Get your hanky ready,
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It was only four days before Christmas.
The spirit of the season
hadn't yet caught up with me, even though cars packed the parking lot
of our
local discount store. Inside the store, it was worse. Shopping
carts and
last minute shoppers jammed the aisles.
Why did I come today? I wondered.
My feet ached almost as much
as my head. My list contained names of several people who claimed
they
wanted nothing but I knew their feelings would be hurt if I didn't
buy them
anything. Buying for someone who had everything and deploring the high
cost
of items, I considered gift-buying anything but fun.
Hurriedly, I filled my shopping
cart with last minute items and
proceeded to the long checkout lines. I picked the shortest but
it looked
as if it would mean at least a 20 minute wait.
In front of me were two small
children - a boy of about 5 and a
younger girl. The boy wore a ragged coat. Enormously
large, tattered
tennis shoes jutted far
out in front of his much too short jeans. He clutched several
crumpled
dollar bills in his grimy hands.
The girl's clothing resembled
her brother's. Her head was a matted
mass of curly hair. Reminders of an evening meal showed on her
small face.
She carried a beautiful pair of shiny, gold house slippers. As the
Christmas music sounded in the store's stereo system, the girl hummed
along,
off-key but happily.
When we finally approached the
checkout register, the girl carefully
placed the shoes on the counter. She treated them as though
they were a
treasure.
The clerk rang up the bill.
"That will be $6.09," she said. The boy
laid his crumpled dollars atop the stand while he searched his
pockets. He
finally came up with $3.12. "I guess we will have
to put them back, " he
bravely said. "We will come back some other time, maybe tomorrow."
With that statement, a soft sob
broke from the little girl. "But
Jesus would have loved these shoes, " she cried.
"Well, we'll go home and work
some more. Don't cry. We'll come
back," he said.
Quickly I handed $3.00 to the
cashier. These children had waited in
line for a long time. And, after all, it was Christmas.
Suddenly a pair of arms came around
me and a small voice said,
"Thank you lady."
"What did you mean when you said
Jesus would like the shoes?" I
asked.
The boy answered, "Our mommy is
sick and going to heaven. Daddy said
she might go before Christmas to be with Jesus."
The girl spoke, "My Sunday School
teacher said the streets in heaven
are shiny gold, just like these shoes. Won't mommy be beautiful
walking on
those streets to match these shoes?"
My eyes flooded as I looked into
her tear streaked face. "Yes" I
answered, " I am sure she will."
Silently I thanked God for using
these children to remind me of the
true spirit of giving."
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