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Momma and the white man

Story-Teller

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Feb 22, 2009
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MOMMA AND THE WHITE MAN

"Behold, the eye of the Lord is on those who love Him, on those who hope for His lovingkindness, to deliver their soul from death, and to keep them alive in famine." Psalm 33:18-19

*** WARNING POSSIBLE TEARS ***


The first time I saw a white man, I was in church in our Alabama parish in the middle of August and it was very, very hot. The preacher rambled on, his fire and brimstone sermon seasoned with an occasional Hallelujah from our sweaty congregation. I was daydreaming about the Sunday feast that we would have after church. This was a reward for sitting through 2 hours of preaching.

But that Sunday everything changed for me. In the middle of his Bible-thumping, fist-clenched exuberance, the reverend stopped. The silence caught me by surprise and at first I thought maybe he knew I wasn't listening. I looked at the pulpit, to see him standing there with an expression of disgust, staring at the back of the church as if the devil himself had just entered...I turned to see.

There, leaning against the front doors of our church, our pure-black church, was a drifter, a skinny, disheveled, white drifter. This man, this invader of our sacred space, stood before us in all his unholiness. His ragged clothes seemed to hang on him and his face looked pasty and sunken, like a man waiting for death. Worst of all, he had entered our church barefoot, his blistered, bloody feet staining our holy wood floor.

We were still. He walked down the center aisle with slow, deliberate steps. His legs looked fragile and weak and his hunched back made him look as though he carried the world on his shoulders.

"Pardon me, Reverend", he said as he removed his hat and seated himself in the front pew. The preacher looked around the congregation and then at Mr. Jackson, our layman, who barely acknowledged the man before turning away. Looking down at the bloody floor, the reverend shook his head. He glanced at the drifter for just a second and with a roll of his eyes, picked up where he had left off.

The man glanced at the stained floor and bowed his head, ashamed. I was confused by the preacher's reaction. I had never really listened to the Sunday sermons, but bits and pieces I had picked up had taught me that God wanted us to be kind to others. And yet here, in the place that this preacher called "God's house," I was witness to a stranger in need being passed over.

Then, to my right, Momma rose. Clutching her good Sunday kerchief, she walked straight to the church's christening bowl. The reverend stopped speaking. Taking the pitcher of water that the reverend himself had been drinking from during his sermon, she stepped down to the front pew. "Be not ashamed, my brother," said Momma, kneeling in front of the man. I leaned forward and watched as she filled the christening bowl with the water, and then, dunking her kerchief, she bathed the man's feet. I could see the man's face as he began to cry.

Engrossed in the miracle that I had just witnessed, I had forgotten about dinner by the time Momma returned to her seat. I had seen Momma through different eyes that day. Like Rosa Parks walking to the front of the bus, Momma had challenged the racism that surrounded her. Like Susan B. Anthony, taking charge when it was necessary, Momma had showed me the strength of a woman's actions. And, like the Good Samaritan helping a stranger in need, Momma had gone to the aid of another in need of kindness.

That hot Alabama Sunday, Momma showed me not only who she was, but who I was. In one day, she set a lifelong example, paving a road for her only daughter to walk down proudly. As an African American; as a woman; as a Christian.

This mother taught a lesson by example that could not be taught any other way. Isn't that the way God expects us to teach others? Yes, we use words, but we add conviction and power to the lessons with the way we live our lives.

Author Unknown
Submitted by Richard
 
This story had tears welling up in my eyes before I was half-way thru it...I was picturing Jesus ...instead of walking up calvary`s hill all battered and bloody...walking upon the hallowed ground of religious men...

The pristine Jesus on a pristine cross worshiped by pristine saints preached by Pharisees never existed...


wretched beggers like me still need to see the blood!
 
This story had tears welling up in my eyes before I was half-way thru it...I was picturing Jesus ...instead of walking up calvary`s hill all battered and bloody...walking upon the hallowed ground of religious men...

The pristine Jesus on a pristine cross worshiped by pristine saints preached by Pharisees never existed...


wretched beggers like me still need to see the blood!
The Best is yet to come..
 
How too often our words are empty. What a wonderful example that our faith is revealed by actions, and not words alone.
 
How too often our words are empty. What a wonderful example that our faith is revealed by actions, and not words alone.
For God so Loved the world that HE gave His only begotten Son so that no one should parish. So then the word Love is an action word..
 
The Best is yet to come..


amen, Hallelujah!


Rev 5:9 They sang a new song: "You are worthy to take the scroll and open its seals, because you were slaughtered. With your blood you purchased people for God from every tribe, language, people, and nation.
Rev 5:10 You made them a kingdom and priests for our God, and they will reign on the earth."
Rev 5:11 Then I looked, and I heard the voices of many angels, the living creatures, and the elders surrounding the throne. They numbered ten thousands times ten thousand and thousands times thousands.
Rev 5:12 They sang with a loud voice, "Worthy is the lamb who was slaughtered to receive power, wealth, wisdom, strength, honor, glory, and praise!"
Rev 5:13 I heard every creature in heaven, on earth, under the earth, and on the sea, and everything that is in them, saying, "To the one who sits on the throne and to the lamb be praise, honor, glory, and power forever and ever!"
 
amen, Hallelujah!


Rev 5:9 They sang a new song: "You are worthy to take the scroll and open its seals, because you were slaughtered. With your blood you purchased people for God from every tribe, language, people, and nation.
Rev 5:10 You made them a kingdom and priests for our God, and they will reign on the earth."
Rev 5:11 Then I looked, and I heard the voices of many angels, the living creatures, and the elders surrounding the throne. They numbered ten thousands times ten thousand and thousands times thousands.
Rev 5:12 They sang with a loud voice, "Worthy is the lamb who was slaughtered to receive power, wealth, wisdom, strength, honor, glory, and praise!"
Rev 5:13 I heard every creature in heaven, on earth, under the earth, and on the sea, and everything that is in them, saying, "To the one who sits on the throne and to the lamb be praise, honor, glory, and power forever and ever!"
Why look down when what we really want is up..
 
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