But don't forget. There was an exception to all this.
Phillip was not really a part of the group. Phillip did not choose, nor did he
want to be different. He just was. And that was the way things were.
His teacher had a marvelous idea for his class the Sunday
after Easter. You know those things that panty hose come in, the containers
that look like great big eggs? The teacher collected ten of them. The children loved
it when he brought them into the room and gave one to each child. It was a
beautiful spring day, and the assignment was for each child to go outside, find
the symbol for new life, put it into the egg, and bring it back to the
classroom.
, would then open and share their new life symbols and surprises,
one by one.
It was glorious. It was confusing. It was wild. They ran all
around the church grounds, gathering their symbols, and returned to the
classroom.
They put all the eggs on a table, and then the teacher began
to open them. All the children gathered around the table. He opened one and
there was a flower, and they ooh-ed and aah-ed. He opened another and there was
a little butterfly. "Beautiful' the girls all said, since it is hard for
eight-year
old boys to say 'beautiful.' He opened another and there was
a rock and as third-graders will, some laughed, and some said, "That's
crazy! How's a rock supposed to be like new life?" But the smart little
boy who'd put it in there spoke up: "That's mine. And I knew all of you
would get flowers and buds and leaves and butterflies and stuff like that. So I
got a rock because I wanted to be different. And for me, that's new life."
They all laughed.
/
The teacher said something about the wisdom of eight-year
olds and opened the next one. There was nothing inside. The children, as
eight-year olds will say, "That's not fair. That's stupid! Somebody didn't
do it right." Then the teacher felt a tug on his shirt, and he looked
down. "It's mine, Phillip said. It's mine." And the children said, "You don't ever
do things right, Philip. There's nothing there!" "I did so do it right!" Phillip
said. "I did do it right. The tomb is empty!"
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