UNCONDITIONAL
LOVE (Part I)
Allow
me to share a story that I read some time ago.
It is a compelling tale told by a young wife and mother, and it involves
something completely priceless, extraordinary, incomprehensible: the
unconditional love of a young baby. This
story challenges the quantity and quality of our love! Please read and prayerfully ponder.
We were
the only family with children in the restaurant. I sat Eric in a high chair and noticed
everyone was quietly eating and talking.
Suddenly, Eric squealed with glee and shouted, “Hi!” He pounded his fat baby hands on the
highchair tray. His eyes were wide open
with excitement and his mouth displayed a huge toothless grin. He wiggled and giggled with merriment.
I
looked around and was somewhat surprised to see the source of Eric’s joy. It was an old man whose pants were baggy…with
his zipper at half-mast…with toes poking out of his would-be shoes. His shirt was filthy and his hair was
unwashed and uncombed. His whiskers were
too short to be called a beard and his nose had so many varicose veins that it
looked like a road map. We were too far
from him to catch a whiff…but I was totally sure that he smelled very bad! He was just sitting there, hands waving and
flapping like gelatin, completely holding the attention of my beautiful baby!
“Hey
there baby…hi there big boy! I see ya’
buster,” the man called out gently to Eric.
My husband and I exchanged looks and whispered, “What should we
do?” Our adorable baby boy, Eric,
continued to laugh and answer this disheveled man, “Hi! Hi!
Hi!” We were completely
flabbergasted. Everyone in the
restaurant seemed to notice and they glanced over at us sympathetically…and
then they looked with disgust at ‘that man.’
Their eyes seemed to say, ‘That old geezer has some nerve, creating a
public nuisance with such a handsome baby!’
As our meal came, the man kept calling to Eric across the room, “Do you
know patty cake? Do you know
peek-a-boo? Look at that smart boy…he
knows peek-a-boo!”
Nobody
thought any of this was cute. He was
obviously drunk and dirty. My husband
and I felt embarrassed. We ate in
silence, except for Eric, who was now running through his repertoire of the
things-he-could-do to gain more admiration and attention from this apparent skid-row
bum, who in turn reciprocated with his annoying comments. We hurried through our meal so we could head
for the door. My husband went to pay the
check and asked me to meet him in the parking lot.
The old
ragged man sat positioned between me and the door. “Lord,” I thought, “if you can just let me
get out of here before he speaks to Eric or me.” As I drew closer to the door…closer to the
man…I turned my back, trying to side-step him and by all means to avoid any body
odor or air he might be exhaling. As I
did this, Eric suddenly leaped over my arm, reaching out with both arms in a
baby’s ‘pick-me-up’ position. Before I
could stop him, Eric had propelled himself from my arms, right into the man’s
arms.
Immediately,
this very old smelly man and my young beautiful baby consummated their growing
love relationship. In an act of total
trust, love and submission, Eric laid his tiny head upon the man’s
shoulders. That old homeless man’s eyes
closed, and I saw tears rolling down his face.
His aged hands, that looked to be so full of grime and pain, gently (so
gently) cradled my baby’s bottom and stroked my baby’s back.
Watching
this union, I felt sure that no two human beings had every loved so deeply in
such a short period of time. I stood
there, absolutely paralyzed and awestruck.
The old man rocked and cradled Eric in his arms for a moment, and then
his eyes opened and set squarely on mine.
He said in a firm, sober and commanding voice, “You take care of this
baby.” Somehow I managed to squeeze “I
will” from my constricted throat, which at the moment felt full of stones. He pried Eric from his chest, unwillingly,
longingly, as though he was in actual pain.
I
happily received my baby as the man whispered, “God bless you, Ma’am, you’ve
given me my Christmas gift.” I said
nothing more and raced toward the car, holding Eric close to me. My husband wondered why I was holding on to
Eric so tightly, crying and mumbling, “My God, my God, forgive me.” For I had just witnessed Christ’s love, shown through the
innocence of a tiny child who saw no sin, no issues, and made no judgments…an
innocent child who saw nothing but a living and loving soul…and a mother who
had only seen raggedy and dirty clothes.
I was a Christian who was blind, holding a baby who was not blind. And I felt as if GOD, Himself, was asking –
“Are you willing to share your son for a moment?” – although HE had shared HIS
SON for all time and eternity. That
homeless old man and my son reminded me, unwittingly, that to enter the Kingdom
of God, we must become as little children.
Stay
tuned…more to come tomorrow!
Sisters and brothers, be continually
blessed, and please (above all else) MAKE SURE YOU ARE READY TO MEET OUR SOON
COMING KING. Maranatha!
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