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Jewish poet and
storyteller
Noah ben Shea tells this parable:
After dinner, the
children turned to Jacob and asked if he would
tell them a story. "A story about what?" asked Jacob.
"About a giant," squealed the children.
Jacob smiled, leaned against the warm stones at the side of the
fireplace, and his voice turned softly inward.
"Once there was a boy who asked his father to take him to see the
great parade that passed through the village. The father,
remembering the parade from when he was a boy, quickly agreed, and the
next morning the boy and his father set out together.
"As they approached the parade route, people started to push in
from all sides, and the crowd grew thick. When the people along the
way became almost a wall; the father lifted his son and placed him on his
shoulders.
"Soon the parade began and as it passed, the boy kept telling his father
how wonderful it was and how spectacular were the colors and images.
The boy, in fact, grew so prideful of what he saw that he mocked those who
saw less saying, even to his father, 'If only you could see what I see.'"
"But," said Jacob staring straight in the faces of the children, "what the
boy did not look at was why he could see. What the boy forgot was
that once his father, too, could see."
Then as if he had finished the story, Jacob stopped speaking.
"Is that it?" said a disappointed girl. "We thought you were going
to tell us a story about a giant."
"But I did," said Jacob. "I told you a story about a boy who could
have been a giant."
"How?" squealed the children.
"A giant," said Jacob, "is anyone who remembers we are all sitting on
someone else's shoulders."
"And what does it make us if we don't remember?" asked the boy.
"A burden," answered Jacob.
We all have been richly blessed by those who have gone before us. As a
family member, I recognize that I have grandparents and parents who
through much sacrifice and effort have given me the opportunity to do
things that they couldn't even dream of doing. As a citizen of the United
States, I owe a great debt of gratitude to those who gave their lives for
the freedoms I am able to enjoy. And as a Christian, I look back on so
many others (both in recent years and in biblical times) who laid a
foundation of faith that gives me the encouragement to draw closer to God
myself. I pray that I will never forget that I am sitting on someone
else's shoulders.
" And others were
tortured, not accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better
resurrection. Still others had trial of mockings and scourgings,
yes, and of chains and imprisonment. They were stoned, they were
sawn in two, were tempted, were slain with
the sword. They wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins, being
destitute, afflicted,
tormented -- of whom the world was not worthy.....Therefore we also, since
we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses,
let us lay aside every weight, and the sin
which so easily ensnares us, and let us run
with endurance the race that is set before
us." (Heb.11:35b-38a;12:1).
Are you a giant......or a burden?

In Jesus'
name, Amen.

 

This weeks
thought and comments comes from
Thought-for-the-day

a daily
devotional which you can
receive daily online by subscribing at:
join-thought-for-the-day@xc.org
It is created by
Alan Smith,
Boone Church of Christ,
Boone, NC

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