to preserve them for her children.

As Navis re-read each letter, some on scraps of paper and others 20 full pages, she uncovered a story of Godā€™s faithfulnessā€”one in which Back to God Ministries International played a part.

ā€œI began seeing these letters as a manā€™s faith walkā€”a faith under fire,ā€ Navis said. ā€œHe was tested severely in Vietnam, but he stayed faithful to God during that time.ā€

Three Letters

Three letters in particular marked a turning point for John. First, John sent a letter filled with discouragement and despair. 

ā€œI donā€™t care anymore what happens,ā€ John wrote. ā€œI canā€™t see wasting my time, effort, or energy on something that destroys my joys, hopes, honesty, and beliefs.ā€

But John wrote a second letter later that day. Filled with words like ā€œshalomā€ and ā€œreawaken,ā€ John clearly had experienced a transformation. In the letter, John attributes this change of heart to a transcribed sermon from Joel Nederhood recorded for The Back to God Hour radio program. The sermon, sent in a monthly devotional pamphlet, reflected on Lamentations 3.

ā€œGod was talking to me personally (through the sermon),ā€ John wrote in a letter to his wife. ā€œNow Iā€™m mentally singing, ā€˜Iā€™ve wandered far away from God, now Iā€™m coming home.ā€™ā€

Little did John know the sermon had prepared him for another challenge. Just two days later, John and his company were ambushed by snipers, who ultimately killed a soldier John knew well. Johnā€™s next letter again illustrated his renewed strength.

ā€œBecause I read that sermon, because I am (Godā€™s), I grieve at the manā€™s death, but Iā€™m not downcast. I can and do go on,ā€ John wrote. He added that he was praying for the courage to share the message with fellow soldiers ā€œso that they too may feel the joy and peace I feel in spite of the attacks of mortars and snipers.ā€

Untold Stories

Sometimes stories like Johnā€™sā€”stories of Godā€™s workā€”don't reveal themselves until decades later. Yet we know God is at work around the world through the ministries of the Christian Reformed Church. As we commemorate Veteranā€™s Day and Remembrance Day this November, may this story remind us of Godā€™s faithfulness despite the trauma of war, just as John experienced.

ā€œAfter John returned from Vietnam, he rarely talked about his time there,ā€ Navis said. ā€œI hesitated to share this story of God intervening at exactly the right time and the Holy Spiritā€™s movement throughout the church.ā€

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