I was in a hospital gift shop some time ago, stocking a
rack with Christian books. A young woman asked me about the flowers in a nearby
display case. Her eyes were hopeful but I had to
disappoint her and explain that I did not work in the hospital gift shop. I was
just there to stock the book rack. I pointed to two ladies at a nearby counter.
“Maybe they can help,” I said.
She nodded, stared at the flower display and sighed. “I’m not really
sure what I want.”
I took note of her dress then – a baseball cap pulled over messy hair; a
thin pair of pyjama bottoms topped by a hospital issue housecoat wrapped around
a frail frame; pull-on terrycloth slippers, two sizes too big.
“My friend is dying,” she said, then turned back to me. “I am too.”
I put my clipboard down and waited. Her story unfolded in simple
language, the words slipping from her mouth almost as though rehearsed. She
reached into a pocket and pulled out a picture of her seven year old daughter.
I could see the resemblance. She smiled when I mentioned it and went on to say
there was a surgery that she was hoping for – highly experimental, there was
only one doctor in the country who could do it and he just happened to live in
a nearby city. But then her voice fell and I had to lean close to hear. Her
friend had had the surgery. She was still dying.
The conversation turned to the word hope then. She had hope they would
agree to do the surgery, hope that, unlike her friend, she would recover, hope
that she would live to watch her daughter grow up.
She said a pastor came to visit sometimes and “we say our small prayers
together. They seem small, just words, but maybe not, eh?” Again that hopeful
look in her eyes.
I was praying small prayers right then. She’s so young, Lord. Please. Please.
Then she was gone and I resumed stocking the rack. I do it once a month and in that hospital, the rack is usually almost empty by the time I return. As I filled the pockets with books I was acutely aware of their contents. They hold pages about the love and mercy of Jesus, pages filled with stories of courage and faith, pages of humour to lift a sad heart and inspiration to encourage a weary soul. Pages of hope and redemption.
I knew I was sent there that day to do much more than just stock the book racks, but my job suddenly seemed important. My other job, as a writer, suddenly seemed essential, “That I may publish with the voice of thanksgiving and tell of all thy wondrous works” (Ps. 26:7, KJV).
What a wonderful and inspiring story! God bless!
ReplyDeleteTears
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this moving story, Marcia. What we say matters? What we write matters? May God give us the wisdom to write and speak with an instructed mind, and instructed mouth, the words that will make a difference to someone's hope and healing. Amen
ReplyDeleteBeautiful story, powerful inspiration. Thank you, dear Marcia, for reminding us why we write.
ReplyDeleteBlessings ~ Wendy