Boxcar wall
July 30, 2003 | 12:00am
I have compassion on the multitude, because they have now continued with Me three days and have nothing to eat. Mark 8:2
I ate breakfast the other day with a man who 60 years ago sold newspapers and shined shoes on the streets of downtown Boise, Idaho. He told me about his life in those days and how much things have changed.
"Whats changed the most?" I asked him. "People," he said. "They dont care anymore."
As a case in point, he told me about his mother, who often fed hungry men who came to her house. Every day she prepared food for her family and then made several more meals because she knew homeless travelers would start to show up around mealtime. She had deep compassion for those who were in need. Once she asked a man how he happened to find his way to her door. "Your address is written on all the boxcar walls," he said.
I wish that type of compliment could be said of all of us. In the feeding of the multitude, Jesus gave us an example of what it means to care about the physical and spiritual needs of others (Mark 8:1-9).
It would be wonderful if our homes were known as places where hungry people could find bread. But more than that, we need to pray that our homes will be known as places where spiritual hungry men, women, and children will be loved, listened to, and given the Bread of life. David H. Roper
Thousands of weary ones need
consolation,
Souls of the hungry are crying for bread;
Many have never yet heard of salvation,
Many are waiting by you to be fed.
Anon.
READ: Mark 8:1-9
Evangelism is nothing more
than one beggar telling another beggar where to find bread.
I ate breakfast the other day with a man who 60 years ago sold newspapers and shined shoes on the streets of downtown Boise, Idaho. He told me about his life in those days and how much things have changed.
"Whats changed the most?" I asked him. "People," he said. "They dont care anymore."
As a case in point, he told me about his mother, who often fed hungry men who came to her house. Every day she prepared food for her family and then made several more meals because she knew homeless travelers would start to show up around mealtime. She had deep compassion for those who were in need. Once she asked a man how he happened to find his way to her door. "Your address is written on all the boxcar walls," he said.
I wish that type of compliment could be said of all of us. In the feeding of the multitude, Jesus gave us an example of what it means to care about the physical and spiritual needs of others (Mark 8:1-9).
It would be wonderful if our homes were known as places where hungry people could find bread. But more than that, we need to pray that our homes will be known as places where spiritual hungry men, women, and children will be loved, listened to, and given the Bread of life. David H. Roper
Thousands of weary ones need
consolation,
Souls of the hungry are crying for bread;
Many have never yet heard of salvation,
Many are waiting by you to be fed.
Anon.
READ: Mark 8:1-9
Evangelism is nothing more
than one beggar telling another beggar where to find bread.
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