Dedication Speech - Tupelo Christian Prep School
DEDICATION OF JAKE MILLS BUILDING
TUPELO CHRISTIAN PREPARATORY SCHOOL
TRIBUTE GIVEN BY GRANT FOX
THURSDAY, MAY 3, 2007
1:30 P.M.
My name is Grant Fox and I have been given the distinct honor and
privilege of making a few remarks about my dear friend, Jake
Mills. I want to thank the Board of Directors, including Dr.
David Talton and the Administration, for allowing me the privilege of
visiting with you for a few minutes about Jake and the impact that he
had on so many. Mississippi lost a
legend April 17, 1999, when Jake Mills died at the age of 63.
Businessman, lay speaker, political power broker, writer, College Board
member, philanthropist and, most importantly, spiritual giant, Jake cut
an impressive path across the culture of America.
Although he never ran for office, he was one of the most dynamic
political figures in the history of our state. Charles Lowery,
senior pastor of Hoffmantown Church in Albuquerque, N. M.
Hoffmantown Church would be one of the largest protestant churches in
the West. Dr. Lowery wrote following Jake Mills death: “Jake was
an uncommon leader who led with common sense. He loved deeply and
laughed hard. He was the king of one-liners and the master of the
bottom line.... His legacy will live on in my heart until I, too,
depart. Until then, I thank God that Jake was my friend.”
Since Jake’s death I have had so many men approach me and describe
him as their best friend, brother, father. For me, he was indeed
a second father, but he was also my mentor, meaning he was someone who
I could attempt to model my life after. It was Dan Fogleberg who
wrote the great song Leader of the Band, that said “my life has been a
poor attempt to imitate the man.”
Jake was reared, as he would say, out from Kossuth, Mississippi in
rural Alcorn County. He was the son of an educator and coach and
played on a high school State Championship Basketball team. He
later attended Mississippi College where he met his wife, the former
Jane Jennings, of Cotton Plant, Mississippi in Tippah County. My
wife Sara and I are so pleased to be here today with Jane, who is our
dear friend.
Many of you of course know that Jake went on to a successful career
in business as the owner of J. P. Mills Oil Company, which owned
a number of Shell Gas Stations. What you may not know is
that Jake and Jane were both teachers and both had a passion for
education. Jake is fondly remembered as a teacher and coach in
Brandon, Mississippi, just outside of Jackson. Jake was later
appointed by Governor Kirk Fordice to the Board of Trustees of the
Institutions of Higher Learning. The College Board as we know is
one of the most sought after appointments in our state.
These Board Members oversee our entire university system and all the
individuals who hire the Presidents of our universities.
Jake was a leader on the College Board. He was greatly admired by
his fellow board members, both those appointed by Democratic Governors
and well as Republican Governors, and the IHL staff members were very
fond of him as well.
There are so many little things that I want to convey today about Jake:
He was a tall, handsome and athletic man who could instantly command
the attention of a room that he entered. He was a great orator
who had a rich, booming wonderful voice that was pleasing to listen
to. He was extremely funny and a great story teller which I
greatly admired. I had the privilege of seeing him speak on
occasion, mainly to Christian Men’s Groups. He was involved in
the Christian Ministry called “Ministry to Men” based out of
Memphis. Sara and I still laugh about Jake’s discussion of his
conversion as an adult and how he and Jane were at the time members of
a conservative Presbyterian Church, a PCA congregation, and Jake under
conviction walked the aisle, making a profession of faith. Jake
would tell the crowd “I found out later you weren’t suppose to do that
in that church.”
To be very frank with you, there are certain individuals who you meet
in life and those individuals are uniformly admired in the
community. If the truth be known, we all watch these people who
really want to be like them. Jake Mills was one of these
individuals. As an individual he was a role model. And as a
married couple, he and Jane were role models to so many young families.
He dearly loved Jane. It was a relationship that was a deep on a
spiritual level as well as an emotional and intellectual level.
It was the type of rare, special marriage that a couple can only have
when their lives center around service to our LORD. Jake retired
early from his business career in order to be with Jane and travel the
country speaking and counseling. What a blessing that they did
this and had those great years together prior to his death.
He loved his sons, Steve and Chris and his grandchildren very
much. I recall fondly his loving relationship with his grandson,
Josh, and how Jake admired Josh’s sweet spirit. I remember when
his grandson, Jennings, somehow shattered the window of Jane’s
BMW. Jake shouted “Jennings get into the house.” Jennings
was later found whimpering in the back of a closet in Jake and Jane’s
house. Jake just hugged him and loved him as a grandfather should
and told him it was okay.
I could go on and on about what a radiant person Jake was. I
cannot tell you how many men have told me of the profound impact that
Jake’s death had on them. It was just one of those losses that
was so difficult to overcome because he was larger than life and meant
so much to so many people.
