The Route of Escape
The First of Three
by
Book Details
About the Book
The Route of Escape is a modern day “Pilgrim’s Progress” of an event that happened one day in the life of an unsuspecting Christian woman. This event sent her reeling headlong down dimly lit back roads of her past while taking to task the spiritual endurance required for her bright future in ministry. To gain supernatural strength to overcome every barrier casually, yet strategically strewn along her way required certain gifts, several acts of God, and more than not, a route of escape.
Come! Let her words guide you along her way. She will tell you in truth, for this is her life.
About the Author
Not much occurred in the summer
of ’64 unless one had eyes to see and ears to hear. The gift of patience
allowed my folks to wait nine whole months for the anticipated miracle of a
blessed event. In the intense month
where the emeralds of May faint and fade to the wilted green of peridot, God staged my entrance.
On the day when God told my
mother that it was “time”, I was birthed.
It was the cusp day of a transition month when Jim Sr. and Shirley Ann
would take full responsibility as well as opportunity of being parents
inevitably a third, yet not, final time. However, it was how the inevitable
would present itself that caused the nail biting and eventually hair (or hell)
raising experience.
Prior to the month when Indians’
heated revenge rampages and scalps summer of its foliage, -leaving in its wake
a trail of blood-red, burnt-orange, and flame-yellow heaps for rakes to herd
into massive burial mounds that ignite swiftly and burn brightly in the warm
autumn nights- I entered the world in my full regalia of nothingness. In other words, I was born butt-naked in the
month of August. With that knowledge,
life would be forevermore radically extraordinary.
My name is Jacquelyn A. Berry,
yet those closest to me call me Jacque
More than not my parents called me by my full name for they were often
fully infuriated with my vest for life (and getting into trouble). I was reared in a safe haven of do’s and
don’ts. I learned about God, and was
told that He somehow always knew about me.
I was taught that God was to be feared, and like Santa Claus, He knew
what I was thinking as well as doing.
Because Santa only came around
the month of December seeking every good girl and boy, I spent the end of
November and all of December reminding my parents just how good I could
be. They in turn reminded me that what
they could not see everyday, God could. Therefore, any
antics missed by them were always caught by “the-Man-upstairs”. (My parents always motioned upward noting God
was “the Man”, and I should fear His all-knowingness.) I usually forgot that part until I was
caught red-handed doing the less than admirable behaviors, or when my
conscience would get the best of me to inspire me to look high and grin my most magnificent smile and ask for forgiveness.
Since God is almighty as well as
all-knowing my infantile mind told me that He had a sheer and awesome advantage
over everything about me. He selected my
parents without my consent. He told them
what I had been up to when they were not around to see what I had been down
to. He even gave them knowledge to fix
what may or may not have been broken by my siblings or me. He was very awesome.
He even allowed my parents to
correct those things needed to be fixed about me, which often left a stinging
retort on my hind-parts. When I tried to
be good, I still managed to cause great drama.
And when being a good girl was too tiring, the extreme was all-too
welcoming. Yet for me, I learned more
about God in the midst of negative situations than I did in those times of
peace. I called on Him more in times of
turmoil, and often forgot to thank Him when things went smoothly.
My parents however, thanked God
all of the time. They thanked Him when
my siblings and I decided to investigate
As I grew, my thoughts about the “Man upstairs” grew also. And so the story continues--