It was an unusually
cold day for the
month of May. Spring
had arrived and
everything was alive
with color, but a
cold front from the
North had brought a
rough winter's chill
back to Indiana. I
sat, with two
friends, in the
picture window of a
quaint restaurant
just off the corner
of the town’s
square. The food and
the company were
both especially good
that day. As we
talked, my attention
was drawn outside,
across the street.
There, walking into
town, was a man who
appeared to be
carrying all his
worldly goods on his
back. He was
carrying, a
well-worn sign that
read, "I will work
for food." My heart
sank. I brought him
to the attention of
my friends and
noticed that others
around us had
stopped eating to
focus on him. Heads
moved in a mixture
of sadness and
disbelief. We
continued our meal,
but his image
lingered in my mind.
We finished our meal
and went our
separate ways. I had
errands to do and
quickly set out to
accomplish them. I
glanced toward the
town square, looking
somewhat
half-heartedly for
the strange visitor.
I was fearful,
knowing that seeing
him again would call
for some response.
I drove through town
and saw nothing of
him, then made some
purchases at a store
and got back in my
car. Deep within me,
the Spirit of God
kept speaking to me:
"Don't go back to
the office until
you've at least
driven once more
around the square."
And so, with some
hesitancy, I headed
back into town. As I
turned the square's
third corner. I saw
him. He was standing
on the steps of the
storefront church,
going through his
sack. I stopped and
looked, feeling both
compelled to speak
to him, yet wanting
to drive on.
The empty parking
space on the corner
seemed to be a sign
from God: an
invitation to park.
I pulled in, got out
and approached the
town's newest
visitor.
"Looking for the
pastor?" I asked.
"Not really," he
replied, "just
resting."
"Have you eaten
today?"
"Oh, I ate
some-thing early
this morning."
"Would you like to
have lunch with me?"
"Do you have some
work I could do for
you?"
"No work," I
replied. "I commute
here to work from
the city, but I
would like to take
you to lunch."
"Sure," he replied
with a smile.
As he began to
gather his things, I
asked some surface
questions.
"Where you headed?"
"St. Louis."
"Where you from?"
"Oh, all over;
mostly Florida."
"How long you been
walking?"
"Fourteen years,"
came the reply.
I knew I had met
someone unusual. We
sat across from each
other in the same
restaurant I had
left earlier. His
face was weathered
slightly beyond his
38 years. His eyes
were dark yet clear,
and he spoke with an
eloquence and
articulation that
was startling. He
removed his jacket
to reveal a bright
red T-shirt that
said,
"Jesus is The Never
Ending Story."
Then Daniels story
began to unfold. He
had seen rough times
early in life, had
made some wrong
choices and reaped
the consequences.
Fourteen years
earlier, while
back-packing across
the country, he had
stopped on the beach
in Daytona and tried
to hire on with some
men who were putting
up a large tent and
some equipment.
A concert, he
thought. He was
hired, but the tent
would not house a
concert but revival
services, and in
those services he
saw life more
clearly. He gave his
life over to God.
Nothing's been the
same since," he
said. "I feel the
Lord telling me to
keep walking and so
I did, some 14 years
now".
"Ever think of
stopping?" I asked.
"Oh, once in a
while, when it seems
to get the best of
me, but God has
given me this
calling. I give out
Bibles. That's
what's in my sack. I
work to buy food and
Bibles, and I give
them out when His
Spirit leads me."
I sat amazed. My
homeless friend was
not homeless. He was
on a mission and
lived this way by
choice. The question
burned inside for a
moment and then I
asked:
"What's it like?"
"What?"
"To walk into a town
carrying all your
things on your back
and to show your
sign?"
"Oh, it was
humiliating at
first. People would
stare and make
comments. Once
someone tossed a
piece of half-eaten
bread and made a
gesture that
certainly didn't
make me feel
welcome. But then it
became humbling to
realize that God was
using me to touch
lives and change
people's concepts of
other folks like
me."
My concept was
changing, too. We
finished our dessert
and gathered his
things. Just outside
the door, he paused
.
He turned to me and
said, "Come Ye
blessed of my Father
and inherit the
kingdom I've
prepared for you;
for when I was
hungry you gave me
food, when I was
thirsty you gave me
drink, a stranger
and you took me in."
I felt as if I were
on holy ground.
"Could you use
another Bible?" I
asked.
He said he preferred
a certain
translation. It
traveled well and
was not too heavy.
It was also his
personal favorite.
I've read it through
14 times," he said.
"I'm not sure we've
got one of those,
but let's stop by
our church and see."
I was able to find
my new friend a
Bible that would do
well, and he seemed
very grateful."
"Where you headed
from here?"
"Well, I found this
little map on the
back of this
amusement park
coupon.."
"Are you hoping to
hire on there for a
while?"
"No, I just figure I
should go there. I
figure someone under
that star right
there needs a Bible,
that's where I'm
going next."
He smiled, and the
warmth of his spirit
radiated the
sincerity of his
mission. I drove him
back to the
town-square where
we'd met two hours
earlier, and as we
drove, it started
raining. We parked
and unloaded his
things.
"Would you sign my
autograph book?" he
asked. "I like to
keep messages from
folks I meet."
I wrote in his
little book that his
commitment to his
calling had touched
my life. I
encouraged him to
stay strong. And I
left him with a
verse of scripture
from Jeremiah, "I
know the plans I
have for you,"
declared the Lord,
"plans to prosper
you and not harm
you. Plans to give
you a future and a
hope."
"Thanks, man." he
said. "I know we
just met and we're
really just
strangers, but I
love you."
"I know." I said.
"And I love you too.
"The Lord is good."
"Yes, He is. How
long has it been
since someone hugged
you?" I asked.
"A long time," he
replied.
And so, on the busy
street corner in the
drizzling rain, my
new friend and I
embraced, and I felt
deep inside that I
had been changed. He
put his things on
his back, smiled his
winning smile and
said,
"See you in the New
Jerusalem."
"I'll be there!" was
my reply.
He began his
journey again,
heading away with
his sign dangling
from his bed roll
and pack of Bibles.
He stopped, turned
and said,
"When you see
something that makes
you think of me,
will you pray for
me?"
"You bet," I shouted
back, "God bless."
"God bless."
And that was the
last I saw of him.
Late that evening as
I left my office,
the wind blew
strong. The cold
front had settled
hard upon the town.
I bundled up and
hurried to my car.
As I sat back and
reached for the
emergency brake, I
saw them... a pair
of well worn work
gloves neatly laid
over the length of
the handle. I picked
them up and thought
of my friend and
wondered if his
hands would stay
warm that night
without them. I
remembered his
request:
"If you see
something that makes
you think of me,
will you pray for
me?"
Today his gloves lie
on my desk in my
office. They help me
to see the world and
its people in new
way, and they help
me remember those
two hours with my
unique friend and to
pray for his
ministry.
"See you in the New
Jerusalem," he said.
"Yes, Daniel, I know
You will...
"I shall pass this
way but once,
therefore, any good
that I can do or any
kindness that I can
show, let me do it
now, for I shall not
pass this way
again." —Author
Unknown—
Blessings from
www.christsbondservants.org