Way Corp group(s) I was in
Second
Where I live
Columbus, Ohio
Married or Single
Married
About Me
I have been blessed to have enjoyed a rich and wonderfully diverse life with a variety of focal points, some of which start with the letter "P." I have been a PHARMACIST, POET, PROFESSOR, PASTOR, and PUBLISHER, among a number of other careers.
My Interests
My passion for the Word of God burns more intensely than ever. I continue to write and teach. I have traveled to Dakar, Senegal and Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, where I made some most satisfying connections with fellow believers.From September, 2007 to June, 2008 I served as Dean of Middle School at Sonshine Christian Academy in Columbus, Ohio, where I also taught 7th and 8th grade science and 6th and 8th grade language arts. Without a doubt it was the most challenging year of my more than 25 years in academe. Within a week at the end of the school year, I was on a two-week short term mission trip in Los Cabos, Mexico where I ministered at a bilingual Christian school. While there, the entire previous year made sense, as I recognized that all things work together for the good, to those who love God to those who are the called according to His purpose.
"Oh, taste and see that the Lord is good."
Employment or Career
During my stint as a draftee in the US Army in 1967, in the thick of the Viet Nam conflict, I was not only introduced to The Way International but I also experienced the joys of classroom teaching when I taught pharmacy technicians at the Medical Field Service School in San Antonio, TX. Nine years later as an adjunct instructor at The Way College of Emporia, I taught New Testament History among other courses which gave me a taste of teaching on the collegiate level, and after earning my doctorate in English, I have continued to teach on the university level for more than thirty years. Here is a link to an article published in the National Education Association Journal in which I discuss my journey into academe via a most intriguing route.
http://www.nea.org/assets/img/PubThoughtAndAction/TAA_03_06.pdf
Music I Like
I enjoy all kinds of music, from opera to jazz and blues, not to mention gospel and contemporary praise and worship. I even like Country Music, in small doses, however. I like it all. Indeed, as the Poet (C'est Moi) says:
"All music seems to mirror me,
Express all of my innermost hopes and joys.
My soulful melancholody
ennobled by the rich chords' counterpoise."
Books I Like
Aside from the Bible, which still brings me untold joy, particularly the Psalms, I enjoy reading, teaching, researching and writing in the area of African American literature. One of the most moving book I have ever read is a novel by Ernest J. Gaines, A LESSON BEFORE DYING. Another work which had a similar kind of profoud impact upon me was WILD AT HEART by John Eldredge whose non-fiction work had a similar theme as the novel by Gaines. Unfortunately I don't have as much opportunity to read for pleasure as I would like, but I still love to read.
Television I like
I seldom watch television.
Movies I like
Movies that I have particularly enjoyed were The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe" along with "Akeelah and the Bee", one of my all-time favorites. There was a HBO version of "A Lesson Before Dying" which was disappointing in light of how moving the novel was.
Sports Teams I like
I'm not into sports to that degree that I have favorite teams. I enjoy watching basketball and other team sports, especially OSU and some of the other Big Ten Schools.
My Email Address:
ljohns10@insight.rr.com
Comments
Here is a quick note to keep the flow going, now that we're getting back on track with our correspondence. So much has happened since we last corresponded prior to my trip to Mexico. Shortly before leaving, I my uncle passed away, and my sister flew in from Atlanta and we drove up to Fremont, OH where we ministered to a fragmented and potentially volatile situation with relatives and family friends, who neither of us really knew. I'm not sure if I told you that I had an amazing epiphany regarding my uncle when I was in Senegal five years ago. The experience so moved me that I wrote a poem as a tribute to my uncle, and I read it at his funeral along with a letter that I wrote to him when I sent him the poem. I'm not sure if I sent you a copy or not. Anyway, I am printing it off again for you to read. My experience on Goree Island off the coast of Senegal, eighteen miles from Dakar, not only helped me to understand my uncle, but I understood myself and my ancestors who could have very well come from that very place. I have no way of knowing but I feel certain that my ancestors were shipped from Goree through "The Door of No Return." Unquestionably that visit to West Africa was one of the highlights of my life which has been so full and rich in so many ways.
I will write tomorrow and share with you some of the highlights from the trip to Mexico. Our team has to make a presentation on Sunday, and I've been working on my remarks. I will probably send you the "unedited version" which has a lot more details. I had to cut out a couple of incidents because of time. Even so, "the half has not been told."
Be blessed, for you are a blessing to me, my brother.
Survivor
Ile de Goree
Dakar, Senegal
July 3, 2003
Prince Albert Crosby, my mother’s baby brother,
with his smoking-drinking-philosophizing-street-wise-goodhearted self,
should have been dead and long gone,
sole survivor of seven siblings,
survived the trauma of childbirth that left his mother dead;
djirim, survived to hear the plaintive cry of his first lullaby:
“Sometimes I feel like a motherless child”
Uncle Prince, survivor,
survived the lean and hungry years of childhood,
the taunts, bearing the brunt of cruel epithets
aimed at darkened skin and shortened height;
cruel jokes that never made him smile:
“Do you have Prince Albert in a can?”
Uncle Prince, survivor,
volunteered for the Navy and survived severe winters in Korea;
discharged and joined the Army; veteran, twice-over;
would have volunteered for Nam, but by then he was too old.
Uncle Prince, survivor,
dissolved his liver in liquor but kept on drinking and didn’t complain;
arm-wrestled “Old Man Crab” and chuckled, “Not right now”;
kept on smoking and outlived two wives:
Inez, her hefty frame ravaged and wasted by cancer,
but Uncle Prince was there to the end;
and Precious, like the Samaritan woman at the well,
with a string of last names;
Uncle Prince, the last of five husbands, survivor.
