1
Is there forgiveness for that?
It was a Tuesday afternoon in the fall 2003 when I first heard it. It was a simple little
piece of a larger story that planted a seed in my mind and sent me into a dizzying array
of poignant thought and agonizing reflection.
One of the members of the Toastmasters club of which I belong spoke that day about
experiences he had during his tour of duty as a GI in Korea.
One of the many events
that he remembered was his first Christmas away from home. He recounted the feeling
that he had, anticipating the loneliness and homesickness that he would experience
being away from his family over the holidays for the very first time.
However, his anxiety was abated as he lost himself in the charitable act of
participating in the Christmas day festivities provided by the military base for the
orphaned children of that society.
As I listened to the heartwarming tale of charity (love) and hope, an approving smile
came over the faces of the audience. He briefly alluded to the fact that this annual
ceremony was something that was done because of “the Gentlemen, if you want to call
them that”, who were responsible for the situation in the first place. As I connected to
dots, so to speak, this jubilation was quickly ripped asunder by a stark realization.
These were orphaned children created by the union of American Infantry men and local
girls (prostitutes, one night stands, love affairs, and marriages) whose fathers have
outright abandoned them and their mothers. These are the “Amerasian children”.
Across Asia, including the Philippines, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Thailand, Cambodia,
Viet Nam and others, there are one untold thousands of these people that are the
victims of a fatherless epidemic created by US Marines, GIs, Sailors and civilian
contractors working overseas.
This speech conjured memories of a magazine article I read in high school about the
Amerasian children. The article interviewed several infantry men after being discharged
from the service in Viet Nam who claimed to have fathered fifty to sixty children, that
they knew of! I was in high school during the seventies, which means that those
Amerasian children are now Amerasian middle aged adults and the problem now spans
generations.
I never really put two and two together before on this subject. But then I realized that
my own wife Cathy and her twin sister are Amerasian Children. They are the product of
an American GI and a Japanese Mother. They are one of the Lucky ones. Her father
brought her mother to the United States to be married. Though they enjoy the blessings
of American citizenship, their Father abandoned the family shortly after birth, and for
forty five years at the time of this writing, they have ever since wondered about the father
they have never known.
Why does this make her lucky?
Because in Asia, the “half breads” are the dregs of
society. They are the outcasts, the down trodden, the spit upon, the kicked, the
disadvantaged, homeless, penniless, jobless, fatherless, ridiculed, hated, and mocked.
It’s called xenophobia, the fear of anything foreign. It is racism to the extreme.
The scenario paints itself out all too well. Rich soldiers (by Asian standards) with a
lot of U.S.
Dollars to spend, have no problem obtaining companionship. Beautiful Asian
dolls, who’s training is to give themselves completely in service to their suitor have no
idea of the danger that awaits them. They tread into the territory of no return with the
tantalizing image of life in the land of promise, the home of the free. Imagine the horror
and distress when the realization sinks down deep in her gut that he is gone, there is no
way to contact him and the only thing she thinks she knows is that his name is Frank.
That afternoon I drove home from work with the radio off. I couldn’t stop thinking
2
about the terrible plight of these people. Even though it wasn’t my problem, the very
idea of it tormented me. It just kept hanging on like a noisy little terrier clamped on to my
pantleg.
It spawned a dialog with my self. The questions kept hammering at me. I needed
answers.
Q. Who are these men?
A. Well, they are American military men.
Q. Specifically though, who are they?
A. Well, we don’t really know exactly.
Q. Why don’t’ we here more about this?
A. I guess its one of those deep dark little secrets that’s nobody’s business.
Q. How can people do that?
A. I guess it’s like the fact that there are four thousand abortions a day in America. Lets
see, 4000 times 365 days a year since about 1971 is umm,….umm… about 50
million dead babies…… Yet very few people seem to know anyone who’s ever had
one. That’s how people are.
Q. Why are they here at home hiding from their responsibilities?
A. They don’t want that responsibility. They don’t want anybody to know. They’re
ashamed.
Q. Where do these men live?
A. In our neighborhoods, our communities. Next door, down the street, around the
corner. They are among us.
Where else could they be?
Q. But what about the precious little children, and their abused mothers? Don’t they
care that they have brought untold tragedy and misery into their lives!
A. They probably think it’s not good, but there is little they can do about it or want to do
about it. They try to ignore it, hoping it will go away, that time alone will erase it.
But it never goes away. It’s always there reminding them. Their lives are secretly
miserable, suppressing the truth about their other family from their American wives
and children. Their life is a complete and utter LIE.
