Irene Navis ate several meals from a different table this summer. A giant map of 1967 Vietnam spread across her dining room table didnāt 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 Johnās letters, pictures, and postcards, she carefully pinpointed locations on her map and recorded a detailed timeline. She has also been typing each of Johnās 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 Godās faithfulnessāone in which Back to God Ministries International played a part.
āI began seeing these letters as a manās faith walkāa faith under fire,ā Navis said. āHe 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.
āI donāt care anymore what happens,ā John wrote. āI canāt 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 āshalomā and āreawaken,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.
āGod was talking to me personally (through the sermon),ā John wrote in a letter to his wife. āNow Iām mentally singing, āIāve wandered far away from God, now Iām coming home.āā
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. Johnās next letter again illustrated his renewed strength.
āBecause I read that sermon, because I am (Godās), I grieve at the manās death, but Iām 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 āso 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 Johnāsāstories of Godās workādon'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 Veteranās Day and Remembrance Day this November, may this story remind us of Godās faithfulness despite the trauma of war, just as John experienced.
āAfter John returned from Vietnam, he rarely talked about his time there,ā Navis said. āI hesitated to share this story of God intervening at exactly the right time and the Holy Spiritās movement throughout the church.ā
About the Author
Brian Clark, ReFrame Ministries