A rather bedraggled man, who did
not seem to be our most prosperous citizen, was laboriously counting out coins
to pay for his prescription. Quarters, dimes, nickels and a few pennies littered
the counter as he fumbled in his pockets for more. A few dollar bills were piled
up untidily on one side.

Tanya, who was serving him,
waited patiently. I wasn’t in a hurry, so I—uncharacteristically—waited
patiently, too. After a while the man realized he didn’t have enough, and went
off to find his wife. She arrived with a few more crumpled dollar bills, but
they were still $2.00 short.
"That’s all we have," she said.
"We had to buy gas to get here."
They were very embarrassed, but
Tanya quickly put them at ease.
"Don’t worry. I’ll cover it,"
she said. She went to get her purse and came back with two dollars, put the
money in the till and gave them their medicine.
"I’ll pay you next time we are
in town," promised the lady.
|
"It was just a very simple, spontaneous act
of kindness, but suddenly the day seemed brighter. Doing good has that
effect." |
"Forget it. Just pass it on,"
said Tanya.
After the couple had left, I
said, "That was a very kind thing to do."
"Well, I do it when I can," she
replied. "I don’t always have extra, but when I do, why not help?"
It was just a very simple,
spontaneous act of kindness, but suddenly the day seemed brighter. Even if we
are not affected personally, doing good has that effect.
I drove home, to the news of the
massacre at Virginia Tech. A disturbed young man had cut off the lives of more
than 30 people, and had cast a pall of grief over the entire nation. Even if we
are not affected personally, an act of violence and anger of this magnitude
leaves us disturbed and depressed.
Meanwhile, in a little town in
rural Indiana, a kind shop assistant had made her part of the world a better
place. But surely, such a small incident would be swamped by the great evil.
But that is not so. In Matthew
25, Jesus tells us that he feels it personally, and will remember it whenever we
help those less fortunate then ourselves: "I tell you the truth, whatever you
did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me" (Matthew
25:40).
At the end of the book of
Revelation, Jesus promises that there will be a time when "He will wipe every
tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain,
for the old order of things has passed away" (Revelation 21:4).
As I write this, the massacre at
Virginia Tech is dominating the news, and will for several more days. The evil
consequences of that one terrible act of cruelty, for now, far outweigh on any
scale some simple and tiny act of goodness done in a corner. But in the eternal
scheme of things—from the point of view of our eternal life in God’s kingdom of
love and joy—it is the acts of kindness, not cruelty, that will be remembered.
When all is said and done, I
think that acts of goodness, such as Tanya did, will have made the bigger and
longer-lasting impact. •
copyright 2007
Photo: iStockphoto.com