A Coincidence
Daily
Encouragement For July 05:
A
Coincidence?
I was very proud of my daughter Emily. At only 9
years old, she had been carefully saving her allowance money all year
and trying to earn extra money by doing small jobs around the
neighborhood. Emily was determined to save enough to buy a
girl's mountain bike, an item for which she'd been longing for. She'd
been faithfully putting her money away since the beginning of
the year.
"How are you doing, honey?" I asked
soon after Thanksgiving. I knew she had hoped to have all the
money she needed by the end of the year. "I have forty-nine
dollars, Daddy," she said. "I'm not sure if I'm going to
make.""You've worked so hard," I said encouragingly.
"Keep it up. But you know that you can have your pick from my
bicycle collection" "Thanks Daddy. But your bikes are so
old." I smiled to myself because I knew she was right. As a
collector of vintage bicycles, all my girls' bikes were
1950's models--not the kind a kid would choose today.
When
the Christmas season arrived, Emily and I went comparison
shopping and she saw several less expensive bikes for which she
thought she'd have to settle. As we left one store, she noticed a
Salvation Army volunteer ringing his bell by a big kettle. "Can
we give them something Daddy?" She asked. "Sorry, I'm out
of change," I replied.
She continued to work hard
all through December; it seemed she might make her goal after all.
Then suddenly one day, she came downstairs to the kitchen and made an
announcement to her mother.
"Mom," she said
hesitantly, "You know all the money I've been saving?" "Yes
dear," smiled my wife Diane. "God told me to give it to the
poor people." Diane knelt down to Emily's level. "That's a
very kind thought
sweetheart. But you've been saving all year.
Maybe you could give some of it." Emily shook her head
vigorously. "God said all."
When we saw how serious
she was, we gave her various suggestions about where she could
contribute. But Emily had received specific instructions, and so one
cold Sunday morning before Christmas, with little fanfare, she handed
her total savings of $58 to a surprised and grateful Salvation
Army
volunteer.
Moved by Emily's selflessness, I
suddenly noticed that a local car dealer was collecting used bicycles
to refurbish and give to poor children for Christmas. And I
realized that if my nine-year-old daughter could give away all
her money, I could certainly give up one bike from my collection.
As
I picked up a shiny but old-fashioned kid's bike from the line in the
garage, it seemed as if a second bicycle in the line took on a glow.
Should I give a second bike? No, certainly this one would be enough.
But as I got to my car, I couldn't shake the feeling that I should
donate that second bike as well. If Emily could follow Heavenly
instructions, I decided I could too. I turned back and loaded the
second bike into the trunk, then took off to the dealership.
When
I delivered the bikes, the car dealer thanked me and said,
"You're making two kids very happy, Mr. Koper. And here are
your tickets." "Tickets?" I asked. "Yes. For each
bike donated, we're giving away one
chance to win a brand
new man's 21-speed mountain bike from a local bike shop. So here
are your tickets for two chances."
Why wasn't I surprised
when that second ticket won the bike? "I can't believe you
won!" Laughed Diane, delighted. "I didn't," I said.
"It's pretty clear that Emily did."
And why
wasn't I surprised when the bike dealer happily substituted
a gorgeous new girls mountain bike for the man's bike
advertised?
Coincidence? Maybe. I like to think it was God's
way of rewarding a little girl for a sacrifice beyond her
years--while giving her dad a lesson in charity and the power of the
Lord.
By: Ed Koper
In : Obedience
Tags: a coincidence

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