The Rest Of The Story

And the prayer of faith will save the sick, and the Lord will raise him up. And if he has committed sins, he will be forgiven. James 5:15

One of the broadcastings greatest contributors died last Saturday.

I remember getting lunch and eating it in the truck so I could listen to Paul Harvey.

He had a way of making news and events so very interesting.

On the way home I would listen to The Rest Of The Story and at one time I even made a sermon with the same title.

I’ve been able to find out a lot of biographical info on Mr. Harvey; how and where he got started in radio, where he met his beloved “Angel”, and how he died in the end.

What I have not seen in any source is any indication about his salvation, though I did see that he was baptized into the Seventh Day Adventist Church in 2000.

I did find out from a Worldnetdaily.com article that in 2001 he was voiceless for several months and credited God with healing him in order to broadcast an important message to Americans regarding the war on terror.

It seems during his malady, he was invited to speak at a Salvation Army event in Cincinnati, but sought to be excused due to his voice problem. The organization, though, had sold thousands of tickets, and asked him just to show up to the event without having to utter a word.

“I’ll never forget the delegation who met my plane,” said Harvey. “I was unable even to return their greeting.”

On the tarmac of the airport, Harvey recounted how Salvation Army Maj. Philip McMichael led a prayer with his colleagues for the speechless newsman. “Lord, we know something good will come from Mr. Harvey’s silence.”

“Well, by George, something good did,” Harvey continued. He says over the ensuing days, an epiphany taught him a new way to pray.

“You remember Jesus had prescribed for his disciples a perfect prayer, the essence of which is ‘Thy will be done.’ My prayers so often had been a shopping list of things I wanted to be done, and I began to pray for what He wanted.

“And doors began to open. I was led to a voice specialist. An outpatient procedure reinforced a weakened muscle alongside a vocal cord and within minutes, the voice which had been mostly mute for weeks came back to life.”

The experience made Harvey appreciate his daily visits with listeners much more, and he thanked his longtime sponsors who did not abandon the program during his hiatus.

But the miraculous cure is hardly the end of Harvey’s tale. And now, as the plainspoken Midwesterner would say – the rest of the story.

“Sentenced to silence, I had to confront the possibility that I would not be back on the air ever, and I was not ready for that,” Harvey said. “There were a few more footprints that I had hoped to leave behind for my [journalism] colleagues, especially the very young ones.”

Having returned to the microphone in late August, he calls it fortuitous that his rusty pipes were renewed in time to help put Sept. 11 in perspective.

“We remember the Crash of ’29, and the Dustbowl of the ’30s and Hitler’s Holocaust and Dien Bien Phu and Saddam Hussein,” Harvey began his analysis, referring to himself as a professional observer for several lifetimes.

“During each test, some Americans feared that our country was going to hell. Well, it did not. It went through a little hell, but it came out of the crucible a little heat-tempered and stronger than before.”

Harvey then set his sights on the Taliban. “Osama bin Laden epitomizes for this generation what we called hippies or flower children in the last generation. These anti-establishment unwashed counterculture rich kids have hijacked Islam for their personal aggrandizement.”

He explained how mature, experienced Americans have already been there and done that, and that crisis handling was nothing new. “Since 9-11 of this year, Osama bin Laden has been utterly confounded. The victims have displaced the victimizers.”

Harvey says the suicidal hijackings have aroused a patriotic and humanitarian spirit that was not obvious in recent years. “New Yorkers of all people are smiling at strangers, and honking their horns less, and giving people more of themselves and their resources. …

“Americans are pledging allegiance again, soldiers are saluting again, college-agers are taking baths again, and the kids are coming home.”

Harvey concluded by focusing on the brighter side of events, stressing that storms are part of life’s normal climate, and that Americans need to learn to ride them.

“Don’t let noisy news distress you, don’t let the headline writers rain on your parade,” he said. “My goodness, there’s resiliency in this country we’ve not yet begun to use.”

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