TES:His Nickname is Thunder  (Andre Thorton)

   His Nickname is Thunder, but even in Cleveland, that is a misnomer.
The only thing outwardly intimidating about Andre Thornton is is size.
He looks like a guy who could snap a bat in half with his bare hands.

   But don't be misled by appearances. His voice is tissue paper soft,
his manner extra polite. Andre Thornton is a deeply religious man who
has found in baseball a vehicle to convey a very special message, even
while he's terrorizing American league pitchers. That is why the story
of yet another remarkable comeback by the 32 year old first
baseman-designated hitter is unique.

   Through his 16 year professional baseball career, Andre Thornton has
survived frustration, rejection and the ultimate tragedy of losing his
wife and a child in a 1977 car accident. For two recent seasons, the
6-foot-2, 205 pound Thornton was in virtual hibernation, chiefly
because of injury. But now he is back. In fact, he's on a rampage -
Larry Whiteside, Sportswriter for the Boston Globe.

   TRAGEDY ... TRIUMPH

   Obviously, power hitter Andre Thornton has endured much more than
baseball injuries or fickle batting slumps. His most painful experience
began on an icy night in October 1977 when the van he was driving
skidded off the Pennsylvania turnpike. Thornton's wife and 3 year old
daughter were killed, leaving only Andre and his 4 year old son as
survivors.

   "There is no doubt that the accident was like tearing the insides
right out of me," says Thornton. "My first wife and I both loved the
Lord. She was a wonderful woman. We spent seven years together. I felt
God's presence right there on that highway in Pennsylvania I felt God's
peace. Now I'm thankful that I knew Him years before, that I didn't
have to come to that point in my life and see my wife and child lying
on a highway and have no hope at all ... [Hope] is the essence of life."

   That tragedy was the true test of Andre's faith. It proved that his
outer composure was more than just a mask - it was the result of a deep
inner stability, a firm spiritual foundation. That's why he received
the 1978 Danny Thompson award for "exemplary Christian spirit in
baseball," and the 9th annual Roberto Clemente Award for his
"sportsmanship, character, community involvement and contributions to
team and baseball."

   HOW IT ALL BEGAN

   But Thornton remembers how it all began in 1968, just months after
entering professional baseball. He had just joined the National Guard
and was alone in his room. "It was one of the loneliest times of my
life," he says. "Everything seemed to be so confusing, and questions
about life were boiling inside of me. It wasn't money I was looking
for. It wasn't clothes or houses or a profession that had prestige. I
wanted to know what life was all about, why I was here, where I was
going. The questions were demanding an answer. Here I was, experiencing
all the things that most people want, but the world could not give the
true answers that I needed so urgently."

   It was then that Thornton started to read the small tract that his
mother had given him earlier. For the first time Thornton understood
Christ's words: "I came that they might have life, and might have it
abundantly." (John 10:10). "I knew that was what I was looking for,"
Thornton says, "life, abundant life. Here was the answer to my
question. First God had a purpose for my life. He created me in order
that I might enjoy Him and serve Him. Second, when I died, I could know
that I would have eternal life with God."

   Thornton realized that he needed a new spiritual life. "The Bible
told me that 'all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God'
(Romans 3:23), and that 'the wages of sin is death' (Romans 6:23) which
means spiritual separation from God." He understood that his sin was
the reason why he wasn't experiencing abundant life. "Then I read that
there was a solution to this problem," Thornton recalls. "The key ...
was my believing in God's Son, Jesus Christ. The Bible says, 'God has
given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. He who has the Son
has the life; he who does not have the Son of God does not have the
life. These things [were] written to you who believe in the name of the
Son of God, in order that you may KNOW that you have eternal life' (I
John 5:11-13). Believing that Jesus Christ had died on the cross to pay
the penalty for man's sin, and knowing that He had risen from the dead,
Thornton got down on his knees and asked Christ to be his personal
Saviour.

   AN INFINITE RESOURCE

   "It's been more than ten years since I invited Jesus Christ to come
into my life, to forgive me of my sins, and to change my life. And I
have found Him to be the source of joy, peace, love - of all things I
ever wanted in life. There have been trials and tragedies, but God has
brought me through all of them."

   Sometimes we experience problems and trials that we can't
understand. I've learned that there is one thing I can trust and that
is what God says in His Word. That comforts me and reassures me, even
when all of my questions aren't answered."

   That confident assurance enables Andre Thornton to remain calm
through all the circumstances of life. He has found a stability in God,
and inner foundation which holds him up when life threatens to
overwhelm him. He keeps swinging at life's tough pitches.
