Several months later, the director of
the orphanage was on furlough in the United States. He wanted to visit all the
churches that supported him in China, so he came to speak one Sunday at my
grandfather's small church in Chicago. The missionary began by thanking the
people for their faithfulness in supporting the orphanage. "But most of
all," he said, "I must thank you for the glasses you sent last year.
You see, the Communists had just swept through the orphanage, destroying
everything, including my glasses. I was desperate. Even if I had the money,
there was simply no way of replacing those glasses. Along with not being able
to see well, I experienced headaches every day, so my coworkers and I were much
in prayer about this. Then your crates arrived. When my staff removed the
covers, they found a pair of glasses lying on top."
The missionary paused long enough to let
his words sink in. Then, still gripped with the wonder of it all, he continued:
"Folks, when I tried on the glasses, it was as though they had been
custom-made just for me! I want to thank you for being a part of that."
The people listened, happy for the miraculous glasses. But the missionary
surely must have confused their church with another, they thought. There were
no glasses on their list of items to be sent overseas. But sitting quietly in
the back, with tears streaming down his face, an ordinary carpenter realized
the Master Carpenter had used him in an extraordinary way.
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