I'll Run With You: How God's Grace is Sufficient When our Strength is Not

I'll Run With You: How God's Grace is Sufficient When our Strength is Not

by William Boyd Chisum
I'll Run With You: How God's Grace is Sufficient When our Strength is Not

I'll Run With You: How God's Grace is Sufficient When our Strength is Not

by William Boyd Chisum

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Overview

"I’ll Run With You" is the appropriately named chronicle of the life of William Boyd Chisum. This follow up to "Chasing the Wind" tells firsthand how the Grammy and Dove nominated song by the same name has inspired not only Chisum, but countless others.
Readers will be drawn in by his frankness and faith and will applaud his strength and passion as he faces not only his own surgery, but his only son’s as well. Watch how the story unfolds as they are enlightened and ignited and beat the physical odds and continue their ministry sharing Christ’s love with their God-given musical abilities.
Follow Chisum as he continues his journey ministering through song and testimony to those afflicted with physical hardships and mental anguish. Watch as a collision of legacies explode and gives birth to a new and better life for so many. See how one song can mirror the past and the future and is, in essence, a complete telling of the grace-filled story of William Boyd Chisum’s life.
"I’ll Run With You" will inspire you and fill you with a new and never-ending hope.  It will give you strength to run and win your race, no matter how many obstacles stand in your way.  It will leave you joyously anticipating your greatest victory; the run that begins at Heaven’s gate and ends at the feet of the Father.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781614480563
Publisher: Morgan James Publishing
Publication date: 08/30/2011
Series: Morgan James Faith Series
Pages: 170
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.39(d)

About the Author

William Boyd Chisum is an accomplished singer/ songwriter and a 2007 Dove and Grammy Nominee. He is a published author of two previous books "Chasing The Wind" and "The Story Of God’s Grace". He holds an Associate’s Degree in Sports Medicine/Orthopedic PA from Long Medical Institute and is a member of the National Association of Orthopedic Technologists, Gospel Music Association, Voting Member of the Recording Academy Grammy’s, and resides with his wife and son in Dallas, Texas.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Happy New Year

(God's Timing Is Everything)

It had been only a couple of weeks since the Christmas concert at Scottish Rite Hospital for Children. That single event set the scene for a wonderfully blessed Christmas for the Chisum household. The opening of each present on Christmas morning brought back memories of the kids we had ministered to only days before. We couldn't help but feel thankful and fortunate for God's unmerited favor.

My father-in-law, Jack Moulton, had practically "camped out" at our house in the days leading up to Christmas. We were all excited as I diligently put the finishing touches to my first book, "Chasing the Wind". I was working on strategies on how to get accepted by a national publishing company. Being that this was my first book, the saying "He didn't have a clue" would be a gross understatement. It wasn't just that I didn't have a clue; I wasn't even sure where to start looking for one.

But God often answers prayers in ways that you least expect. And this was the case for me concerning the search for a publishing company.

I had received a phone call from Dr. Bob Bard a few days after Christmas. Bob was the Optometrist my wife Nena had worked for, for many years before our son Brock was born. He wanted to wish us a happy New Year and to ask if I would be interested in joining him on a trip to Atlanta, Georgia to an entrepreneurial conference. There would be many companies represented at this meeting, along with several nationally known speakers. As Bob began going down the list of guest speakers my ears "perked up" when he mentioned the name David Hancock, President/founder and CEO of Morgan James Publishing out of New York. I quickly wrote it down as Bob continued down the list.

To be honest, I really didn't hear much of the list of speakers after he mentioned Morgan James Publishing. I knew the possibility of me getting away and traveling to Atlanta was slim to none, so, after a few more minutes of conversation and with a quick check of my schedule I had to politely decline his invitation. As I hung up, I quickly began searching for information on this newly uncovered publishing company. Turns out, God was making sure I wasn't so clueless after all.

What I found on the Internet told me this was the right place for me to start. If I was going to get a ton of rejection notices (as everyone had been telling me to prepare for) then this was as good a place as any to start getting them.

Morgan James touted themselves as "A different kind of publishing company". Unbeknownst to me, these words would come into play heavily in the days that followed.