I saw a glimpse of Uncle Prince
in the face of Boubacar Joseph Ndiaye,
Principal Curator, Maison des Esclaves;
could have been his brother,
another long lost uncle discovered at a family reunion,
but he spoke in flawless, Francais de Moliere.
As I stood on Goree Island in the House of Slaves,
I stared through the Door of No Return
and gazed upon the soul of Uncle Prince, survivor.
Some things happen that take your breath away.
Some things happen that take your breath away.
You just hang your head and cry:
‘Lord, have mercy’ is all you can say.
‘Lord, have mercy’ is all you can say.
Lonnell E. Johnson
July 14, 2003
I once again looked at your last words "may you continue to be blessed in all your endevour" and although we say "god bless" a lot I thought how dynamic a teaching that would be - how a man can impart blessings on another - by recogizing goodness and asking God to release into manifestation his goodness and destiny and care on another - how Paul told his readers of his letter - God bless you with mercy and love and peace.
So a blessing must be returned by the one that is blessed by another.
I will close with a Persian blessing that I read and thought directly it was for you in return of your blessing on my life.
Time & clime, & wealth & health, & root & fruit, & state & fate
May you in your majesty, continue in year and name
Year joyous, clime pleasant, wealth plenty, and health whole
Root constant, fruit enduring, state splendid, and fate tame.
Matt
I have kept you in my thoughts and prayers.
What an eye opening trip you must have had and that part of Mexico is certainly beautiful - a whole teaching in Spanish? I do believe when you attempt to expand in their own language it can be impacting - for the effort catches their attention that you care and are putting yourself a little on the spot for them.
I have thoroughly enjoyed your teaching on visitation - the word just flows from you brother both in substance and in an experiential sense as well - my heart melted in your reading of your poetry -especially the recitation of The Calling on your tape.
I must confess it took me some time to find a cassette recorder to play your teaching. However a 1987 Lincoln Town Car that I just acquired had a JBL stereo with a cassette recorder!
Your theme on visitation was remarkable in timing as I spent that Saturday - the day after I listened to the tape visiting dear friends that I had not seen in thirty or more years - a high school reunion up in Minneapolis. As you might know I graduated from high school in India and these were sons and daughters of missionaries and we all went to boarding school together. A lovely lady invited me to her home - her name was Hope - and there were about 20 of us that got together. We had an Indian dinner and stayed up til about 4 AM visiting. Of note was a guest there - a young Indian PHD student at the University of Minnesota writing his thesis on Chemical Medicine. He told me an interesting story about he and other scientists had isolated in the lab a chemical compound recently that cured melanoma and that the compound came from Madya Pradesh in India from a specific plant that grew only there. He told me he is within weeks of identifying that exact compound. We became friends on this visit and will be getting together later this week.
It was such a complete visit - with so many elements - just as a delicious meal with all the flavors and aromas - a perfect gift from God to learn from an experience what you shared.
How I enjoyed your birthday poem. It is awesome to think of being what you are meant to be and to be where you are supposed to be at a given moment is it not?
The news of Sam being wounded hit me a little hard - even though I don't know him personally.
So in honor of his service in Afghanistan I will share with you about Poppy's. In Afghanistan the Poppy's are almost natural to the landscape and among Poppy's our Canadian and American soldiers fall.
Wild poppies flower when other plants in their direct neighborhood are dead. Their seeds can lie on the ground for years and years, but only when there are no more competing flowers or shrubs in the vicinity (for instance when someone firmly roots up the ground), these seeds will sprout. It is interesting to note this as spiritual analogy - God can show you and expand on this.
The poppy is known as a symbol of sleep. We get morphine from Poppy's and morphine is used to stop pain.
The spirit of sacrifice is symbolized by the burning torch.
So a young Canadian physician wrote this poem in World War 1.
In Flanders Fields
In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved, and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.
I particularly love the third part of the poem.
Our adversary must be dealt with - by taking up the quarrel with our foe! Do not break faith with those that sacrificed who went before us to give us our true heritage of liberty.
Matt Miller
I plan to write a little more tonight but could you pray for Sam Schoenheit - the son of the man that served in the Research Dept of the Way I heard indirectly through a source that he is in intensive care for taking a bullet in the head in Iraq - where he is serving. I believe he is still alive.
Love you bro,
Matt
I just got approved to be on this site yesterday and it's great. I had kind of lost hope of reconnecting with fellow corps so it is exciting. Let's stay in touch and if you ever get out to Arizona it would be great to hook up with you.
My best to Brenda and your family.---Regards--Phil Dean
peace & Love
Tim
A J is working on two booklets: "The Blessing of Wine" and "How We Got the Trinity." Tell us a little about your publishing enterprise! Wanna call us? 316-260-2244
I love you,
Glenda Sue
Just arrived here a few days ago. I saw your picture and just had to say hello. You always warmed my heart and still do. I remember how loving and kind you were to me.
Keeping you in my prayers.
Love Christine
Sorry I was so long getting back to you. Have been up to my goolies in work.
I would be delighted to hear from Michael. His work sounds very mathematical which scares me. Maths was not a strong subject of mine. In fact I may as well have been looking into a ditch as trying to figure out how algebra worked!
I would not say my book on The Nephilim is abstract at all. In fact there are a lot of scientific and, dare I say it, mathematicl facts in it. (Not to mention spiritual truths). But I will allow you decide that when you get around to reading it.
Delighted to hear of your daughter's achievment. The apple doesn't fall far from the tree, what? I have three beauties myself so I know how you feel.
So give Michael my details and we''ll hook uo.
God bless Brother,
Paddy
How wonderful to see your smiling face.
I'm off to bed, but wanted to say hi.
Fond memories of you and your mom.
Chris Newcomb