The Salvation Army URL has changed to salvationarmy.org.au

Find out more

Diamond in the rough

26 September 2020

Diamond in the rough

James (left) and his wife Taryn assisted in the 2019 Salvos' Red Shield Appeal.

Finding genuine friendship and acceptance through Jesus has given James a life he never felt he deserved.

Words Bill Simpson 

James was raised in what he says was a dysfunctional family. His family moved seven times in his first 15 years. He didn’t have time to make friends. Nobody got close to him; he didn’t let them. It was his way of dealing with the life forced upon him.

“I don’t think I was a bad kid,” he says. “I did push the boundaries. I was unsettled. I was no angel. But, somehow, I was able to keep clear of the law, more by good luck than good management.”

Early adult life had its ‘moments’. James now prefers to dwell on the positives rather than the negatives. By the time he was 32, he was, he says, a “dry alcoholic”, had lost a business and was trying to pay off debts and back taxes.

“I wasn’t drinking any more,” he says, “but I had all of the alcoholic tendencies and behaviours – anger, lying, cheating, selfishness. I wasn’t a nice person when I was drunk and I wasn’t a nice person when I was sober, either.”

James defines a dry alcoholic as a person who doesn’t drink alcohol but displays the behaviours of an alcoholic. A recovering alcoholic, he says, is a person who is recovering physically, mentally and spiritually from alcohol­ism, but has not yet fully recovered and may never be fully free of the grip of alcoholism.

James has two adult sons and a grand-daughter from a previous marriage. During that marriage, a stepdaughter had a sleep-over with a friend. The friend attended Sunday school at the Salvos in Queanbeyan, on the NSW-ACT border.

When his stepdaughter returned from the sleepover, she asked her mother if she could go to the Sunday school. Her mother told her to ask her father (James). “I told her that I had never had anything to do with religion and that I didn’t care [whether she went or not],” James says.

“Anyway, I started dropping her off and picking her up at Sunday school. Next thing, I also took a second stepdaughter and my son, who were then both pre-school age. Someone at the Salvos said it was okay for me to take them, but that I would have to stay to help look after them. So, there I was, sitting up the back in Sunday school looking after my little kids.

“After a few months of doing this, the Sunday school teacher asked the children if they would like to invite Jesus to come into their life and be their special friend. Well, I thought, ‘Gee I could do with a special friend.’

“I had never had a ‘special friend’. I had had a few friends but wasn’t really close to anybody in particular. My life was pretty rubbish. So, I prayed the prayer of accepting Jesus as my special friend with all of the other kids, unbeknown to the Sunday school teacher.

“A few weeks later, one of the women at church – a nice, little, traditional Salvo lady in full uniform – asked me where I was up to in my walk with Jesus. Because I was a very rough bloke at the time, I probably used a few swear words enquiring about what she meant by my ‘walk with Jesus’.

“I told her that I had prayed the prayer to accept Jesus as my friend, but that I must have got it wrong. She asked me why I had thought I got it wrong. I told her that I thought that because nothing had changed.”

The “nice, little, traditional Salvo lady” took on the job of helping James understand what‘ walking with Jesus’ is really all about.

“She taught me about Jesus, showed me how to read the Bible and how to pray. She told me that I was actually saved. She taught me the absolute basics of being a Christian and the fact that, actually, somebody really, really loved and cared for me.”

From there, James got involved with the church and found the acceptance and friendships he hadn’t known growing up and didn’t feel he deserved.

A few years ago, at Moonee Valley Salvos in Melbourne, he found another friend – Salvation Army officer (pastor) Lieutenant Taryn Castles. Taryn says she was initially attracted to James when she discovered that he was willing to surrender a good career in Canberra to move to Melbourne so that one of his sons could study at the National Institute of Circus Art.

“James is a character – a character with integrity,” she says. They married three years ago. James is also now a Salvation Army officer at Kyabram Salvos, in northern Victoria. Taryn is a Project Officer at the Salvos’ Australian headquarters in Melbourne, researching the impact of COVID-19 on Salvation Army social programs.

And James now has more friends than he ever imagined.

“No, I’m not surprised, in a way, that I am where I am today,” he says. “Yes, I had a tough life and I was a tough person. But I have always had a heart for the marginalised

in society. They are the people the Salvos look out for. It’s who I am.”

Comments

No comments yet - be the first.

Leave a Comment


- Will not be published

Email me follow-up comments

Default avatarWould you like to add a personal image? Visit gravatar.com to get your own free gravatar, a globally-recognized avatar. Once setup, your personal image will be attached every time you comment.