"When I was in my twenties," writes Virginia, "I had
three little girls, and one on the way. I had gone to visit my mother, and
stayed until mid-afternoon." By the time she decided to leave, however, the sky
was darkening. Rain was definitely on the way.
Should she stay or go? This was only to have been a brief visit, so Virginia had
very few supplies with her, and she could be home via the country road within an
hour... Taking a deep breath, she buckled up her daughters and set out. "It
wasn't too bad in the beginning," she says. "Thunder, lightening and a medium
downpour..." But as they drove, the sky got darker, and the rain denser.
Eventually, the downpour was so heavy that Virginia could not see her own hood!
Terrified, she rolled the window down trying to see the road, but she couldn't.
Visibility was zero. Would another driver hit her?
Virginia knew vaguely where she was, and her fear deepened. There was nowhere to
pull over, given the deep ditches along the road, and the dense forest beyond.
But worst of all, a railroad crossing was somewhere up ahead. "There was only a
sign posted on the crossing, not a signal," she says, "because we were way out
in the boonies." No one would be able to see the warning sign until they were
upon it. And then it might be too late.
Virginia's daughters had fallen asleep. It would be too difficult to awaken all
three and get them out of the car, and take them....where? Possible solutions
flew through her mind as she continued to inch along. The rain still coming like
a flood. She prayed for direction, for safety, for her unborn vulnerable
baby...and suddenly the car stopped.
Wait! She hadn't touched the brake. Was the engine flooded? Then, to Virginia's
utter amazement, the mist cleared for a moment. Ahead of her, no more than an
arm's length from her bumper, was a moving train.
Virginia sat for a moment, dazed, as the freight cars went by. It took some time
for the train to completely pass, and when it did, she was able to see a little
bit better. The storm was quieting. Her family was safe. And her car started
immediately.
"To this day I still believe that God sent his angel to be with us," Virginia
says. "There is no way I could have stopped in time if not for the power of
God."
Joan Anderson Copyrighted by Joan Wester Anderson, used with permission. Originally appeared on the Where Angels Walk website, http://joanwanderson.com
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