I couldn't wait to share this newfound information with my father-in-law Jack. He had committed himself to try and help me find a place for this book. He had spent so many long sleepless nights talking with me on the phone as I "two finger typed" my way through this autobiography. Jack and my wife, Nena, were both instrumental in keeping me going. They were there to encourage me when I felt I just couldn't finish it, or help me to write better when my fears of failure overwhelmed me, and all I could hear in my head was, "It was not good enough!"

I could best be described as a pit bull hanging on to a bone that New Year's holiday, because I would not let go of that publishing company I had shared with Jack; the same one he had procrastinated over calling for several days. All I wanted was information on their rules and processes on submitting a manuscript for review. It was on New Year's Day that Jack decided to call, and all along knowing there would be no one there to answer. He left a message requesting that someone call us back.

A day went by with no call from New York. Jack placed another call and then slowly the method behind the madness of a call on New Year's Day began to take shape. In the second message Jack left, he was very blunt and challenging. "I thought you were a different kind of publishing company but you're really not!" Jack said. "You claim to be a company that puts people first, but you won't even return a phone call," Jack went on. "I will believe you're different when I see it, and I'll see it when you return my call," and with that Jack hung up. It was less than twenty-four hours later when Jack's cell phone came to life.

The first call he received was from the secretary of Morgan James Publishing. She tried to explain to Jack that everyone had been off for Christmas and the New Year and that she was so sorry but even now there was no one available to speak with him. Jack erupted into what we affectionately knew as his "controlled temper-tantrum" and this only made the situation worse. Jack continued to repeat his earlier phrase to an overmatched and underwhelmed secretary, that Morgan James was not a "different" kind of publishing company. "You are just like all the rest," he said, and with that Jack abruptly hung up. My mouth must have been open so wide you could have flown a jetliner into it and not touched either corner of it. I couldn't believe my ears. "I wouldn't even get the benefit of a rejection letter now," I thought.

It wasn't twenty minutes later that Jack's cell phone began to ring again. I thought after the fourth ring that he wasn't going to answer it at all, but on the fifth ring he calmly said in the sweetest of voices, "Hello." This time it was David Hancock himself. Jack didn't act at all surprised; this was the man that he had wanted to, and had planned on talking to all along.

No one was too big or too important for Jack. He could talk to anyone. His fearlessness and polished demeanor, when on display, were amazing to watch. He often said, "Why should I be nervous to talk to anybody? I talk to God every day and there's no one bigger than He is!" The power of that statement is found in its simplicity.

Mr. Hancock was gracious and patient as Jack went through the story once again. "So what is it you want, Mr. Moulton?" was the final response from David. "Well, I want you to agree to publish this book," was Jack's 'to the point' response. One never had to wait long to find out where Jack stood on any issue, or learn what it might be that he wanted, because he'd let you know: and quickly.

David explained to Jack that Morgan James Publishing gets hundreds of submissions each year and selects only around fifty for publication. This did not dissuade Jack in the least and he let David know that basically, from this day forward, Morgan James need only to concern themselves with the other forty-nine books!

Before the conversation ended, David asked Jack to send "Chasing the Wind" directly to him. He didn't have time to review it himself, but he would direct someone on his staff to take a look at it and get back to us. He was very careful not to make any promises or commitments other than, "We'll see." When Jack hung-up the phone, I couldn't help but feel sick to my stomach. Rejection number one, I was sure, would quickly be on its way!

I watched the mailbox like a lunatic. I think our postman even began to feel like I was stalking him because I was watching him come and go with so much intensity. I would stand out in the yard waiting on him to drive up and actually got a little peeved each time he didn't hand me what I was waiting for. I think he was afraid that I was the one about to "go postal".

What would a rejection letter look like? Would the publisher be polite and say something like; "You almost did it, so keep working at it." Or would it be a letter comprised of only one sentence; "This stinks on ice"? I was sure it would be one of the two. Everyone knows that no author gets accepted on his first try.

In less than two weeks I received a letter with the MJ Publishing logo and address in the top left hand corner. It was your standard business size envelope and very light weight. I thought to myself as I carried it in to the house, "How heavy does a 'don't call us we'll call you' letter have to be?" I think I was holding the answer to that question in my hand.

