"WHAT HAVE WE DONE FOR YOU LATELY"
by Perry Newton
Many people have had the experience of helping some unfortunate soul in many ways over a period of time only to have them turn at the last with the retort, "But what have you done for me today?"
Deep in the heart of every person is the yearning to be accepted, to be loved and a feeling that one is something to somebody. But people do not express appreciation very much. Most are like the nine lepers Jesus healed who failed to turn back to thank him. These just go out and forget you.
Samuel Leibwitz, a great criminal lawyer, saved 78 persons from the electric chair, yet not one of the 78 ever bothered to send him a word of thanks. Art King had a radio program called Job Center of the Air. He got good jobs for 2,500 people, yet only 10 every bothered to thank him.
In the home, husband and wife often fail to make known to their loved ones the sea of gratitude that wells up in the heart . . . the great need for each other. A country doctor told of a patient, a rancher's wife whose husband was strong and taciturn, little given to expressing his feelings. The woman, always frail, suffered a ruptured appendix and was rushed to the hospital where she steadily grew weaker. The doctor tried to challenge her to greater effort by saying, "I thought you would try to be strong like John." To which she replied, "John is so strong that he doesn't need anyone."
That night the doctor told John he didn't think his wife wanted to get well. "She's got to get well," said John. "Would another transfusion help?"
The rancher's blood proved to be the same type as his wife's and the doctor arranged a direct transfusion. As John lay there, his blood flowing into his wife's veins, he said, "I am going to make you well." "Why?" she said, her eyes closed. "Because I need you," was the simple answer.
There was a pause, then her pulse quickened. Her eyes opened and she slowly turned her head to say, "You never told me before." Writing of the incident later, the doctor said, "It wasn't the transfusion but what went with it that made the difference between death and life."
The truth of this incident applies to all of us. Being human we need to face the unalterable fact that at any instant it might be too late to say the things we really feel but put off saying. So it is with spiritual needs. One writer put it this way, "God has promised forgiveness to your repentance, but He has not promised tomorrow to your procrastination.
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PERCEPTIONS
""Cut Off From The Power Source"
by Monroe Hawley
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
All of us have experienced a power outage from time to time. A power outage makes us aware of just how dependent we are on electrical energy. Our lives have to be totally redirected when we lose power. The same thing is true when we lose contact with our spiritual power sources. You can read more about this challenge
at
http://www.allaboutfamilies.org/sh/percep200044.html
If you have questions about marriage and family relationships, you can "ASK THE COUNSELOR." Address your questions to Mikal Frazier. Her address is
mikal@allaboutfamilies.
org
Norman's e-mail address:
nlbales@allaboutfamilies.org