Saturday, April 1999
One Sunday, right in the middle of the branch sacrament meeting, a
woman walked in the door off the street. She was a homeless woman who
was wearing dirty, ragged clothes, coughing, choking, and blowing her
nose into a filthy handkerchief. In a loud, hoarse voice she said, "I
want to sing! I want to pray!" and walked right to the front row and sat
down next to a member who was wearing a white blouse, leaned against
her, and laid her head on her shoulder. The member immediately put her
arms around this guest and held her in her arms throughout the remainder
of the meeting. It happened that the speaker had been talking about the
parable of the good Samaritan1 as the woman had come in. As this woman
coughed and choked, the speaker continued telling of the parable. As he
came to the end of his talk and was quoting a relevant scripture,
suddenly, in a loud voice, this homeless woman finished giving the verse
that the speaker had begun. In talking of this after sacrament meeting
with the speaker, we thought it had probably been a long time since
someone had affectionately put an arm around our visitor. We wondered
what better illustration you could have of the parable of the good
Samaritan than what we had just seen, and we were reminded of the
Savior's words that preceded His telling of that parable, "Thou shalt
love . . . thy neighbour as thyself."
A second experience in the branch dealt with a kind and conscientious
woman who faithfully turned in envelopes containing a few coins for
payment of her tithing. One day as she came to church, she was also
holding in her hand a plastic sandwich bag with a piece of dried-up
bread in it. She handed the plastic bag to us and said: "If you are
going to belong to a church, you ought to contribute. I can't contribute
much, but I can contribute the sacrament bread."
As we used her bread for the sacrament, the whole experience
carried an additional meaning that day.
A third experience in the branch came during a discussion the members
were having in Sunday School concerning when you should give to those
who ask you for aid. One of the members, who had come with his wife from
Africa to further his education, raised his hand and told us of the
following experience. As he had been walking home in the neighborhood,
he had been approached by a man who put a pistol to his chest and
demanded all his money. Our member took the money from his pockets and
handed it over to the man and then said, "If you need the money that
badly, I have more." He opened his briefcase and took out additional
money, which he gave to the robber, saying, "Understand, you are not
taking this from me; I am giving it to you in the name of the Lord
because you need it." He said the robber looked at him in amazement, put
the pistol in his belt, and said, "Where do you live? I'm going to walk
you home because you're too good a man to be on these streets, and you
are not safe here."
As they started to walk to the member's apartment, suddenly they
were surrounded by police cars because a woman had seen the holdup from
her apartment window and had called the police. The police arrested the
robber and took him away. Having been the victim, this member was asked
to be a witness later at the trial of the robber. At the trial, he
testified that although the robber had demanded his money, he had told
him that he gave the money to him in the name of the Lord and that if
the robber needed it that badly, he wanted him to have it.
Since then, when I hear the Savior's words, "Him that taketh away
thy cloke forbid not to take thy coat also,"
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