When I was a boy, I felt it was
both a duty and a privilege to help my widowed mother make ends meet by finding employment in vacation time,
on Saturdays and other times when I did not have to be in school. For
quite a while I worked for a Scottish shoemaker, or
"cobbler," as he
preferred to be called, an Orkney man, named Dan Mackay. He was a
forthright Christian and his little shop was a real testimony for
Christ in the neighborhood.
The walls were literally covered with Bible texts and pictures,
generally taken from old-fashioned Scripture Sheet Almanacs, so that
look where one would, he found the Word of God staring him in the
face. There were John 3:16 and John 5:24, Romans 10:9, and many more.
On the little counter in front of the bench on which the owner of the
shop sat, was a Bible, generally open, and a pile of gospel tracts. No
package went out of that shop without a printed message wrapped
inside. And whenever opportunity offered, the customers were spoken to
kindly
and tactfully about the importance of being born again and the
blessedness of knowing that the soul is saved through faith in Christ.
Many came back to ask for more literature or to inquire more
particularly as to how they might find peace with God, with the
blessed results that men and women were saved, frequently right in the
shoe shop.
It was my chief responsibility to pound leather for shoe soles.
A piece of cowhide would be cut to suit, then soaked in water. I had a
flat piece of iron over my knees and, with a flat-headed hammer, I
pounded these soles until they were hard and dry. It seemed an endless
operation to me, and I wearied of it many times.
What made my task worse was the fact that, a block away, there was
another shop that I passed going and coming to or from my home, and in
it sat a jolly, godless cobbler who gathered the boys of the
neighborhood about him and regaled them with lewd tales that made him
dreaded by
respectable parents as a menace to the community. Yet, somehow,
he seemed to thrive and that perhaps to a greater extent than my
employer, Mackay. As I looked in his window, I often noticed
that he never pounded the
soles at all, but took them from the water, nailed them on, damp as
they were, and with the water splashing from them as he drove each
nail in.
One day I ventured inside, something I had been warned never to do.
Timidly, I said, "I notice you put the soles on while still wet.
Are they just as good as if they were pounded?" He gave me a
wicked leer as he answered, "They come back all the quicker this
way, my boy!"
"Feeling I had learned something, I related the instance to my
boss and suggested that I was perhaps wasting time in drying out the
leather so carefully. Mr. Mackay stopped his work and opened his
Bible to the passage that reads, "Whatsoever ye do, do all to the
glory of god."
"Harry," he said, "I do not cobble shoes just for the
four bits and six bits (50 cents or 75 cents) that I get from my
customers. I am doing this for the glory of God. I expect to see every
shoe I have ever repaired in a big pile at the judgment seat of
Christ, and I do not want the Lord to say to me in that day, 'Dan,
this was a poor job. You did not do
your best here.' I want Him to be able to say, 'Well done, good and
faithful servant.'"
Then he went on to explain that just as some men are called to preach,
so he was called to fix shoes, and that only as he did this well would
his testimony count for God. It was a lesson I have never been able to
forget. Often when I have been tempted to carelessness, and to
slipshod effort, I have thought of dear, devoted Dan Mackay, and it
has stirred me up to seek to do all as for Him who died to redeem me.
- H.A. Ironside
Pleasing God
Nothing is better than
living under God's approval. To see His smile upon your
life...to make His heart glad...to cause Him to joy over you
with singing. To have Him say of you. "This is my child
in whom I am well pleased." He wants you to please Him as
a child pleases a father. You please Him with the spontaneity
of your love...with the abandonment of your trust...with the
completeness of your obedience. His peace rests with His
approval. As you go through this day, make no decision,
entertain no thought that will move you away from that peace.
From: Receiving His Blessing...Giving His Love
Author: Roy Lessin
The Lord turn His face toward you and give you peace. Numbers
6:26
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