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Memorial Service
Celebrating
the Life of Dr. Foy Dan Valentine
Park Cities Baptist Church, Dallas Texas
January 11, 2006
Remembrances
of a Friend
By David Sapp
I happen to like classical
music, and one of my favorite classical musicians is a singer named George
Jones. When Jimmy Allen called me last Saturday morning with the news of Foy
Valentine’s death, I couldn’t help thinking of one of my favorite George Jones
pieces, a number entitled “Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes?” The lyrics pose just
the question we all have when we face the loss of the likes of Foy: “Who’s
gonna fill their shoes? Who’s gonna stand that tall? Who’s gonna play the Opry
or the Wabash Cannon Ball?” Indeed, we are gathered here in such awesome
numbers because we know in our bones that a giant has fallen.
The first time I ever heard of Foy Valentine, I was a college student. He
came to the campus of Mercer University to speak, and it was obvious before he
arrived that he was a giant. The faculty heralded his arrival with perceptible
excitement. Among the Baptist leaders they had known, this one above all had
taken a stand for racial justice and equality. They were excited about his
coming, and their excitement caused me to pay attention.
Foy Valentine walked onto center stage in those years and gave young people
like me a reason to be Baptist. He provided a model of courage, a force for
constructive change, a vision for a moral righteousness, and even a glimpse of
the Kingdom of God.
I had little idea back then how much influence Foy Valentine would have on
my life. In the ensuing years he was to become, as I have often said, both my
mentor and my tormentor, as well as my teacher, my model, my boss, my friend,
and finally a powerful father-figure.
Thirty years ago this month, Foy called to ask if I might be interested in a
job on the staff of the Southern Baptist Christian Life Commission. I could not
imagine a more significant opportunity to serve the Kingdom. He asked one
question on the phone that I have not forgotten: “Are you a workaholic?” Well,
I wanted the job, so I answered quickly: “Do you want me to be? I’ll be
whatever you want.”
During the next five years I discovered that was exactly what he wanted.
Some of you think Foy Valentine had a strong work ethic. In reality, he did not
have a work ethic at all. What he had was more like a work virus. He was a
tough and demanding taskmaster, the toughest I have ever known.
Some special words come to mind when I think of Foy. One of them is color.
He was a colorful character. The color, of course, was turquoise. Some of you
know that he always wrote with turquoise ink. What you may not know that those
of us who worked for him worked in turquoise offices, complete with turquoise
telephones, turquoise walls, turquoise carpet, and turquoise mastheads on our
letterhead.
He was a colorful character in other ways, as well. Take speech, for
instance. Foy expressed himself with so much color that every administrative
assistant I have ever had has thoroughly enjoyed answering the phone when he
would call and ask for “his Sappship.” As a matter of fact, his colorful
expressions “pleasured me a great deal,” and I am sure that in the days ahead I
am going to “crave” to hear them again.
The word character comes to mind, as well. Of course, we know
that Foy had character; what I am speaking of here is that he was a
character.
Just after I went to work for him at the CLC, we went to lunch together one
day. Walking back to the office, Foy asked if I minded stopping at the bank, I
believe to renew a note. The lady who waited on him said, “Of course, you will
need to pay the interest that is due.”
Foy replied, “I know. I have calculated it, and I owe you $6.38.”
The lady at the bank said, “Yes sir, but it is our policy not to charge less
that $10.00.”
“It is my policy,” Foy said, “not to pay more than I owe. I will give
you six dollars and thirty-eight cents.” He won.
Or, again, just three years ago, Linda and I came to visit Foy and Mary
Louise here in Dallas, and Foy took me with him to get some barbeque to bring
home for lunch. We arrived at the restaurant before the lunch crowd. Foy walked
up to the counter and said to the man, “I’d like a pound of chopped barbeque.”
The man behind the counter said, “Yes, sir. May I have your name please?”
“There is no one else here,” Foy said, “you do not need my name.”
I remember as well those summer visits he made to his cabin at Red River. All of us on the Commission staff became well acquainted with the routine. He
would return at the end of an extended stay, and brag about all the fish he had
caught. Then he would hold out his hand, and ask you to feel the calluses on
his finger which had formed from endless fish-cleaning. After a couple of
years, we began to anticipate this annual ritual. “Just three more days,” we
would say to each other, “ and we’ll have to feel his finger.” Maybe just now,
on the other side of Jordan, he is building up calluses again. Foy Valentine
was a character.
Another word that comes to mind is judgment. Judgment is a
rare and valued quality, the ability to take the measure of the person before
you, to take the measure of the situation around you, and then to take the
measure of your own reactions. Foy once told me to take stock of a people’s
judgment when hiring them. “However much judgment they have the day you hire
them is the same amount they will have the day they quit,” he said. “You can’t
teach it.” And over the years, experience has convinced me that he was right.
Foy himself possessed judgment in extraordinary measure. His judgments were
quick, not slow, and they were generally unerring. On the rare occasions when
his judgment was not unerring, it was never uncertain. For thirty years now, I
have asked his judgment on nearly every critical situation I have faced. I hope
I have learned enough to make it without him.
