there is a good lesson i learned from my husband about this topic. I remember that once a beggar came to my husband asking for money, my husband ask him if he wanted to work. The beggar said yes. Husband told him: i will give you this money so that you can go and cut your hair and come back to see me. Next day, the beggar appear, he was clean, with his hair cut. Husband told him: i will bring you some clothes tomorrow so you can work, so come tomorrow. Next day, husband brought some old shirts and a pair of shoes and gave them to the beggar. After that, i believe, he hired him.
The beggar was not a beggar anymore.
Sometimes we can do a little bit more, a step ahead, in a constructive way and really change the lives of some people.
I remember once a saw a homeless person at the church, all by himself. Nobody wanted to sit near him. He smelled bad and was dirty. I said to myself: go and sit down near him, letās see if you can do it. I knew that i have to shake his hand when it was time to offer peace to our neighbor, anyway, i did it. I thought: maybe Jesus is inside that homeless person, how am i going to reject him? i shook his hand.
We think we are better than the poor and needy, but we are not. We are arrogant people who forget that one day might be also in those same shoes.
Sorry, if somebody has been annoyed by this post. I just expressing some of my own experiences. Thank you.
What a wonderful story, thanks for sharing and how wonderful that you and your husband were blessed enough to be able to give a poor man a job! Iād particularly like to note the portion I bolded and highlighted, yes exactly! āWhatever you do for the least of your breatheren you do for meā¦ā, Christ was certainly in that homelessman and how wonderful that you were able to recognize him!
We should all always keep this in mind when ādealing withā the poor. Thereās a little⦠I guess saying that we have as Christians we use to humble our selves with respect to sinners:
āBut for the grace of God, there go Iā
Well personally I donāt think that applies only to being a particular type of sinner, it also applies directly to our situation in life. In particular that over which we had no control, the fact that we might have been middle class, upper middle class or perhaps even rich growing up. The fact that we were able to propetuate a certain standard of living in our lives moving forward. The fact that we can afford a nice home, more than one car, perhaps a minivan and maybe even an RV to for family vacations with a multitude of childeren.
These too are graces and blessings which we donāt really deserve, but for some reason we have them and some of our neighbors donāt. The greatest blessing in my life, for which I thank God almighty every day, was the blessing of seeing life for a commoner in a 3rd world country.
I was born in Peru, S. America. I grew up in Detroit MI (suburb of actually⦠anyway), but we visited Peru frequently. Seeing those people, live in that poverty, you must face the basic reality that they
can not work their way out of their situation. It doesnāt matter what effort they put into it, their lot in life was decided, they are going to be poor and struggle and it will be propetuated for years to come.
But in 32 years of life I havenāt known that kind of struggle. Iāve been comfortable, living a nice middle class life in the USA. Iām sure there are many there suffering in Peru which deserve my life far more than I, but I have it and they donāt. We should always keep this in mind when deciding whether or not that ābumb on the cornerā really ādeservesā $5 of my hard earned money, out of my pocket.