
I ran across an entry that Kathleen Norris wrote about the Bible in Amazing Grace: A Vocabulary of Faith and it inspired this current drawing. She writes of a man that she and her husband ran across in a diner one evening, a man they knew to be a hard-working old-timer but didn’t really know very well. She writes, “He happened to be in a talkative mood that evening” and this is what he shared:
“Out of the blue, Arlo began talking about his grandfather, who had been a deeply religious man, or as Arlo put it, “a damn good Presbyterian.” His wedding present to Arlo and his bride had been a Bible, which he admitted he had admired mostly because it was an expensive gift, bound in white leather with their names and the date of their wedding set in gold lettering on the cover. “I left it in its box and it ended up in our bedroom closet,” Arlo told us. “But,” he said, “for months afterward, every time he saw grandpa he would ask me how I liked that Bible. The wife had written a thank-you note, and we’d thanked him in person, but somehow he couldn’t let it lie, he’d kept after him. “Well,” he said, “the joke was on me. I finally took that Bible out of the closet and I found Grandad had placed a twenty-dollar bill at the beginning of the book of Genesis, and at the beginning of every book of the damn thing, over thirteen hundred dollars in all. And he knew I’d never find it.’”
“We laughed over this with Arlo, and he began talking about the interest he could have made had he found that money sooner. ‘Thirteen hundred bucks was a lot of money in them days,’ he said, shaking his head.”
That story makes me sad. It seems to me, anyway, that after all those years, it was the thought of the money he could have made on investing the first $1300 that was uppermost in his mind.
I’m also more than a little sad when I think about all those years I could have been reading the Bible and reaping the rewards of the investment and commitment which came later in my life. Thank goodness the “theory of compounding interest” doesn’t put those of us who start reading the Bible later in life at a disadvantage (except maybe in Bible Trivia). I think God has promised us excellent returns on any investment we make in discovering his Bible, don’t you agree?
The Bible is a gift…why do some of us (including me) wait so long to open it?
8 comments:
The hands look like Granddads...
CP
I thought that too; it's a good friend of mine from church who I persuaded to "model" for me.
Now I'm going to have to figure out who it is . . . :)
Now that's an amazing piece of art!
Such talent. I like your other artwork as well. Never stop!
View my blog here:
vickifourie.blogspot.com
I'm an artist as well, but in a different way. I'm a writer!
Thank you for your kind words, Vicki and for leaving your blog for me to see. I will look forward to reading it in the future. You are definitely an "artist with words"!!! Wonderful!!
Loved the story of Arlo, you never know what treasures you miss by not opening the cover of the bible or any book for that matter. Sad to say the bible seems less and less read by more and more Christians.
DO we get a prize for guessing the hands... $20 perhaps? You realize of course, that half the church will now be staring at hands instead of listening to the sermon!!
If I give a prize my model might request a portion as a fee or something! They definitely look like his hands so if you see them you'll say, "Yep, those are his."
So it's a him.... that bit of info help.
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