A Jon Post
Jonathan was an incredible man. I met him in September last year when he arrived in the Oncology department at the hospital. He had left his home in Manica, Mozambique, a small town on the border of Mozambique and Zimbabwe 4 months earlier, with a small tumor over his right shoulder. He first went to a hospital nearer to his home thinking he would be there for the weekend and would return home soon. They kept him there for four months analyzing and waiting for test results for his tumor. By the time he arrived in Maputo, the tumor was the size of a grapefruit and growing. In the hospital here he waited 3 months for decisions from doctors and for them to make the time to biopsy his tumor. By December of last year he had received no treatment for his cancer and his tumor was nearly the size of a bowling ball. When he finally started receiving chemotherapy in early January he had 6 other tumors protruding from his arms, legs and one on his forehead. Despite the odds, his body responded remarkably well to his chemo. His tumors receded, and, after three months of treatment, his shoulder almost looked normal again.
Before he got sick he lived most of his life in Zimbabwe and was raising two young boys to be fine men. His wife loved him and counted herself lucky to be married to a man so committed to his family. He went to a technical school after finishing high school and learned to design and build houses. He traveled through much of northern Mozambique building houses for those who had none.
Later he pursued his education even further and became a professional certified dog security trainer. When I told him of my dog Gasher he asked me to bring him to the hospital, and offered endless free advice on how to teach him to be a good guard dog for my home and family.
His smile was infectious.
He loved my daughter deeply and was eager to have a picture taken with her in his arms. He wanted to take that picture home with him so he could remember his little niece and see her every day.
He deeply desired to know God more and would press me to bring my Bible and read it to him so he could hear the Word of God. I had many Portuguese Bibles but because he spent most of his life in Zimbabwe where English is spoken he could not read Portuguese. I rooted through my old books and found a Bible I had received many years ago and had inscribed my name in when I was only 13; Jonathan. He held that Bible in his hands like it was worth more than the treatment that seemed to be saving his life.
We read together often and prayed passionate prayers to our God together, beseeching Him for mercy, His hand in our lives and in the lives of our wives and our children.
Last Tuesday night he got sick.
It may have been Malaria, or a simple flu infection.
His body, wracked by multiple chemo treatments and many tumors, could not fight for long.
Thursday night he died.
I still cry as I think and write that.
He never did get to take that picture with Anaya.
In the tears that Layne and I have shed so freely over the past few days as we remember our dear friend we have been echoing a refrain from John 6:68. “Lord, to whom shall we go? You alone have the words of eternal life.” Even in the face of death and pain and suffering,… ”Lord, to whom shall we go?” In our tears, in our breathless prayers, in our memories… “Lord, to whom shall we go? You alone… You alone… You alone have the words of eternal life.”
This is not our home. Jonathan is there waiting for us with his smile.
Oh Jon – death is so much a part of life – Tatu and I grieve with you knowing that joy does come in the morning with the rising of the Son of God. We will also join you in prayer for Jonathan’s family. Thank you for being there.
Hey bro,
I’m so sorry to hear about your friend. I wish I could understand what it’s like for you and Layne, but I’m so near-sighted with my current American life. I’m just left to pray and ask that he give us his heart for his people, despite how much it hurts. I love you bro. Please don’t stop loving.
Paul Heller
wow. how beautiful to have been able to be the shining glory toward and w this guy in the last days! so glad yall got that fellowship, and those happy feelings are sitting amidst the confusion about why certain awesome people have to go through these things , and leave their kids.
Jon & Layne, your lives have been touched by some incredible people. May the Lord continue to hold you close and give you comfort in your grieving.
Jon, I’m so glad you got to love Jonathon even if only for a short time. I can’t imagine how much sadder his time in the hospital would have been without your friendship! You brought joy to some of his darkest and probably lonely days. He will get to hold Anaya, his niece, one day..
Jon, I will treasure forever that I got to meet and pray with him during my time there, if only briefly. Where his family was so far from him and not there to be with him in his pain, I got to watch you be his family. Now he has an even better caretaker in the arms of his Heavenly Father. And in the midst of our mourning, we can be grateful knowing that he is now free from all pain…
Reading over this blog again, I weep afresh. I miss Jonathan. I never met him personally, but somehow I feel like I did. What a gift he was :-) The gift of a friend who desperately wanted to know God more and more. A friend who treasured a Bible that was inscribed with his own name — knowing that it had been brought to him specially from the God who loves him.
I miss Jonathan. Someday I will meet him face-to-face and tell him that I loved him for a little while … in the shadowlands :-) But then maybe in that day we won’t even be thinking of this old “life”.
I’m so happy for Jonathan now that he is free of pain, and truly alive. But I still miss him.