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Subject:
From:
David Stahl <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
David Stahl <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 13 Apr 2006 13:46:10 -0400
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AN ENCOURAGING WORD for April 13, 2006 - written by Dr.
Thomas Lane Butts, Pastor Emeritus, Monroeville, Alabama
First United Methodist Church
An Easter Story
Let me tell you an Easter story. Several years ago one of my
unusually smart (and sometimes smart-aleck) preacher friends
who knows how I love a story called me and said, "Dr. Butts, I'm
sending you a story. It is yours to tell only if you can be
professional enough to tell it without a tear in your eye or quiver
in your voice." I took the challenge but lost. You want to try?
I do not know the origin of the story, but here it is.
Once upon a time there was a little boy named Philip who was
born with Down's Syndrome. He was a very pleasant and happy
child it seemed, but increasingly aware of the difference
between himself and other children.
Philip went to Sunday school each Sunday with nine other 8
year-old children. The Sunday School teacher was a very
sensitive and creative man. Philip, with his increasingly
noticeable difference, was not readily accepted as a member of
this third grade Sunday School class. But, this teacher knew
how to facilitate a class of 8 year-old children. They learned and
they laughed, and they played together. They really cared about
each other, even though, as you know, 8 year-olds don't say they
care about each other out loud very often. But the teacher could
see it. He also knew that Philip was not really a part of the
group. Of course, he did not choose or did he want to be
different. He just was.
The Sunday School teacher had a marvelous design for his
class on the Sunday after Easter. You know those things that
panty hose come in - the containers look like eggs. The teacher
collected ten of them to use on that Sunday. The children loved
it. Each child was given an egg. It was a beautiful spring day,
and the assigned task was for each child to go outside on the
church grounds and find a symbol of new life, put it in the egg,
and bring it back to the classroom. They would then mix them
all up and then all open and share their new life symbols
and surprises together one by one.
It was wild as they ran around outside and then came back in
and put their eggs on a table. The teacher began to open them
one by one. There was a flower in one. Another had a butterfly.
He opened another, and there was a rock. Some laughed
and some said, "That's crazy! How's a rock supposed to be like
new life?" But the smart little boy about whose egg they were
speaking spoke up. He said, "That is mine. I knew all of you
would get flowers, and buds, and leaves, and butterflies,
and stuff like that. So, I got a rock because I wanted to be
different. And for me, that's new life."
The teacher opened the next one and there was nothing there.
The children said, "That's not fair - that's stupid! - somebody
didn't do right."
About that time the teacher felt a tug on his shirt, and he looked
down and Philip was standing beside him. "It's mine," Philip
said. "It's mine." And the children said, "You don't ever do things
right, Philip. There's nothing in it!" "I did so do it," Philip said.
"I did do it. It's empty - the tomb is empty!"
The class was silent, very silent. And for you people who don't
believe in miracles, one happened that day. From that time on,
it was different. Philip suddenly became a part of that group of 8
year-old children. They took him in. He was set free from the
tomb of his differentness.
Philip died in the summer of that year. His family had known
since the time he was born that he would not live out a full life
span. Many other things had been wrong with his tiny little body.
In late July, with an infection that most children could have
quickly shrugged off, Philip died.
He was buried from the church where he went to Sunday
School. At the funeral nine 8 year-old children marched up to the
altar - not with flowers to cover the stark reality of death. Nine 8
year-olds, with their Sunday School teacher, marched up to that
altar and each laid on it an empty egg - an empty old discarded
holder of panty hose.
Sometimes Easter happens in the strangest ways, at the
strangest times and in the strangest places. It never lasts long,
except as we remember it. It is like a door that opens for a
moment and then it closes. And we keep on looking for it again,
and again, to remind ourselves that things are not as they
seem. There is a different world out there which is more real
than the world we see.
Do you understand that? I don't, but I do believe it.

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