Sully Sullenberger, the captain who skillfully landed US
Airways flight 1549 on the Hudson River on January 15, 2009, became a household
name. After striking a flock of geese
that disabled the engines, Sullenberger flew the plane like a giant glider and
landed safely on the Hudson River saving the lives of 155 people on board. For thirty years Sullenberger flew airplanes
in an uneventful career. This one act
made him a national hero. The event was captured in the movie, Sully,
starring Tom Hanks.
Unlike Sullenberger, few took notice of Julien Duret, a
French tourist who plunged into New York’s East River to save a two-year-old
child. When Julien Duret saw Bridget Sheridan slip through the guard rail and
fall into the river, he did not hesitate.
He immediately jumped into the river to save her. Later, amid all the
commotion, he took a taxi and disappeared without waiting to be thanked. Like
most heroes, he did not consider himself heroic.
Few of us will be
given such significant opportunities to perform heroic feats that make the
news. And even if the heroic opportunity
were given to us, we might miss it.
Celebrated heroic actions make a difference. They burst upon us like a torrential downpour
that sweeps us off our feet. But it is the little-known acts of kindness that
often make the greatest difference. They
are like the raindrops that pool into freshwater lakes and nourish the
earth.
Jesus recognized the importance of heroic and sacrificial
actions. He said, “Greater love hath no
man than to lay down his life for his friend.”
Of course, this is what He did when He went to the cross and laid his
life down for us. But He also taught the importance of little acts of
kindness. In fact, it might very well be
that the little acts of kindness we choose to do every day have a far greater
impact in transforming the world than a few famous acts of heroism.
All of us have opportunity every day to perform little acts
of kindness. We all have opportunity to
let someone else in line before us, to hold a door open for a stranger, to
speak a kind and encouraging word to the cashier who wearily scans countless
items at the checkout counter. We can
all be kind to a waitress who works for a minimum wage to support her child, or
a student working nights to pay for college.
A friend recounted his visit to Arby’s. Completing a cell phone call, he watched from
his car as a large woman frantically searched the back seat of her car. He
asked if there was a problem. She told him she had a roll of quarters she was
going to use to buy lunch, but she could not find them. He pulled out a $10 bill and asked, “Will
this help?” She refused. He insisted.
Inside he stood behind the rattled woman as she thanked him
profusely. She said, “God sent you, you
know.” When the cashier delivered his
order she said, “The manager was watching and he went ahead and gave you a free
sandwich.”
Little acts of kindness add up. All put together, they can
change the world. Jesus said, “In that you have done it to the least of these,
you have done it to Me” (Matthew 25:40).
Tinsley's novel, We Beheld His Glory is free as an eBook on Amazon September 9-11.
No comments:
Post a Comment