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I remember reading a story not long ago about the "elevated" in
Chicago--a train that when it comes into the downtown, it's on a high track. A
young man was riding that train day after day as a commuter. And as the train
slowed up for the station where he got off, he could look through an open
curtain into a room of a building and see a woman lying in a bed.
She was there day after day, for a long time, obviously quite ill. He began
to get interested in her since he saw her every day. Finally he determined to
find out her name. He discovered her address, and he wrote her a card, assuring
her that he was praying for her recovery. He signed it: "The young man on
the elevated."
A few weeks later, he pulled into the station, and he looked through that
window and the bed was empty. Instead there was a great huge sign: GOD BLESS
YOU, MY FRIEND ON THE ELEVATED!
William Hinson, "A Breath of Fresh Air"
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I've seen a picture of the pilgrims at the first American Thanksgiving. Do you
know half of their number died the first year they were here? They had a hard
time, and it was a cold winter. Dangers lurked everywhere, but those pilgrims
didn't think of the death of their loved ones and the dangers and the cold
weather. They didn't let that obscure the blessings of God. They went together,
and they thanked the Lord for the blessings they had received.
Sometimes we need to put down our assets
alongside our losses. Everyone of us is more blessed than we are hurt.
Charles Allen, "Lessons from the Lepers,"
Preaching Today |