Or, try another word: courage. You cannot talk about Foy
Valentine without the word courage. What he did on the race issue in the face
of withering opposition was astounding. Some chose to stand in the schoolhouse
door and shout, “Closed.” Foy stood in the church door and shouted, “Open.”
Some stood in fear and shouted hatred. Foy stood in courage and shouted love.
The secret of his courage, I believe, is that Foy fought for more than
institutions and traditions, for more than prejudice and partisanship. He
fought for justice. He fought for righteousness. He fought for God. And if at
times he could rap your knuckles so hard you could feel it in your toes, it was
that same aggressive abandon that enabled him to stand firm in the face of
Satan’s hosts.
Another word that fits him is the word intelligence. Several
years ago Foy came and taught the book of James at Second-Ponce de Leon. Our
twin sons, of course, have known him all of their lives; but having heard him
teach for the first time in his own adulthood, one of our sons informed me,
“Dad, Dr. Valentine is brilliant!” He told me as if I had never realized it for
myself. Few minds could stand on level ground with Foy Valentine.
Or try the word love. Now, Foy was not your basic
sentimentalist. In the years of my relationship with him, I never heard him
throw the word love around flippantly. He was never one to stand on a platform
and say in phony tones, “I love you, brother.” But he was one who did the deeds
of love. During the greatest crisis of my life, Foy called—sometimes every
day—to say, “How are you? Keep the faith. Never give up. Hold the fort.”
There was an interesting change in Foy over the years. In the beginning, our
telephone conversations would be all business. Then the business became a way
of legitimizing a personal visit we would have at the end of the conversation.
In the last few years, the business nearly disappeared. He would call and say, “I
don’t have anything to talk about. I just craved a visit.”
Before my congregation in Atlanta, he once called me “a friend that sticketh
closer than a brother.” I will cherish those words until I breathe my last.
Foy loved Mary Louise, his wife. He loved Jean and Carol and Susan, his
daughters. He loved his in-laws, and oh, he loved his grandchildren. And he
loved our Lord Jesus Christ. He loved Him with all his heart (which was big),
all his soul (which was deep), and all his mind (which was keen), and all his
strength (which was prodigious).
But most of all, God loved Foy Valentine. He loved him enough to give him to
us; and He loves him enough that he holds Foy even now close to His heart.
Which brings me to the final word I associate with Foy. It is the word faith.
Many times I heard him say that he would like for his epitaph to be, “He
stumbled toward righteousness.” Like all of us, Foy may have stumbled, but
through his faith he always stumbled in the right direction, toward
righteousness, toward justice, toward peace, toward love, toward God, and
toward that final blessed hope that we have been given.
Just about a year ago, in December of 2004, Foy wrote a column in Christian
Ethics Today that expressed his faith better than I could express it for
him. The column was entitled, “The Last Rose of Summer,” and in it he reflected
on the last rose of the season, clinging to the stem of a rose bush just
outside his study window. After reflecting for a few paragraphs on that rose,
this is what he said:
“But now let’s face it. I am 81. Going on 82. Morbidness is not my stock-in
trade. I am not dwelling on my own imminent demise. I am basically prepared to
meet God. Not quite ready for the face-to-face encounter, you understand, but
not facing the experience with grave misgivings, either. Like this rose on
which I am presently focused, whose petals will soon shatter, my days are also
numbered. Come to think of it, they always have been. That sooner or later I
too shall be the last rose of summer is a sobering reminder that I do not have
the leisure of eternity to get done the things I need to do. Time has been
God’s gift to me, as has been life itself. So, I am constrained to make the
most of it, make things right wherever I can, get my house in order, burnish my
relationships with God and others, fresh every morning—and smell the roses.
“And this last rose of summer calls to mind the prospects and hopes that
attend nature’s cycles ordained by God, ordered by the Almighty in his grand
scheme of things. This rose will shatter in a week or so, the first killing
frost will nip the tender stem, and the leaves will yellow and fall. The sturdy
rose bush itself will stand, however, and the elaborate root system will stay
firmly in the ground, alive and well under whatever ice and snow may come. Then
on February 14 next year I will prune the bush rather severely.
“A couple of weeks later new buds will swell, new growth will emerge, a
tender stem will start pushing upward, then a tiny rose bud will develop at the
end of the stem, in a few more days the bud will grow enough for the red color
to be seen about to break through, and then one bright, sunny spring morning I
will once again look out this window to see the first rose of a new season.
Bright red, exquisitely formed, inordinately fragrant, proudly alone in my
small rose garden, and a little bigger than I might reasonably be expected to
be, as if to demonstrate to the world that, after all, as Robert Browning put
it, ‘God’s in his heaven, all’s right with the world.’”
And so it is by that faith that we come here today. We have lost a friend, a
husband, a father, a grandfather, a Christian leader, a champion, a giant. But
as hard as it is to give him up, we give him into the hands of the Father who
made him, and in the matchless grace of that God, all is right. All is
right.
Dr. David Sapp is pastor of the Second-Ponce de Leon Baptist Church,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Updated
Thursday, March 16, 2006
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