I sat at the desk in my office and looked at the envelope for the longest time. I was afraid of what I would find printed on the page just inside. As I carefully tore it open I said a silent prayer; "Lord, let it be what You want it to be."

"William, Congratulations! Your manuscript proposal, Chasing the Wind, has been accepted! Welcome to Morgan James Publishing, LLC."

For the next twelve months life became a blur! We were juggling so many projects, trying to keep them all in the air, that is was by grace and grace alone that we were able to accomplish so much.

I started a children's book, "The Story of God's Grace". It would come with a CD that would allow the child reading the book to sing along with the words on each page. Jack found us a children's book illustrator: Karen Skold, who lived in Sweden and spoke little English but her artwork was beautiful and absolutely perfect for this project. Her daughter, who was in college at the time and taking English classes, was able to translate for us. Karen delivered such moving artwork on each and every page, and when it was finished she refused to take any compensation for her hard work. She told me, "I did this for the glory of God," and I know that her reward will be great one day! Morgan James Publishing quickly accepted my second book and suddenly I had become a multi-published author.

Jack now turned his efforts to the gospel CD I had recorded earlier, also entitled "Chasing the Wind". With the album now printed and several solo concerts on the books, it was time to find a record label that would be willing to sign a new artist. Oh, I really wasn't that new, I had been in country music, toured for many years and had chart singles across the country. But, now I was singing the songs God had laid on my heart and for the first time in my life, I was now listening to His direction. I guess I was a new artist after all!

Dave Moody was, and is, the president of Lamon Records with offices in Nashville, Tennessee as well as North Carolina. He also had the experience and notoriety of being a multi Dove and Grammy Award recipient for his producing abilities. Jack almost met his match in the "negotiating arena" when he and Dave went at each other over many phone conversations, but when the smoke had cleared I was signed to a Southern Gospel recording label and my first national release was only weeks away.

When God starts opening doors in your life, things often happen very quickly. It always becomes a situation that, when you look back at it all, you realize that only God could accomplish what was happening. I call it a "God Thing", and when He opens a door, no man can shut it. I was seeing an unbelievable amount of doors opening and even though I did not know where they all would lead me I had learned to trust THE ONE doing the leading.

The year was 2007, and I was looking at a list of the top fifty gospel songs in the nation, as reported by Singing News magazine. There, close to the bottom of that list, I found my name and my first release on Lamon Records; "He Still Moves the Stone". Jack and I were sitting in the same restaurant where I had signed the publishing contract for my book. It was also the very same place we chose to sign my recording contract that took place barely two months later. Having the first release from my "Chasing the Wind" album make the charts was truly a humbling experience for me. Jack was so proud and for almost an hour went around showing everyone at each table the list of the top fifty, and making a "huge" effort to point me out.

Oh, I was excited, of course, but really more in shock than anything. You see, I had made God wait for so many years while I was busy singing songs that meant nothing, and added nothing to The Kingdom, that I realized that God was working overtime to show me what He could now do. How He could take my small contribution, if I would just let Him, and do exceedingly and abundantly more than I could ever have imagined.

Little is great when it is placed in the hands of God. Like the five loaves of bread and two fish, my gifts were being multiplied by God and used to feed a lost and hungry world with the very "Bread of Life".

Later that year, Nena and I received our voting ballets for both the 2007 Dove and the Grammy Awards. Who would we vote for in the Southern Gospel Song of The Year Category? I wondered. Oh yes, I would be remiss if I didn't mention that He Still Moves the Stone was nominated for Song of the Year, so of course we voted for it. We weren't stupid, and it probably was the only two votes the song received. We didn't win, however, but oh what an honor it was just to be nominated.

God had been so good to us and we were thankful. We were truly being fed in the valley, where it was lush and green, but there was a mountain that would soon appear in our path. At the top of this mountain we would find emptiness. It would be a place of rocks and boulders where nothing could live. Climbing this mountain would leave us a family, bloody and scarred, and with wounds so deep they would never heal on this side of heaven.

