I never thought it strange, not having a father. I was barely a year old when my father died, so I didn’t miss him. How could I? I never knew him.
In elementary school some kids didn’t know better than to ask, “How’d he die?” and when I told them polio, my status went up. Bubonic plague or suicide wouldn’t have had more effect. On the walls of every school hung March of Dimes posters of children wearing metal braces on their legs, or lying in a scary-looking contraption called an iron lung. When I added that my father had stayed in one of those iron lungs for several months, eyes widened like they do when kids don’t know what to say next.
“You poor child,” women would cluck to me at church. I glowed in the attention, the sympathy my very presence coaxed out. To my mother they would say things like, “Bless you. I don’t know how you do it.” Meanwhile, their husbands took a sudden interest in their fingernails, or studied their clothes for stray whiskers.
Sometimes the pastor would read a verse about caring for widows and the fatherless and I would sit up straight. Being part of a group mentioned in the Bible gave me moral stature. At school, too, I felt a kind of pride. Growing up without a father made me different, and I liked that. Sometimes bullies would take it easy on me when they learned I had no father. Sometimes they got even meaner—I had no protector to march to their houses and lay down warnings.
I have no memories of my father. For me, he existed mainly in two grainy, black-and-white photos. One shows a thin, rakish sailor leaning against a rail fence, his Navy cap at a jaunty angle. A more formal portrait has him with wire-rim glasses and looking a bit older; he’s wearing a double-breasted suit with wide lapels and a wide tie, his curly hair parted on the side and piled in a heap on top.
My brother, who was three when our father died, has an actual memory, one that haunts him still. Our father, lying in a bed, now paralyzed and fighting for air, turns his head to the side and gets out the words, one or two at a time, between labored breaths, “Son…you’re the…man…of the…house…now. It’s up…to you…to take…care…of your mother…and little…brother.” This happened three months after my brother’s third birthday. He nodded his head and accepted the weight of that responsibility as solemnly as a three-year-old could. Then, on the way home, he told Mother that he should probably take charge of my spankings right away.
Back then parents didn’t divorce much, and so all my friends had two at home. I won’t deny there were times when being fatherless felt like a burden. We were dirt poor, which came as part of the package. We had no father to teach us how to catch and throw a ball, or how to shave, or how to talk to girls—to teach us what a man is. We had no one to appeal to when Mother wouldn’t let us do things every other kid did with no opposition from their parents.
Having no father created a hole in my universe, something like a black hole, a powerful unseen force that disturbs everything around it. Though he was hardly a real person to me, more of a myth, his life shadowed mine. His absence felt like a presence. “He looks just like his daddy,” the women would say as they tamped down a cowlick on my head, “He’s got that same head full of curls.” They referred to him as “your daddy,” but I never called him anything. He died before I could talk.
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Apart from the rare male teacher in school, church was the main place where I had contact with men in my childhood. Colonel Doran stood ramrod straight and sometimes wore his impressive blue uniform to church. Another veteran, a former sailor, had a tattoo of an anchor and a woman on his arm, possibly the first tattoo I’d seen and definitely the first one in church.
I had several favorites among those men. Mr. Crain always took me for a ride when he got a new car. He owned a hand-crank ice cream machine, and sometimes he made ice cream with fresh peaches. I had never tasted anything so delicious—like touching heaven with my tongue.

Another, Mr. Warton, had an eye that wandered in a different direction from the other one, and I never knew which eye to stare at. He became the all-time hero of us kids because for special events he brought his very own cotton-candy machine to church. It looked like a stainless-steel washtub with a tube in the middle. He poured sugar in the tube, flipped a switch, and Presto! All we had to do was hold a paper cone and lovely, sticky strands of pink cotton candy appeared like magic, winding their way around the paper and our fingers.
Another favorite, blind Mr. Baker, relied on a German Shepherd to lead him around. We were strictly warned not to pet the seeing-eye dog unless Mr. Baker gave us permission, so I made it a goal to win him over. It proved easy, for Mr. Baker had a soft spot for kids. I tried to sit in the row behind him in order to watch how the dog handled boredom in church. He must be bored all the time, I decided, because he always has to obey his master. He can’t even be petted without permission.
In the years since I was a child, the percentage of single-parent homes in the U.S. has tripled. Now, nearly a quarter of all children grow up in a home with no father present. Looking back, it occurs to me that church offers a community that can help fill the holes in our world: not only for fatherless children, but also for single and divorced adults, widows and widowers, refugees, and foreign or out-of-state students. Certainly, it did that for me.
Later, as a young journalist I had the good fortune of reporting to male supervisors who saw their role as developing people, not simply producing a magazine or turning a profit. Men like Harold Myra and Jay Kesler spent hours offering guidance and shepherding me through personal crises, functioning much like substitute fathers. And then while writing a book (Where Is God When It Hurts), I came across Dr. Paul Brand, who had learned much about pain while working with leprosy, a disease that causes insensitivity. He was the first surgeon to use reconstructive surgery to correct deformities resulting from the disease in the hands and feet. When I met him, he was living in Louisiana, applying the same principles to diseases such as diabetes. 
As we worked together, Dr. Brand became a true father figure to me. Over a fifteen-year period of time, I wrote three books with Dr. Brand. I accompanied him on trips to India and England, where together we retraced the main events in his life. I spent hundreds of hours asking him every question I could think of about his experiences with medicine, life, and God. Dr. Brand, who died in 2003, was both a good and a great man, and I have everlasting gratitude for the time we spent together. At a stage in my spiritual development when I had little confidence to write about my own faith, I had absolute confidence writing about his.
I changed because of my relationship with Dr. Brand; he became a channel of spiritual growth for me. My faith grew as I had a living model of a person enhanced in every way by his own relationship with God. I now view justice, lifestyle, and money issues largely through his eyes; I see the natural environment differently; I look at the human body, and especially pain, in a very different light.

