Bible blog of award-winning bestselling Christian author, Stephen M. Miller. "How I answered a critic, encouraged a friend" for Wednesday, 10 September 2014
How I answered a
critic, encouraged a friend
ON YOUR KNEES. My buddy Terry, kneeling on the ground, helps me
dig a 40-foot-long sump pump drainage ditch and then install the piping.
Friends like him deserve a public thank you from time to time, don’t you think?
IT TOOK
TWO LETTERS to do the job.
I wrote a blog article last week about how people in my Bible
study group surprised a fellow member of ours with letters of encouragement to
help him through a difficult summer. He was a school teacher who got pushed
into retiring sooner than he wanted.
I’ve wondered if the administrators wanted his salary so they
could hire two teachers. I’m afraid I think like that, given what I’ve seen in
this world.
In a moment, I’ll let you read the letter I wrote to him.
But first, I thought you would enjoy an email I got a few days
after I wrote the letter for my friend.
This email came from a reader.
Hi Steve, I bought your book; The Complete Guide to Bible
Prophecy.
It is now in the recycle bin, as I found it useless to inform of
what will actually happen.
I guess you will consider me a oddball, but I have intensively
studied the Prophetic Word and there is all the information there to know God’s
plans for His creation.
Please look at my free articles at www….
I replied.
Hi Bruce.
Well, it takes all kinds.
Glad to know you recycle.
Steve
A letter for Terry
Now, swinging the pendulum in the opposite direction, here’s
part of the letter I wrote my friend, whom I’ve known for around two decades.
Dear Terry,
You are my 2 a.m. phone call if I ever need to make one. My number one guy to go to for backup.
You are my 2 a.m. phone call if I ever need to make one. My number one guy to go to for backup.
If I got cancer and needed money for treatment, I believe you
would offer it to me without me even needing to ask. I saw how you took care of
your brother Joseph when he developed cancer in Trinidad. You flew him
up…arranged for his treatment, and let him live with you and Cris during the
months that followed.
When he wished to marry his partner, Ann Marie, you brought her
up and arranged the marriage and I got to walk her down the aisle. What a
blessing that was for me to see unfold, and for me to play a tiny role in.
You’ve bought shoes for kids at school. You’ve taken them food
as well. You cared about them from the brain in the top of their head to toes
in the bottom of the feet.
For friends and strangers you’ve stained decks, installed
overhead fans and lights, loaded a huge moving truck for a retired lady moving
to New York City to take care of her mom. You helped me dig a 40-foot long
trench to install a drainage tube, and spent an entire Saturday with me
staining my fence, from morning till night.
You did buy me that chocolate wine, which kinda counts against
you.
But I know your heart was in the right place, even though your
taste buds were still at Burger King.
You took the lead on praying for Erin, Barbara, and Tim to stop
smoking. I would never have done that. I would have been afraid of offending
them or making them feel as though I was passing judgment on them. But you
stuck your neck out. And you did it because you loved them more than you feared
them.
You are a wonderful Bible study teacher, far better than I am. I
love it when you teach. I love sitting back and absorbing the discussion, and
jumping in now and then. You do excellent research. And you present it with joy
and passion, while inviting others to add their thoughts—and making them feel
welcome to do so. What an incredible gift that is.
You’re a wonderful liar, too. You lie at just the right time,
with just the right reason. Thank you for the birthday lie. But don’t ever ask
me to help you move a table again.
I believe with all that is in me—perhaps even more than I
believe in life after death—that in this life I have a friend….And I believe if
ever I needed anything you would be there to do everything. I don’t love you
like a brother. I love you as a brother.
One more thing. When we Millers have Miller Time – events that
are typically for the immediate family – and I think you and Cris might be free
and interested in joining us, before inviting you I always check with the kids
to make sure they’re okay with it. I’ve done this many times over the years.
I’d like you to know that in all the times I’ve asked them, my kids have always
wanted you.
Steve
“There is a friend who sticks closer than a brother” (Proverbs 18:24).
PS. A few days ago, Terry accepted a full-time teaching job. And
it pays better.
Read in browser »
How to teach kids the Bible
Bushwhacking a friend with kind wordsWhen God grabs hold of me
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