CHAPTER 2

Jack's Lost Journey

There comes a time for each of us when we realize that we have given our all. Exhausted, we all too often continue to pour ourselves into a ministry, a Sunday School class or even an individual, and then we end up feeling more than just burned out; we are completely and utterly empty.

'Empty' best described my father-in-law Jack when it came to all the new aspects swirling around my ministry. Books, albums, concert schedules, speaking engagements: they all ran together and made Jack wonder if there might be something missing in his life. Had he given so much to my ministry to the exclusion of his own?

Maybe Jack could have paced himself a little better, but that just was not in his nature. He always went headlong into life at breakneck speed and you either ended up taking the ride with him, or you got run over. Oh, by the way, he was the worst driver I have ever ridden with in all my life; but then that's another story all together. But I will say this about it: when I would be white knuckling the dashboard as he weaved in and out of traffic at the speed of light, he would look at me and ask with a sarcastic smile; "What are you afraid of, aren't you prayed-up and ready to go home?" Well, I was, but I didn't think there was any need to hurry the process along.

Life with Jack was never boring, but maybe life with me had become so. Jack had reached the point where he needed to move on. He longed for another challenge, another deal. To him it was all about the art of negotiation that kept him fired up. He needed another spark.

The hardest part for Jack as he prepared to move back to Scottsdale, Arizona was twofold. Number one: how would he be able to say goodbye to his favorite grandson Brock? They shared a bond that was very special and, despite Jack's gruff demeanor at times, they loved each other deeply. Number two: where would he find someone to watch over him, love him and care for him more than his step-daughter Nena did? We knew that there was no safer place on earth for Jack than where he lived now, just two blocks from our house.

There was a great feeling of trepidation as we watched Jack make plans to leave. He had leased his condo, made arrangements to transport his Mercedes and packed the multitude of boxes that held all the pieces of his life. Each box would carry a piece of Jack across the country and far away from us. We felt helpless but nothing we could say or do would change the course Jack was determined to follow.

There seemed to be a void in Jack's life, and he didn't know what was causing it. He just believed he needed to return to that place where he thought he was happiest and maybe there he would find who it was or what it was that could fill the emptiness he was now experiencing.

We watched him drive off early one morning. Our hugs goodbye seemed a little forced and stiff. It could have been because he knew we didn't want him to go, and felt the journey he was now on might not end well. That deep blue Buick Grand Prix that I had so many near death experiences in, was now driving away. For as I long as I live I wouldn't miss the roller-coaster ride that I found within those four doors, but oh, how I would miss the man behind the wheel.

Months went by and we heard very little from Jack. The little dribs and drabs of information that we received from him over those months always seemed to have a glaring hole. He said that he was very busy meeting old friends and seminary buddies and together they were actively working on ministerial projects and outreach ministries. He had even had some of his writings become part of an on-line bible course for some University somewhere. But nothing could calm that uneasy feeling within our hearts that something wasn't right.

January 30th started out like any other day, answering e-mails and returning phone calls. As I sat in my office, sipping on my third cup of coffee, the phone rang and I recognized the number immediately. It was Rev. Bud Brown: the one who helped me dig a little deeper in the writing of Chasing the Wind. He was the associate pastor of the fastest growing church in the United States, located in Sedona, Arizona. He was also one of Jack's closest friends.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "I'll Run With You"
by .
Copyright © 2011 William Boyd Chisum.
Excerpted by permission of Morgan James Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS,
CONTENTS,
FOREWORD,
CHAPTER 1 ~ Happy New Year,
CHAPTER 2 ~ Jack's Lost Journey,
CHAPTER 3 ~ Closer Than a Brother,
CHAPTER 4 ~ A Bridge for a Beautiful Heart,
CHAPTER 5 ~ The Song of My Life,
CHAPTER 6 ~ Lacee's Story,
CHAPTER 7 ~ Grace Runs Deep,
CHAPTER 8 ~ Don't Let Being Good Keep You from Being Great,
CHAPTER 9 ~ A Burning Hope,
CHAPTER 10 ~ God's Poet,
CHAPTER 11 ~ Escaping Pandora's Box,
CHAPTER 12 ~ From A Broken Vessel To A Masterpiece,
EPILOGUE,

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