My relationship with Dr. Brand affected me deeply, in my core, on the inside. Yet as I reflect, I can think of no instance in which he imposed himself on me, or manipulatively sought to alter my opinions. I changed willingly, gladly, as my world and my self encountered his. Indeed, our relationship avoided many of the father-son dynamics that I hear about from my friends. I never competed with siblings for Dr. Brand’s attention; I never angered him by my clothes or hairstyle or the choices I made; he never held an inheritance over me as a power move. Our relationship was simpler, more pure: that of an eager learner and a wise and caring teacher who had my best interests at heart. His example filled the word father with meaning for me, a word I tentatively learned to apply to God.
Reviewing my own life calls to mind the role any of us can play for someone who lacks a complete or healthy family. As Father’s Day rolls around each year, I’m reminded that I never bought a card or racked my brain for a creative gift. Yet rarely did I feel like a fatherless child.

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Yes, a “note” can revive our souls for a week, but your books on grace have sustained me for years. The culture has moved away from those teachings at a frightening level. Almost to the level that the concept that we can demonstrate radical grace on a human level might seem to have been a mirage, but I think of examples from your books, and they have kept me during the confusing times.
Also, when I was struggling with my brain, I often thought of the woman typing with one finger or the prisoners who were still able to sing in a crowded cell.
There are very few authors, who have fed me as many stories for a cold Winter’s night season.
Your talking about reading, and these stories of father figures and those stories seem like vitamin supplements to my soul.
Yes, the Bible is the real food version, but there have been times, when I found myself needing to hear the heart-warming stories to understand that it is possible to keep my heart from waxing cold.
I genuinely consider grace to be the supplement we all probably need like a B Vitamin. Love, gets to be Vitamin A.
Dear Philip, thank you for sharing your gift of wisdom with so many through the gifts we have in modern media and communication. I have just finished reading Vanishing Grace and all that you wrote resonated so strongly with me. I have spoken of this book so much with my family, that there is a queue to borrow it from me.
I wanted to share a little of me, and thank you for giving me the courage to write a blog, for my children, especially the ones that lost their father.
Hello Philip,
Since those years of 1949-1953, that my family lived directly across the court from your family, I’ve often thought of you, your mother and your brother. During that time I was in my seventh through eleventh years of live.
While reading your reflection of your childhood, I saw a side of your life that I had never thought of before, “being fatherless.” Those years of your dad’s illness, passing and struggles that your family experienced, came to my remembrance as if it were yesteryear. Your brother and I were closer in age and were playmates.
Over the years, our mothers kept in contact with each other. Although, Mother would tell me when she had heard from Mildred, I really didn’t get any details about you or Marshall. I went off to college in 1960, and joined the US Air Force in 1964, and then the US Army for the next twenty-seven years, so I completely lost contact with your family.
Your family has always had a special place in my heart. I learned from my brother, Terry, that you were a writer and was excited to hear of your success. I know that you had a real understanding of God’s relationship to man, especially during life’s trials of pain and suffering. It pleases me to know that you have been giving comfort and aid to those who have experienced or are passing through that time in their lives.
There have been times that I have come across the name, Philip Yancey, through LinkedIn and Facebook. My attempts to contact you all proved to be fruitless. Today while searching for quotes about service of famous people, I came one of your quotes, “Fulfillment comes not in pursuit of happiness, but rather in pursuit of service.” I would like to use your quote in a calendar I’m making for the residents of Moapa Valley, NV. May I use it?
Now that I have found you, I will be following you on Facebook and your website.
My best regards and wishes to you and yours.
Mine is a mother story. I had Momma #1 for 10 1/2 years and Momma #2 for 56 years. I have a few good memories of Momma #1, but scads of memories from Momma #2. We had a yours, mine and ours family and were blessed. We were family. It made life so much easier. God is so good to give us those who can love us as we are.
The best memory of Momma #2 is that she told me, in my late teens, that she believed every word I ever said to her. Because, she knew, that if it was a lie, I would be back within 3 days to tell her the truth. God would make me feel so guilty and I would just have to repent and go tell Momma.
My youngest brother made a statement about our mother that I wish could have been put on her tombstone. The preacher did not know Mom, so he asked us what he could say about her. My brother said, “The best thing you can say about Mom is that she took 3 families and made them 1.” I do hope Mom heard that. And still today I get people who were raised in our church and in the Children’s Church talk about Mom. She was in charge of their behavior and did a memorable job.
I’m delighted to hear from you, Larry. I was too young to have many memories of Blair Village, but I remember the Griffiths family, and my mother has often commented on you all. (She’s now 93, and living in north Georgia.) I’ll send her your comment. And of course you’re welcome to use the quote. Your words are very kind and thoughtful. Thank you.