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The story is
told of a man who was walking across the road when he was hit by a car.
The impact knocked him on his head which caused him to be in a coma for
two days before he finally regained consciousness. When he opened
his eyes, his loving wife was there beside his bed. He held her
hand and said to her:
"You know, Judy, you've always been right by my side. When I was a
struggling college student, I failed again and again. But you were
always there with me, encouraging me to go on trying."
She squeezed his hands as he continued: "And when I got out of school
and went for all of my interviews and failed to get any of the jobs, you
stayed right there with me, cutting out more classifieds for me to check
on..."
"Then I started work at this little firm and finally got the chance to
handle a big contract. But I blew it because of one little mistake, and
yet you were there beside me all the way. Then I finally got another job
after being laid off for sometime. But I never seemed to be promoted and
my hard work was never recognized. And so, I remained in the same
position from the day I joined the company until now... And, through it
all, you were right there by my side."
Her eyes brimmed with tears as she listened to her husband: "And now
I've been in this accident and when I woke up, you're the first person I
see. There's something I'd really like to say to you...."
She flung herself on the bed to hug her husband, sobbing with emotion.
He said, "Judy, I think you're just plain bad luck!"
Our attitude makes a big difference in how we see things, doesn't it?
As the saying goes, we can either see the glass as half full or half
empty. We can either appreciate the good during our times of adversity
(the faithfulness of God, greater opportunities to develop our faith,
the blessing of good friends to see us through it) or we can moan and
complain about our "bad luck."
The apostle Paul is a great example of someone with a marvelous
attitude. Through all of his trials, God had been right there by his
side. But never once did he blame God for his misfortune. Instead,
listen to the positive attitude in Paul's words as he sat imprisoned for
preaching the gospel:
"But I want you to
know, brethren,
that the things which happened to me
have actually turned out
for the furtherance of the gospel."
(Phil. 1:12)
No moaning, no
complaining. Just a marvelous attitude that brought joy to his life.
May it serve as
an example to you today.

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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