A young and successful executive was traveling down a neighborhood street,
going a bit too fast in his new Jaguar. He was watching for kids darting out from between parked cars and slowed down when he thought he saw something.
As his car passed, no children appeared. Instead, a brick smashed into the Jag’s side door! He slammed on the brakes and backed the Jag back to the spot where the brick had been thrown.
The angry driver then jumped out of the car, grabbed the nearest kid and pushed him up against a parked car shouting, ‘What was that all about and who are you? Just what the heck are you doing? That’s a new car and that brick you threw is going to cost a lot of money. Why did you do it?’
The young boy was apologetic.
‘Please, mister….please, I’m sorry but I didn’t know what else to do,’ He pleaded. ‘I threw the brick because no one else would stop…’ With tears dripping down his face and off his chin, the youth pointed to a spot just around a parked car. ‘It’s my brother,’ he said. ‘He rolled off the curb and fell out of his wheelchair and I can’t lift him up.’
Now sobbing, the boy asked the stunned executive, ‘Would you please help
me get him back into his wheelchair? He’s hurt and he’s too heavy for me.’
Moved beyond words, the driver tried to swallow the rapidly swelling lump in his throat.. He hurriedly lifted the handicapped boy back into the wheelchair, then took out a linen handkerchief and dabbed at the fresh scrapes and cuts. A quick look told him everything was going to be okay.
‘Thank you and may God bless you,’ the grateful child told the stranger.
Whoa…. That makes you think….
I like this…. It made me stop and catch my breath….
Maybe I’ll have to start using a brick as a paperweight for a daily reminder!
A poignant story indeed. Thanks for sending it out “there.”
We alllll neeeeed to slowwwww waaaay dowwwwn.
After, all, in truth, we are already there. In the kingdom of heaven; it is before our feet, as Christ Jesus tried to tell us. Perhaps we’re just moving to fast to see it.
I saw Sidney Poitier in The Last Brickmaker in America, a film produced in the 40s or so. Highly recommend it. Many fine lessons. OK for kids.
:<))