If you had met Ronnie...
Illustration
If you had met Ronnie on the street, your first impression would have been that you needed to protect yourself from danger because you were talking to someone who was very rough and very tough. Your first impression would have been wrong. Although Ronnie looked and dressed like someone who was very rough, he was, in fact, just the opposite. Ronnie was one of those people who literally would have given you the shirt off his back, if he thought it would help. Ronnie left high school at the age of sixteen. Organized education was not for him. Ronnie read history and studied Christianity. He knew more of the Bible by memory than anyone else I had met. Ronnie worked in a meat packing plant. He took great pride in his work. In 25 years he never missed one day of work. Some years he even worked through his holidays because the company needed him. Ronnie's leg was injured at work. When his leg was x-rayed, bone cancer was discovered. It had already spread. Ronnie was given two to three weeks to live. Ronnie was upset about dying, but not for himself. One of Ronnie's favorite Bible verses was Philippians 1:21: "For to me, living is Christ and dying is gain." Ronnie wasn't afraid of dying for himself. It was his friends he worried about. Ronnie coached a floor hockey team and they had just won a gold medal at the Special Olympics. His mentally-challenged friends were Ronnie's family. He wanted to know that they would be taken care of. He wanted to know that we would explain death to them. He needed to know that they would hear the Good News of the Gospel. Once we had promised Ronnie that we would proclaim the Good News of Jesus Christ in a way that they could understand, he was able to relax. Ronnie died, knowing that he was losing his earthly life, but gaining eternal life.
-- Conroy
-- Conroy
