Soprano soloist Janet Paschal has long been one of the most popular members of the Gaither Homecoming Tour. She was the tour’s blonde-headed Barbie Doll, complete with slender build and perfect features, along with an appealing singing style that captivated audiences around the world.
Two years ago, it looked as if all that might be coming to an end when she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
Last year she rejoined the tour. Her theme song has become Bill and Gloria Gaither’s “It Won’t Rain Always,” and her experience of fighting and conquering the dreaded disease has given her a new appreciation for rainbows.
Paschal’s career began as a member of the LeFevres, which became the Rex Nelon Singers after the last LeFevre retired. From there she became a member of the Jimmy Swaggart evangelistic team, then launched her own solo career. She has been on the Homecoming videos since the early days.
She seemed to have everything going for her: Numerous industry honors, a midlife newlywed, a growing fan base and several best-selling gospel songs. Then, six years into her marriage, came the bad news.
Paschal recounted her experience in detail at a recent Gaither Homecoming appearance in Fort Wayne, telling how she faced a series of the toughest kind of chemotherapy, known as Red Devil chemo.
“I finished the chemo, then had a simple lumpectomy, and I was told it would be over,” she told the audience. That was not to be. The chemo had not worked, she was told, and another kind of chemo would have to be tried.
“My hair was just growing back in from the first chemo, and it was about an inch long,” Paschal recalled. “I asked the doctor, ‘Will I lose my hair again?’ He said, ‘Yes, but it will grow back, and it will be blonde.’” After the audience laughed, she added, “Eventually.”
Taking it day by day, treatment by treatment, Paschal came through the second series successfully. This time she was given a clean bill of health.
“Three months ago, I had my last checkup, she said. “They told me as far as they can tell, I’m now 100 percent cancer free.”
A portion of the proceeds from her most recent project, “Sounds Like Sunday,” are being donated to the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.
No one is a stranger to cancer these days. The Gaither Homecoming series has lost several artists, including Hovie Lister, Danny Gaither, Roger Bennett, Glen Payne and Bob Cain, to cancer. And anyone who has experienced the disease knows it can come back even when previous treatment has been successful.
Given a new lease on life, Janet Paschal is taking advantage of it, singing with conviction as she voices the song:
And it won’t rain always,
The clouds will soon be gone,
The sun that they’ve been hiding
Has been there all along,
And it won’t rain always,
God’s promises are true.
The Son’s gonna shine in His own good time,
And he will see you through.
-- William J. and Gloria Gaither
and C. Aaron Wilburn
-----
While we’re talking about Bill and Gloria Gaither, they caught up to us earlier this month as far as the number of grandchildren. William Benjamin Gaither II was born to Benjy and Melody Gaither, giving the proud grandparents a total of six.
A Gaither Web site release says the boy will be called Liam. OK, I guess besides the fact it’s one of those “in” monikers these days, they’ve used up all the other designations. His father goes by Benjy, and Grandpa is Bill. And Benjy’s sister Suzanne Jennings already has a Will.
(Jim Bailey’s column appears on Sunday. He can be reached by e-mail at jameshenrybailey@earthlink.net.)
Columns
JIM BAILEY: For Janet Paschal, life is a rainbow
- Columns
-
-
Susan Miller: Prepare a more powerful proposal
The word “proposal” can convey myriad meanings.
-
Primus Mootry: Connect the dots to get 'big picture'
Most people remember those “connect-the-dots” puzzles children use in most elementary schools. The task is to draw lines connecting a series of numbered dots to form an image. If the numbers are followed, it’s impossible for them to fail to get the picture.
-
Jim Bailey: Ride the almighty bus or leave the driving to us?
Our oldest grandson, Ronnie, has started second grade. His mommy takes him to school every morning and picks him up in the afternoon. That’s because no school bus goes through his neighborhood.
-
THB honors soldiers who died in Iraq
Like most media outlets, ours has been guilty at times of paying too little attention to the U.S. military conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. For nearly a decade, the United States has been involved in major military operations in that part of the world.
-
Osteen preaches positive outlook for Anderson
For a little over a year I have been hosting a radio show on WHBU 1240-AM that I intended to use as a vehicle to simply share a vision for success. The goal is to interview local and national business owners about their success stories.
-
Rodney Richey: It was a time for personal growth
Fred” had been with me for almost 25 years. We were tight, and Fred never left my side. Through victories and tragedies, I always knew Fred would be there.
One day in 2007, however, it became clear: Fred had to be cut out of my life. -
Dennis Lanane: Seniors, don't be victims
Justice for Seniors will be the topic of September’s Madison County Triad meeting.
-
Scott Hutcheson: Enjoy fruits of summer before they're gone
Weathercasters say 2010 has been the hottest summer on record, and I believe it. It also marks another milestone for me: I started bicycling.
-
Jim Bailey: AHS identity, tradition come full circle
So far, so good. Public high schools in Anderson have gone from one to two to three, then two again, now back to one.
-
Maleah Stringer: Coal warms up after chilly start
Coal is a 9-month-old black lab with huge feet and soulful eyes. When he came to Animal Care and Control six weeks ago he had been so abused he stayed curled up in a ball.
- More Columns Headlines
-






