Jacob Hatcher

Folklore

By Jacob Hatcher

Community Columnist

I was wading in a little inlet of the Atlantic Ocean on the coast of Haiti when the missionary leading our group told me a story of a former witch doctor he once knew.  “He told me once,” my missionary friend said, “that a neighbor had betrayed him in some way, so the next time his neighbor went on a journey, he turned into a dragon and flew in the sky above him in order to rain fire down on him.” 

“Sure,” I said, “but he didn’t really turn into a dragon, right?”

“You go tell him that.”

As I sat around the family table last week listening to and sharing tall tales, I listened intently to the details of the ridiculous things we all claimed to have experienced.

Ghosts climbing up walls, brushes with death, fighting fires on mountain tops, and enough dog stories to fill a book.

I couldn’t help but think that if someone unfamiliar with us had been sitting there they likely would have asked, “but that rattlesnake wasn’t really fifteen feet long was it?”  The reality is that it doesn’t matter how true the story is. The important part isn’t the facts; it’s what the embellishments tell about the storyteller.

One such example is when Mama and Daddy were facing lean times and they had a jar with their tithe money in it from Daddy’s job delivering pizzas. Food was short and they considered borrowing from the tithe money until payday a couple of days later, but decided to figure out a different way to make it work.

Once they had made their final decision to not borrow the tithe money, Daddy tossed his wallet on the bed. It hit the bed with a thud, then bounced off and onto the floor. When he picked up, there was a stack of bills in it where there had been none just a few minutes before. And from that point forward, Mama and Daddy trusted God to provide.

Of course, you might think that’s crazy. You might even say, “Come on; money didn’t magically appear in his wallet, right?”

 Well, you go tell him that.

 

 

 

 

 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Planned Hartselle library already piquing interest 

Brewer

Students use practical life skills at Morgan County 4-H competition

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

After 13 years underground, the cicadas are coming 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle students collect pop tabs for Ronald McDonald House

MULTIMEDIA-FRONT PAGE

Priceville students design art for SRO’s police car 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle Junior Thespians excel at state festival 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

$15k raised for community task force at annual banquet  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

4H Pig Show to be held May 11 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

‘We want the best’: Hartselle Police Department is hiring

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Council hears complaints about Hartselle business owner

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Priceville students design art for SRO’s police car 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Scott Stadthagen confirmed to University of West Alabama Board of Trustees 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle plans five major paving projects for 2024 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Future walking trail dubbed ‘Hartselle Hart Walk’ promotes heart health, downtown exploration 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Chiropractor accused of poisoning wife asks judge to recuse himself 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle seniors get early acceptance into pharmacy school  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Farmers market to open Saturday for 2024 season

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Challenger Matthew Frost unseats longtime Morgan Commissioner Don Stisher

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Cheers to 50 years  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Scott Stadthagen confirmed to University of West Alabama Board of Trustees 

Editor's picks

Hartselle graduate creates product for amputees 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Tigers roar in Athens soccer win

Danville

Local family raises Autism awareness through dirt racing  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Three Hartselle students named National Merit finalists  

x