Q. I wonder about the daily hardships, the misery, the pain of trying in vain to raise a son
or daughter with little hope of any help from any one, and everything around you is
against you.
A. Its hard to even think about.
Q. What about the Mothers that are actively trying to find the fathers, I wonder what life
must be like for them?
A. They are searching for a needle in a hay stack. Few if any will ever be successful.
Q. Why don’t these men come forward?
A. The natural man in them tells them to play dumb and keep their mouth shut.
Q. If they do find the father, can’t they petition the courts for redress?
A. Nope. It’s not in the US court’s jurisdiction. It ’s an international issue. They’re “outta
luck”.
I went to bed that night with the issue still weighing heavily on my mind. It was a
long and tiring day, but sleep was the last thing I could grab a hold of. I usually don’t go
to bed until I’m tired enough, so when my head hits the pillow, I’m already half asleep.
But this night was different. I did everything I could to fall asleep. It was all exercise in
futility. You can’t “try harder” to fall asleep!
It kept coming back to me, over and over again. All I could do was stare towards the
ceiling into the blackness. The only light in the room were the large red digital numbers
looming from the clock on the dresser. They served as a constant reminder of the long
3
and winding road I was about to travel during my extraordinary nocturnal journey.
The Pillow wasn’t quite right. Turn it. Twist it. Tuck it. The blankets are too hot,
throw a leg out and get some cool relief. The night air in the room is too cold. It’s
uncomfortable. Pull your leg back in and throw off one of the covers. Try the left
side…Try the right side. Turn this way, turn that way. I gaze over at the click. Its 1:30
AM
I’m wide awake and the dialog continues.
Q. “Oh Lord, what in the world must life be like for a man in that situation. To be
haunted and tormented by the unyielding consciousness of this sin in their lives”?
Q. Is it possible that they could be so callused and detached from their conscience that
it really doesn’t bother them and they never really think about it?
A. I guess that is possible. There are a whole lot of really bad people around. And we
read do in the Scriptures about the people that became so corrupt that they were
“past feeling”. (Eph. 4:19, Moroni 9:20)
Q. Is that what we’re dealing with here, People that are “past feeling”?
A. I don’t necessarily think so. I remember attending traffic school once taught by a
retired policeman who claimed that of the thousands of times he went to peoples
homes to arrest them for unpaid traffic tickets that had gone to warrant, he never once
met anyone who didn’t know their predicament and knew that someday, some how,
they would have to pay the consequences.
Q. How does a traffic ticket compare to abandoning your most important responsibility
as a human being….raising your children in truth and righteousness.
A. That’s a rhetorical question, the answer is obvious. There is no comparison.
Q. Then that must mean that they are all keenly aware of their situation.
A. Painfully aware.
The questions kept coming, the thoughts kept formulating. I raised myself up and
propped my back against the wall for support. Gazing over at the clock, I got my first
report signaling that my hope of a good nights sleep was in serious jeopardy. It was
2:15 AM!
Time slowed down as the pain and sorrow that filled my heart seemed to drag on and
on. Yet, each time I looked at the clock, I was amazed at where the time went.
The two
phenomenon’s stood side by side in curious juxtaposition with respect to my perception
of time.
“I am so lucky and so blessed that this really isn’t My problem! I have my share of
problems alright, but I thank you, God, with all of my heart that I get to wake up each
morning with the peace and serenity that only a clear conscience (with the help of
Christ’s atonement) can provide”.
I have awoke from many a nightmare and breathed a sigh of relief that it was only a
dream. Similarly, my soul became filled with gratitude that it’s not me with the problem.
I had to ask ……….
Q. why am I so lucky?
Q. Why was I blessed to be raised in the church and taught to know the truth about
thee, Heavenly father, by wonderful people who served me and helped my testimony
grow to where it is today?
Q. Is that purely Circumstantial?
A. No, it cant be! The Scriptures say that the lord’s wrath is kindled against those who
confess not his hand in all things. (D&C 59:21)
4
Q. Would my integrity as a child of God have “won out” if I were in the same situation as
these men were or would I have made the same choices that others have, given the
same circumstances and that “but for the grace of god, there go I?
Q. Why was I fortunate enough to be in the right place at the right time to feel the Holy
Ghost testifying to me on numerous occasions of the glorious truthfulness of your
restored gospel? And why weren’t others in life given that same opportunity?
Q. But then, what about those who were there and also felt and heard the same things I
heard but they did not choose to follow in your footsteps and seek to know and do
your will?
