Blog Archives

The Homecoming Tree — 20 years!

My mother and father married on July 27,1935 in the middle of the Great Depression. Most Americans have no idea how bad times were in 1935. My father wanted to be a farmer and by the time 1940 rolled around their family was almost starving. My mother laid down the law and my parents along with my brother and sister moved from the tiny watermelon capital of Louisiana, Saline to the big city of Shreveport. My father was fortunate to get a job at the post office thanks to his brother in law. My mother went to work at Sears & Roebuck downtown.


They leased a house of Buckner Street with plenty of room for the family. Then, in 1941, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. My father was thirty days away from being deployed to Europe when he was told as an employee of the U. S. Post Office, he would keep his job.
Soon after, my uncles from Saline left for Europe or the Pacific. Their families, one by one, moved in with my parents. My father converted a back porch into two bedrooms. The Hennigan “boarding” house was in business.
One of my aunts worked as a taxi driver in Shreveport during the war and the stories my parents told about her antics showed she was far ahead of her time! I loved to sit just off my uncle’s living room in Saline while my parents and their brothers, sisters, and in laws shelled peas and shucked corn and told about life during the Depression and World War II.


In 1999 I had converted all of my parents’ photographs from the past century into an old fashion slide show. My brother, born in 1937, joined them and I turned on the video camera while they told me their life story. Slide by slide we covered their lives from 1914 until to the early 1950’s. In particular, I was interested in life in Shreveport and Bossier City during the war.
In 1992, I became the drama director at Brookwood Baptist Church. By 2005, I had written and directed over 100 long and short dramas and I was ready to move on from drama to dedicate my time to writing books. For my last production, I decided to write a play based on my parents’ stories from World War II for our holiday production in 2005.


“The Homecoming Tree” told the story of a family living in Shreveport from their Thanksgiving meal up through Christmas Eve 1941. It was a huge production covering the entire stage area of our new church campus and featured over fifteen actors and actresses. We had a snow machine for outside scenes. We turned the baptistery into a radio studio. My mother had passed away in 2004 but my father recorded a 1940’s song and along with songs from 1941 it played during the scene changes. I had a three camera setup to record the entire production. (Unfortunately, one of the main actors routinely got off track in the third act and we had to flail around a bit to get everyone back on task.) However, it was one of the best received productions at Brookwood Baptist Church.


A few years passed and I was not happy with one of the characters I had created. I imagined a different framing for the story and rewrote the play featuring a modern day business man about to ruin his family by running off with his secretary. In order to teach him the importance of family, he is sent back in time to 1941 with amnesia and has to learn the lessons of the Greatest Generation. To be honest, many churches asked for the script but because of the scope of the production, they were unable to produce the play.


I decided to write a novelization of the play. “The Homecoming Tree” novel premiered in 2018. Great reviews followed. One reviewer said it reminded him of his favorite Christmas movie, “It’s a Wonderful Life” (which was totally intentional on my part) and that reviewer reads the book every Christmas to get into the spirit of the holidays.


This year marks the twentieth anniversary of “The Homecoming Tree” play and I want to encourage everyone to check out the book for this Christmas. Now, more than ever, we need to remember the sacrifices and devotion of the “Greatest Generation” as they fought and defeated evil throughout the world in order to bring about freedom and liberty.

You can find out more about the book at this link.

What happens with medicine and justice collide?


Part 1: Trafficking and physical abuse

Last post I mentioned a victim of child abuse, a young boy who was physically abused leading to multiple skull fractures. When such a patient is seen, the doctor and the entity for which the doctor fulfills their duties have very clearly set processes that kick in immediately. I won’t go into details, but doctors, nurses, and other hospital personnel care about the patient and will do whatever it takes to insure their safety now and in the future.


My job as a radiologist is to recognize and clearly describe findings on imaging studies that fit the pattern of physical abuse. Radiologists have very specific phrasing to insure these reports signal the possibility without frankly accusing anyone of wrongdoing. Injuries that resemble abuse can sometimes be truly secondary to accidents and not intentional. We do not want to wrongly accuse anyone of physical abuse. But, at the same time, we do not want to let an abused individual fall through the cracks.


Part of annual training for physicians involves recognizing such dangerous situations as human trafficking. We are required to undergo this training or I licenses will be revoked. For 2025 I had undergo training on how to recognize a patient who might be the victim of trafficking.


The International Labour Organization (ILO) estimates that 49.6 million people are currently trapped in modern slavery, which includes both forced labor and forced marriage. Women and girls make up 71% of all modern slavery victims. Children represent approximately 25% of all victims of modern slavery.


Tracking human trafficking is difficult because it’s an underground crime and there is no simple way to track it. Why? Because, transactions happen in secret, traffickers don’t keep public records, and many victims never report their exploitation due to fear, stigma, or lack of resources.


In the Shreveport/Bossier City area the Hub Ministry works very hard to help victims escaped from this type of slavery. There are three ministry areas.


The Lovewell Center is a membership based resource center that gives members the opportunity to earn the physical resources they need by attending classes and programs designed to help them move out of poverty and homelessness and into a restored life. Earned credits can be used in The Lovewell stores: The Dresswell clothing store, The Smellwell laundromat, The Eatwell food store and The Stylewell hair salon. 


Purchased: A trauma-informed residential recovery program for women coming out of the sex industry and adult victims of Sex Trafficking.Rescue, relationship, recovery and resources to women and children experiencing sexual exploitation and sex trafficking.


Rise Up & Roast provides high quality coffee with an even higher quality story.  Every bag of Rise Up & Roast is prepared and packaged by a graduate of one of The Hub’s programs – which means your coffee has fueled a future.  When you have a fresh cup, you’re giving a fresh start.


This fantastic ministry is changing lives every day. For more information check out their website: https://thehubministry.org.


While my current book does not deal with human trafficking I am a staunch supporter of such ministries. If you suspect someone of being a victim of human trafficking, call the National Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888.

Aliens Among us?

Are extraterrestrials living among us? Have we been visited by alien races in the past? If life exists on other worlds, does that negate the Christian faith?

As a science fiction reader and writer, I have grappled with these questions for decades. How do I craft stories about other worlds, other life in view of my Christian faith? If an ET landed on the lawn of the White House tomorrow, what would that mean for my belief in God?

Well, you can find out. On Tuesday night, October 8th, at Brookwood Baptist Church my friend, Mark Riser and I will be giving a presentation: “Aliens Among us? Little Green Men and the Christian Faith”. Our monthly meetings were once affiliated with Reasons to Believe. However, in the past two months, RTB has moved away from supporting “local chapters”. We have reinvented ourselves as Brookwood Apologetics. What we will be doing does not change much. We still meet every month and we discuss evidence for the truthfulness of the Christian faith through science, history, and philosophy.

This upcoming special presentation will feature snacks and prizes. And we will be merging with other ministry groups for this one presentation. So beam me up, Scotty! Live Long and Prosper with us on October 8, 2024 at 630 at Brookwood Baptist Church, 9014 Brookwood Church Way, Shreveport, LA. For more information you can visit brookwoodbaptist.com.