Life....

ilikembig

Senior Member
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (BP)--The impact of 2-year-old Bronner Burgess' death
is already being felt throughout the nation as his family and friends
use the opportunity to tell others about the uncertainty of life and the
assurance of salvation in Jesus Christ, his father, Rick Burgess, said
at a memorial service Jan. 22.

"If you sit here today, the biggest injustice you can do our family, the
biggest injustice you can do our Savior, the biggest injustice you can
do for our baby, is to leave here unchanged, to continue to be
apathetic, weak, ineffective believers of Christ," Burgess, of the talk
radio duo "Rick and Bubba," said at Shades Mountain Baptist Church in
Birmingham, Ala.

Bronner died Jan. 19 when he fell into a swimming pool at his family's
home. Burgess was speaking at a Christian conference in Tennessee when
he got "the most horrible news a father could ever receive."

"The minute this happened, I knew what God wanted me to do," Burgess
recounted to about 4,000 people at the service. "I don't say that
because of any pride in my flesh. I'm saying that because I walk with
Him, I pray with Him, I talk to Him, and when I tell Him I would be
ready and then He says, 'Are you ready?' I didn't want to say, 'Well,
no. I'm caught off guard by this.' He wasn't wringing His hands about
it, and I wasn't either."

Burgess is a member of Shades Mountain Baptist Church and his co-host,
Bill Bussey, is a member of The Church at Brook Hills, both Southern
Baptist congregations in Birmingham, where the "Rick and Bubba Show" is
based at WZZK. Some of Burgess' remarks at the memorial service were
broadcast Jan. 23 on the "Rick & Bubba" show, which airs on more than 40
syndicated radio stations, mostly in the South.

The conference organizers in Tennessee debated canceling the remainder
of the schedule in light of Bronner's death, but Burgess refused.

"My son's eternity is not in question, but 7,200 other people who are
here at this conference -- there are hundreds and thousands of them and
their eternity hangs in the balance," Burgess said he told the
organizers. "So suck it up, get out there and finish the fight because
if we shut this conference down, Satan wins this situation, not Christ."

Burgess said he doesn't believe God took his son but allowed him to be
taken for a greater purpose.

"The Bible says all of our days are numbered, every one of us," he said.
"But He allowed him to be taken so that He could be glorified -- and no
other reason, not to punish us, not to bring us heartache and pain. He
did it so that the Kingdom would be glorified."

Burgess said Satan miscalculated and made a mistake in attacking his
family through Bronner's death.

"He should have never come after us," Burgess said. "And when I say
family, I speak about this family but I speak about my family of
believers because all of you have gone into action in a way that is
making our Savior smile. If God asked me to give up a son so that some
of you will live in eternity, it is well."

The attraction of heaven is especially strong in these days, Burgess
told the crowd, because he longs to escape a fallen world and find
comfort with Jesus and with Bronner. But believers don't decide when
they go to heaven, he said. Jesus does, and Jesus told His disciples
that while He went to prepare a place for them, He needed them to be
about His business, Burgess said.

Burgess didn't hesitate to explain the Gospel message multiple times
during the memorial service, including answering questions people have
posed such as, "Why would this happen?" and "I thought God loved us."

"Well, let me clear that up real quick for all of you," Burgess said
before telling how he was a sinner "bound for the lake of fire" just
like everyone else.

"And God looked at us -- and we have the gulf of sin between us -- and
He said, 'They can't come to Me. I've got to go to them,'" he said,
adding that Jesus took on human flesh and felt a range of emotions as He
walked the earth.

"The reason why I've already had a time of weeping and there's more to
come is because the human side of Him also wept when loved ones died,"
Burgess said. "He also wept when He saw people He loved choosing Satan
over Him. And He took on that flesh and He suffered for you and He
suffered for me. He suffered a gruesome, humiliating death because our
sin is so nasty. And He died on that cross for you and me -- and this is
the part some of you need to get -- when He didn't have to.

"... So can y'all give me a break on 'I thought God loved us'? I think
He's on record for how much He loves you and how much He loves me,"
Burgess said. "So don't you ever take this situation and say, 'I thought
God loved Rick and Sherri and this family.' He did love me. That's why
He died for me. Anything else I get, I don't deserve because I didn't
deserve that."

He reiterated that Jesus is the only way to heaven, based on John 14:6,
and he said the song that encouraged him most as the tragedy unfolded
was "Jesus Loves Me" because of the line "I am weak, but He is strong."

"A father can't get up and do this, only He can. Not an earthly father,"
Burgess said, referring to giving his son's eulogy.

Burgess cited a study in which 90 percent of believers said they had
never shared the Gospel with anyone, and he pleaded for that to change.

"I want the death of our child to energize all believers to get about
the business of preaching the Gospel," he said.
 

GrlsHnt2

Senior Member
You know. The power God gave him to stand up and speak those words. Anyone who ever doubted God's existence shouldn't after hearing that. It is obvious no greiving father could give that apeech w/o the presence of our Father. Hope I didn't get too religious for the campfire thread.
 
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