I'm going to confess to something, dear readers. I admit that things in my personal life lately have been more than a little rough.
I'm also going to admit that I'm now greatly ashamed at how I've looked more to what I've lost instead of to what God has... and what God is still... given me.
The low temperature this morning was 4 degrees Fahrenheit. As of this writing it hasn't got much warmer. But at least I can say that I am staying warm. That I've got food to eat. People who care for me. A career that is beginning to take off beyond my wildest dreams (and that in itself was a huge answered prayer).
I have fretted over things lost and things ruined because of a condition I was born with and too much I let those define the parameters of my happiness when instead I had every reason to be happy with what God has bestowed upon me. Because to be absolutely honest: I don't deserve any measure of happiness at all.
Things could be worse. Things could be a lot worse. And when I read the story of Abigail Sailors, well... this young lady's faith cuts right through the shallowness of my own. It's something God needed me to read, especially right now.
Sailors is 18 years old. She's a waitress at a Cracker Barrel restaurant in Lincoln, Nebraska. Until recently she had been a student at Trinity Bible College, and had just finished her first semester studying psychology and youth ministry. She had to leave before the spring semester so that she could work a job to take care of her family and be able to save money for a return to school next fall.
And then a few days ago two men stopped by her restaurant and asked for "the grumpiest server" the Cracker Barrel had. Instead they got who the manager thought was the happiest: Abigail Sailors.
As she waited on them and served their food, the two men pried Abigail's story out of her. They thought it was amazing that someone with so much going against her was so upbeat and cheerful. But Abigail told them that things could be worse, that "I’m just thankful. Everything we went through, my attitude is: God
blessed me with a lot of things. I’m doing good. That’s all that matters
to me."
Long story short: the two men left her with a tip she'll never forget. They departed the table leaving behind $6,000: one thousand to spend on her own needs and a $5,000 check made out to Trinity Bible College for her tuition. They also left $100 to split between Abigail and another waitress.
Click here to read more about Abigail Sailors' terrific tale at JournalStar.com.
There is still good in this world. God hears our prayers. And God does answer our prayers. It's stuff like this that makes me keep believing that.
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