We are here today because Jake and Jane donated this land where this
institution stands, it should be noted that by the time this site was
purchased Chris Mills had become the successor owner of JP Mills Oil
Company and he too assisted with the purchase of this property.
He would not want recognition, but it is entirely appropriate that I
mention his contribution as well as the entire Mills Family.
He had a vision that Evangelical Christians could come together in
North Mississippi to educate their children. Jake knew that the
spiritual training of boys and girls is an every day activity, not one
hour of Sunday School time on Sunday. Rather than being educated
by government schools he envisioned an environment where you would
aggressively be exposed to a Christian world view. A. W. Tozer in
his book, The Knowledge of the Holy begins “What comes into our minds
when we think about GOD is the most important thing about us.”
Jake Mills understood what Tozer was saying.
I want to make a few points for you to try to remember about Jake
and his life, a few things for you to take away from here other than
the fact that this building is being named for him and that he was
instrumental in the founding of this institution.
1. While he was extremely effective in the circles of the
powerful, it was his heart for the man on the street that made him
unique. I want you to remember that Jake Mills was the same when
he was with the Governor of the State as he was with the man who was
painting his house, or someone who worked on line at a furniture
factory or someone that he might have encountered at a country
store. He understood that as Christians we are called to invest
time and relationships and to minister to those around us. It is
written in Matthew, “For whosoever exalts himself will be
humbled. Whosoever humbles himself will be exalted.” Jake
took to heart those words and reached out to so many around him.
I know that for a fact because I have met a number of those people and
many of them have shared with me the impact that Jake had on their
lives. In short, Jake had a correct view of self which allowed
him to appreciate the perfect nature and character of GOD.
It is impossible to be humble when one’s view of GOD is not proper.
2. Jake was very opinionated and outspoken. He was a
vigorous debater of positions he believed in. The point I want
you to remember about Jake’s passionate advocacy for so many issues was
that he had the ability to disagree with people without being
disagreeable. Even those who completely disagreed with him held
him in high esteem and many of them loved him. I submit to you
that that is an extremely rare quality in our culture. For
example, when Jake died, Danny McKenzie from here in Tupelo, widely to
be considered one of the most liberal newspaper columnists in our
State, wrote an article about Jake and how he admired him and admired
how he stared death in the face with cancer and never complained.
It is a great tribute to Jake that Danny as well as other individuals
who disagreed with him on so many positions held him in such high
regard.
3. Finally, I want you to remember that Jake was totally committed
to the cause of Christ. And that he realized that commitment was
born out not just in words, but in his actions. The Book of
Matthew says “A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, and a bad tree cannot
bear good fruit. Thus, by their fruit you will recognize
them.” From his financial generosity to institutions like this,
to the investment of time that he and Jane made in the lives of so
many. I cannot tell you how many individuals have told Sara and
me of being exposed to Christ through bible studies hosted by Jake and
Jane. Others and there are many, many couples, have shared of
marriage counseling that Jake and Jane did with them. There were
many, many marriages saved and souls won as a result of these tangible
investments in the lives of others. How many of us can say that
we are that committed to our LORD? Do we really invest those
amounts of time in teaching, speaking, counseling others and making a
difference in others’ lives? Jake and Jane would drive around the
country speaking. Jake would speak to these audiences at the
Minister to Men Conferences. How many couples in their retirement
years undertake that type of investments in others? Jake knew
that from the time we are born in front of us is eternity and when you
put eternity on a line, our lives are just a dot on that line
throughout eternity. He was determined to use his time on this
earth to make a difference for CHRIST, to win souls for HIS kingdom.
It is written in Hebrews “Holiness, without which no man shall see
the LORD.” Jake Mills knew that our faith and our salvation is
not cheap and easy and trite. That living for CHRIST was a very
serious matter, contrary to what is taught today in many evangelical
circles. I want to close with the quote from the book, Holiness
by Bishop J. C. Ryle which was written in the 1800s. Bishop Ryle
wrote “Holiness is the habit of being of one mind with GOD according as
we find HIS mind described in the Scripture. It is the habit of
agreeing in GOD’S judgment, hating what HE hates, loving what HE loves
and measuring everything in this world by the standard of HIS
WORD. He who most entirely agrees with GOD is the most holy man.”
It is a privilege today to report to you that more importantly than all
of Jake Mills’ accomplishments, that he lived a sanctified and holy
life. As he fought his battle with cancer, I am certain that he
was sad that he would miss Jane, Steve, Chris and his grandchildren,
but he knew that there is no greater sweetness than to be in Glory with
our LORD. To come into the presence of a GOD who dwells in a high
and lofty place, whose character is not only omnipotent, but
omniscient and immutable. I thank GOD for Jake Mills and the life
he lived.
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