The Power of Children
A four-year-old child's neighbor was an
elderly gentleman who had recently lost his wife. Upon seeing the man cry the
little boy went into the old gentleman's yard, climbed onto his lap, and just
sat there. When his mother asked him what he
had said to the neighbor, the little boy
just said, 'Nothing, I just helped him cry.'
Teacher Debbie Moon's first graders were discussing a picture
of a family. One little boy in the picture had a different hair color than
the other members. One of her students suggested that he was adopted. A little girl said, 'I know all about adoption, I was
adopted.' 'What does it
mean to be adopted?' asked another child. 'It means', said the girl, 'that you
grew in your mommy's heart instead of her tummy!'
On my way home one day, I stopped to watch a Little League
baseball game that was being played in a park near my home. As I sat down
behind the bench on the first-base line, I asked one of the boys what the score
was.
'We're behind 14 to nothing,' he answered with a
smile. 'Really,' I said. 'I have to say
you don't look very discouraged.' 'Discouraged?' the boy asked with a puzzled look on his
face. 'Why should we be discouraged? We haven't been up to bat yet.'
Whenever I'm disappointed with my spot in life, I stop
and think about little Jamie Scott. Jamie was trying out
for a part in the school play. His mother told me that he'd set his heart
on being in it, though she feared he would not be chosen. On the day the parts were awarded, I went with her to
collect him after school. Jamie rushed up to her, eyes shining with pride and
excitement. 'Guess what, Mom,' he shouted, and then said those words that
will remain a lesson to me. 'I've been
chosen to clap and cheer.'
Here is an eyewitness account from New York City, on a
cold day in December, some years ago. A
little boy, about 10-years-old, was standing before a shoe store on the
roadway, barefooted, peering through the window, and shivering with cold. A lady approached the young boy and said, 'My, but
you're in such deep thought staring in that window!' 'I was asking God to
give me a pair of shoes,' was the boy's reply. The lady took
him by the hand, went into the store, and asked the clerk to get half a dozen
pairs of socks for the boy. She then asked if he could give her a basin of
water and a towel. He quickly brought them to her. She took the little fellow to the back part of the
store and, removing her gloves, knelt down, washed his little feet, and dried
them with the towel. By this time, the
clerk had returned with the socks. Placing a pair upon the boy's feet, she purchased him a pair of
shoes. She tied up the remaining pairs of
socks and gave them to him. She patted
him on the head and said, 'No doubt, you will be more comfortable now.' As she turned to go, the astonished kid caught her by
the hand, and looking up into her face, with tears in his eyes, asked her.
'Are you God's wife?'
Sent in by Gayla Vick from Medford,
Oregon.