Pattern of
Love
by Jack Smith
I didn't question Timmy, age nine,
or his seven-year-old brother Billy about the brown wrapping paper
they passed back and forth between them as we visited each
store.
Every year at Christmastime, our
service club takes the children from poor families in our town on a
personally conducted shopping tour. I was assigned Timmy and
Billy, whose father was out of work. After giving them the allotted
$4 each, we began our trip. At different stores I made suggestions,
but always their answer was a solemn shake of their head, no.
Finally, I asked, "Where would you suggest we look?"
"Could we go to a shoe store,
Sir?" answered Timmy. "We'd like a pair of shoes for our Daddy so he
can go to work."
In the shoe store the clerk asked
what the boys wanted. out came the brown paper. "We want a pair of
work shoes to fit this foot," they said.
Billy explained that it was a
pattern of their Daddy's foot. They had drawn it while he was asleep
in a chair.
The clerk held the paper against a
measuring stick, then walked away. Soon he came with an open box.
"Will these do?" he asked.
Timmy and Billy handled the shoes
with great eagerness. "How much do they cost?" asked
Billy.
Then Timmy saw the price on the
box. "They're $16.95," he said in dismay. "We only have
$8.00."
I looked at the clerk and he
cleared his throat. "That's the regular price," he said, "but they're
on sale for $3.98 today only."
Then with shoes happily in hand
the boys bught gifts for their mother and two little sisters. Not
once did they think of themselves.
The day after Christmas the boys'
father stopped me on the street. The new shoes were on his feet,
gratitude was in his eyes. "I just thank Jesus for people who care."
he said.
"And I thank Jesus for your two
sons," I replied. "They taught me more about Christmas in one evening
than I had learned in a lifetime."
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