"I have neither silver nor gold, but what I do have I give you." Acts 3:6
Easter is not just about receiving with joy the promise of eternal life. It is about giving it away. Peter's response to the man crippled from birth is a perfect example of this. Not worried about what he doesn't have, Peter gives what he does have, and this ought to be the model for every believer. Some have the financial ability to help others. Some have time to give. Others can pray, but all of us have to give something.
Several years before my mother died she wanted to talk about her living situation. It was a time similar to today. People were losing their jobs and homes and she was living in a home with two extra small bedrooms. Guilty about having so much while others were suffering, she wanted to know whether I thought she should offer the extra bedrooms to some homeless people. Stunned by her generosity, I also reacted strongly against the proposal. A woman of 80 living alone should not open her home to strangers, but what should she do? More important, what should we do, not just with our surplus, but with our substance.
Become Easter for others. Focus, like Peter, on what you do have, and give it away. Kindness costs nothing but means everything. Listening takes time, but lasts a lifetime. Compassion towards those who seem ungrateful is difficult, but is demanded by the gospel.
Today, think of your gifts and share them.
Has anyone ever stunned you with their kindness when you expected nothing?
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