KISSED
AND TUCKED IN
A young man cowered
in the corner of a dirty,
roach infested death
row cell in a South Carolina prison.
His body curled in
a fetal position,
he seemed oblivious
to the filth and stench around him.
His name was Rusty,
He was sentenced to
die for the murder of a Myrtle Beach woman
in a crime spree that
left four people dead.
Police
arrested twenty-three old Rusty Welborn
from Point Pleasant,
West Virginia in 1979,
following one of the
most brutal slayings in South Carolina history.
Rusty was tried for
murder and received the death penalty for his crime.
Bob McAlister, a deputy
chief of staff to South Carolina's governor, became acquainted with Rusty
on death row.
Bob had become a Christian
a year or so earlier
and felt a strong
call from God to minister to the state's inmates, especially those spending
their last days on death row.
Bob's first
look at Rusty revealed a pitiful sight.
Rusty was lying on
the floor when he arrived,
a pathetic picture
of a man who believed he mattered to no one.
The only signs of
life in the cell were the roaches,
which scurried over
everything, including Rusty himself.
He stared blankly
at Bob as he began to talk,
but did not respond.
During visit after visit, Bob tried to reach Rusty,
telling him of the
Love that Jesus had for him and of his opportunity,
even on death row,
to start a new life in Christ.
He talked and prayed
continuously,
and finally Rusty
began to respond to the stranger
who kept invading
his cell.
Little by little,
he opened up, until one day he began to weep
as Bob was sharing
with him.
On that day, Rusty
Welborn,
a pitiful man with
murder and darkness behind him
and his own death
closing in ahead of him,
gave his heart to
Jesus Christ.
When Bob returned
to Rusty's cell a few days later,
he found a new man.
The cell was clean
and so was Rusty.
He had renewed energy
and a positive outlook on life.
McAllister continued
to visit him regularly,
studying the Bible
and praying with him.
The two men became
close friends over the next five years,
in fact McAlister
said that Rusty grew into the son he never had,
And as for Rusty,
he had taken to calling McAlister "Pap."
Bob learned that Rusty's childhood in West Virginia
had been anything
but"almost heaven."
His family was destitute,
and Rusty was neglected
and abused as a youngster.
School was an ordeal
both for him and for his teachers.
Throughout his junior
high years he wore the same two pair of pants
and two ragged shirts.
Out of shame, frustration,
and a lack of adult guidance,
Rusty quit school
in his ninth grade year,
a decision that was
to be just the beginning of his troubles.
His teenage years
were full of turmoil
as he was kicked out
of his home many times
and ran away countless
others.
He spent the better
part of his youth living under bridges
and in public rest
rooms.
Bob taught Rusty
the Bible,
but Rusty was the
teacher when it came to Love and Forgiveness.
This young man who
had never know real Love was amazed
and thrilled about
the Love of God.
He never ceased to
be surprised that other people
could actually love
someone like him through Jesus Christ.
Rusty's childhood
enthusiasm was a breath of fresh air to Bob,
who came to realize
how much he had taken for granted,
especially with regard
to the Love of his family and friends.
Rusty became extremely
bothered by the devastating pain
he had caused the
family and friends of his victim.
Knowing that God had
forgiven him,
he desperately wanted
the forgiveness of those he had wronged.
Then a most significant
thing happened:
the brother of the
woman Rusty had murdered became a Christian.
God had dealt with
him for two years about his need
to forgive his sister's
killer.
Finally, he wrote
Rusty a letter that offered not only forgiveness
but also Love in Christ.
Not long before
his scheduled execution,
this brother and his
wife came to visit Rusty.
Bob was present when
the two men met
and tearfully embraced
like long-lost brothers finally reunited.
Rusty's senseless
crime ten years earlier
had constructed an
enormous barrier between himself and the brother. The Love of Christ obliterated
that barrier
and enabled both men
to realize that,
because of Him,
they truly were brothers
reunited on that day.
It was a lesson Bob
would not forget.
Not only did
Rusty teach Bob McAlister how to Love and Forgive;
he also taught him
a powerful lesson about how to die.
As the appointed day
approached,
Rusty exhibited a
calm and assurance like Bob had never seen.
On his final day,
with only hours remaining
before his 1:00 A.M. execution,
Rusty asked McAlister
to read to him from the Bible.
After an hour or so
of listening,
Rusty sat up on the
side of his cot and said,
"You know the only
thing I ever wanted was a home, Pap.
Now I'm going to get
one."
Bob continued
his reading, and after a few minutes
Rusty grew still,
very still.
Thinking he had fallen
asleep,
Bob placed a blanket
over him and closed the Bible.
As he turned to leave
he felt a strong compulsion
to lean and kiss Rusty
on the forehead.
A short time later,
Rusty Welborn was executed for murder.
A woman assisting
Rusty in his last moments
shared this postscript
to his story:
As he was being prepared
for his death, Rusty looked at her and said.
"What
a shame that a man's gotta wait till his last night alive
to be kissed and tucked
in for the very first time."
Does it seem almost unbelievable to you that a convicted killer,
a man who had brutally
murdered an innocent woman
with little or no
thought for consequences,
would mourn the fact
that
As a child
No one kissed him;
No one tucked him in?
That is a Tragedy
This true story was
copied from a book
"From Bad Beginnings
to Happy Endings."
This was a book that
Billy Graham sent out to all that asked for a copy.
I hope this story has
touched your heart too
and that you will
give Love to many others.
