“Sometimes, little things make a big difference…” Nino
Varsimashvili
What would you be willing to give up for $4.80?
How long would you be willing to give up something of significance for a little
less than $5.00?
For 60 years Ted Sams regretted missing his
high school graduation. Now that he’s 78, Sams can finally call himself a high
school graduate, On Friday, May 27th, he donned a cap and gown and
received his diploma with the class of 2022 at Southern California’s San
Gabriel High School.
Back in 1962 when Sams was a high school
senior, he got in trouble, was suspended five days before the end of the school
year, and ended up missing a crucial final exam that he had to make up over the
summer.
He recently told a local TV station, “When I
went back with my grade, they wouldn't give me my diploma because I owed $4.80
for a book, and so I just walked away and said forget it.”
Fortunately, the high school still had Sams’
original diploma locked away in an old filing cabinet. He beamed as he walked
across the graduation stage at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena and received his
diploma. He said, “over the years, I complained to my kids a number of times
about how $4.80 kept me from having my diploma.”
It’s amazing how something small, like $4.80,
can cause us to make a big, bad decision with lifelong ramifications?
God has matured me a lot over the years (I still
have a long ways to go) but I remember a day when someone giving me a one-finger wave would cause me to go nuclear. When I was growing up, my Dad would
chew us out if someone forgot to turn a light off. Have you seen one of those Youtube
clips of McDonald’s or some other fast food joint and a customer got the wrong
order? Some of them are of a customer crawling through the drive-thru window or
over the counter to attack the cashier who messed up their order. It’s a
$5,000.00 reaction to a $5.00 problem.
There’s a verse tucked away in the Song of Solomon
that describes this, “Catch the foxes for us, the little foxes that spoil
the vineyards…” (2:15). A little fox – big damage!
Many a parent has had a meltdown with a child
over something insignificant like spilling a drink or leaving a toy out. Married
couples fight over the trivial, like putting the toilet paper on the wrong way
or forgetting to empty the garbage…or a truly major crisis, leaving just a bit
of milk in the jug without replacing it.
I wish that I could say that I never get
angry over the small but unfortunately, I’m guilty, too. My lack of patience
with slow drivers is a continual area of spiritual growth. My sanctification is
still working its way down to my right foot.
Personally,
I think pride was part of Ted Sams’ problem and it was further complicated by stubbornness.
Stubborn is defined as “having or showing persistent determination not
to change one’s attitude or position on something, especially in spite of good
arguments or reasons to do so.”
The
Bible contains several examples of stubbornness. Probably one of the most well-known
ones was Pharaoh. Remember the story? God told Pharaoh, “Let my people go,” but
Pharaoh was stubborn and wouldn't let them go. So God sends plague after plague,
and after each plague, Pharaoh cries out, “OK, I'll let the people go.” Yet after
God lifted the plagues, the Bible records that Pharaoh “hardened his heart” and
wouldn’t let God’s people go. The end result was the 10th plague,
the death of the first born in every Egyptian home. It was the end result of Pharaoh’s
stubbornness. We lose a lot when we’re foolishly stubborn and needlessly dig in
our heels.
Ted Sams lost sixty years because of stubborn
pride. I wonder how many relationships suffer needless estrangement because of the
same thing. Often there’s been an argument, then a rupture in the relationship.
It may have gone on so long that the combatants no longer even remember what
the original offense was. They just know that they’re angry at the other person.
In
his book, The Preaching Event, John Claypool tells a powerful story
about identical twin brothers who never married because they enjoyed each other’s
company so much. When their father died, they took over his store and ran it
together in a joyful collaboration.
One
day a man came in to make a small purchase and paid for it with a dollar. The
brother who made the sale placed the dollar on top of the cash register and
walked the customer to the door to say goodbye. When he returned, the dollar bill
was gone. He said to his twin brother, “Did you take the dollar bill I left
here?” “No, I didn’t,” answered the brother. “Surely, you took it,” he said, “There
was nobody else in the store.” The brother became angry: “I’m telling you, I did not take the dollar bill.”
From
that point, mistrust and suspicion grew until finally, the two brothers could no
longer work together. They put a partition right down the middle of the
building and made it into two stores. In anger, they refused to speak to each other
for the next twenty years.
One
day a stranger pulled up in a car and entered one of the two stores. “Have you
been in business very long here?” the stranger asked. “Yes, 30 or 40 years,”
was the answer. “Good,” continued the stranger, “I very much need to tell you
something...Some 20 years ago, I passed through this town. I was out of work
and homeless. I jumped off a boxcar. I had no money and I hadn’t eaten for
days. I came down that alley outside and when I looked into your store window,
I saw a dollar bill on the cash register. I slipped in and took it. Recently though
I became a Christian. I was converted and accepted Christ as my personal
Savior. I know now it was wrong of me to steal that dollar bill...and I have
come to pay you back with interest and to beg your forgiveness.”
When
the stranger finished his confession, the old storekeeper began to weep as he
said, “Would you do me a favor? Would you please come next door and tell that
story to my brother?” Of course, with the second telling, the two brothers were
reconciled with many hugs and apologies and tears. Twenty years of hurt and pain
and a broken relationship based not on fact, but on mistrust and
misunderstanding, but then healing came; reconciliation came, because of that
stranger’s love for Christ.
I’m
glad Ted Sams humbled himself and got his diploma. But he still lost sixty
years. How about you? Is there someone you need to reconcile with? How much more
time do you want to lose? Please humble yourself and fix it…today!
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