What about all the youth I have taught through the years and saw them
make wrong choices. Were they not listening or did they just not care. How much of
it is circumstances?
How much of it is choices?
So many questions. So much we don’t know. I prayed, “Dear Heavenly Father, I
thank you so much for sparing me from the pitfalls of this world. They are real. I thank
you with all my heart for my great blessings. I am witnessing each of my Five children
embrace the gospel of Jesus Christ with full purpose of heart.
I am the luckiest man in the world.
I don’t know what I did to deserve this. All I can
say is thank you, thank you, thank so much”.
In this short life, the best thing to do is choose the right and trust in the lord with all out
heart, and lean not to our own understanding. (proverbs 3:5).
It’s now 4:00 AM.
After expressing my gratitude to god, I still wondered about the sorry plight of these
“Gentlemen”.
Q. How in the world could a person ever get out of this trap that they are in?
A. It seems almost impossible.
Q. Could they possibly repent of something like this?
A. Good Question.
Q. What does repentance consist of?
A. Recognize, remorse, restitution, request it, resolve to never repeat it, serve god…
Q. Restitution? Restitution? What if restitution is not possible? What about the men
who fathered 60 children on the other side of the word, and abandoned them all.
Even if one of them was to spend the rest of his life trying to track down all of these
children, and even if he could find them all, is there any way he could even possess
the capacity within himself of being a true father to them?
A. Financially, emotionally, spiritually, and every other way, it is inconceivable. No, its
just flat out impossible.
Q. Then does that mean he cannot be forgiven of his sins since he cannot perform
restitution?
A. That’s a darn good question.
5:30 AM
Is it possible for a man in this predicament to gain forgiveness of his sins?
As I sat there pondering upon this question, meditating upon the reality of this situation, I
felt the spirit of the Holy Ghost come upon me and I heard the still small voice whispered
to my soul…
5
”Yes, they can be forgiven even of this, on one condition only, that
they truly repent of their sins, yield their whole being to the will of
god, and spend the rest of their lives until the day they die in the
service of the Lord….Nothing less will do”.
As I was left to reflect on what I just heard, I was dumbfounded at the mercy and love
and forgiveness of the Lord Jesus Christ.
How his arms are outstretched continually to
every person, begging them to “come unto Christ and be perfected in him” (Moroni
10:32,33). His unmatched love for each and every one of us is incomprehensible to the
mortal mind. Yet it is this infinite and eternal love that Christ has for us that allows his
atoning sacrifice to work in our lives.
The answer that I received, supports the underlying principle that is eternally cast into
the concrete of the universe and determines success or failure on every level. The
principle is most thoroughly and concisely stated in what I have come to know as the
most perfect passage of scripture on the subject of grace and works that we have.
For we labor diligently to write, to persuade our children, and also our brethren,
to believe in Christ, and to be reconciled to God; for we know that it is by grace
that we are saved, after all we can do. (2 Nephi 25:23)
Even the very answer to my question reflects this eternal principle.
I was given my
answer as a gift from god, but only after I qualified myself by making the Enos-like
sacrifice (Enos 1-8).
The principle is true. It is universal, available equally to all. It is eternal, and will
always work. It is free, offered to all regardless of economic status. It is simple, give all,
and it will be enough.
That’s why it’s almost impossible for a rich person to enter into the
kingdom of god. They have too much to give up. It is perfect. It doesn’t matter how
much or little one gives, as long as its everything. It applies to all circumstances,
regardless of the severity of the sin.
As I sat pondering on the message, I had to ask myself the next logical question.
What about those who have not committed crimes against humanity? What is s required
to be forgiven of the “Little” sins. As I sat contrasting the difference, again the spirit
whispered to my soul.
”Yes, they can be forgiven even of these, on one condition only, that
they truly repent of their sins, yield their whole being to the will of
god, and spend the rest of their lives until the day they die in the
service of the Lord….Nothing less will do”.
No difference. The principle is applied equally.
It is my testimony that this is a true
principle and I admonish everyone to employ it. It is a great bargain. Jesus Christ is the
son on god. He is the Savior to all those who make him their Lord or Master, and by
doing so make themselves his servant. He is my master, and I am his servant. He has
forgiven me of my sins and given me happiness, joy and peace. I serve him because I
love him.
I love him because of what he has done for me. Because of what he has done
for me Jesus could never ask me to do too much for him. I want Eternal Life (Gods Life)
Its the only thing that’s worth anything. This is my testimony to you. It is my
responsibility to share it. (Mosiah 18:9-10).
Howard Lemmon
6


