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Steps
to Life
WEEKLIES
# Supplement
4
The New Covenant
Ceremonies
Dear Friend,
In today's lesson
we will be studying the services Jesus instituted at the Last Supper
with His disciples before His death. They had gathered to celebrate
the Passover. Jesus desired to keep this feast alone with the twelve.
He was about to present Himself as a sin offering and thus bring
to an end the system of types and ceremonies that for four thousand
years had pointed to His death.
As He looked
at His disciples, He longed to help them understand the great disappointment
they were soon to experience, but there was strife among them; which
of them should be accounted the greatest. The whole life of Christ
had been a life of unselfish service. "Not to be ministered
unto, but to minister," Matthew 20:28, had been the lesson
of His every act. But, the disciples had not yet learned this lesson.
How could He show His disciples that it is loving service, true
humility, which constitutes real greatness?
At a feast it
was customary for a servant to wash the feet of the guests. Provision
had been made with a pitcher, basin and towel, but no servant was
present. It was the disciples' duty to perform the act, but each
determined not to act the part of a servant. They refused to humble
themselves. Jesus waited for a time to see what they would do. Then
He rose from the table, laid aside his outer garment, took a towel
and girded Himself. Surprised, the disciples looked on, and in silence
waited to see what was to follow. "After that He poureth water
into a basin, and began to wash the disciples' feet, and to wipe
them with the towel wherewith He was girded." This action opened
their eyes and bitter shame and humiliation filled their hearts.
They understood the unspoken rebuke, and saw themselves in a new
light.
Now the disciples
were prepared spiritually to learn of the ordinance of the Lord's
Supper that was given to commemorate the great deliverance wrought
out as the result of the death of Christ.
Till He shall
come the second time in power and glory, this ordinance is to be
celebrated. It is the means by which His great work for us is to
be kept fresh in our minds.
The following
stories are examples of others who have had the spirit of Jesus,
one of humility and service to others. As you study the lesson today,
I pray that you will also gain a deeper understanding of the love
of Jesus, as shown by His humility and sacrifice for us.
A Language the
Whole World Understands
Another translation
of the Bible says, "Love is patient and kind." In other
words, if there is love in our hearts, it will be shown by our being
kind. We will not be unkind to those we love. It will not be difficult
for us to show kindness to those we love; it will be a pleasure,
the natural thing for us to do.
General Robert
E. Lee, who was one of the gentlest and kindest of men, was one
day riding by train to the city of Richmond. The car in which he
was riding was filled with officers and soldiers. At a small station
along the route an elderly woman, poorly dressed, entered the car.
Not finding an empty seat, she walked down the aisle toward the
place where General Lee was seated.
Immediately
he arose, bowed courteously, and offered the little old lady his
seat. Noticing this act of kindness on the part of their general,
a score or more of the men in the car arose instantly and urged
their superior officer to be seated. "No, gentlemen,"
he said, "if you could not rise for an infirm elderly lady,
you need not rise for me." It was a rebuke to those men, and
most of them arose and went into another car, where they would feel
more comfortable.
Jesus tells
us we should love our neighbor as we lover ourselves. That neighbor
may live next door, or he might be of another nationality, he might
speak another language, he might even live across the seas or in
another land. His skin might be a different color.
Some years ago
a black man was walking down a busy New York street, carrying two
heavy suitcases. He could not afford a taxicab, so was carrying
his heavy load from the railway station to a hotel some blocks away.
As he struggled along with the heavy burden, a hand was laid upon
his shoulder, and in an instant had reached down and taken hold
of one of the heavy suitcases. A white man's smiling face looked
into his, and a friendly voice inquired, "Pretty heavy, brother,
is it not? Let me take this grip. I am going your way." The
black man wanted to say no. He tried to protest, but it was useless,
for the strong arm already was carrying one piece of the heavy luggage,
and this new-found, big-hearted friend was walking by his side.
The black man was Booker T. Washington, and the white man was Theodore
Roosevelt. Big people are kind.
The color of
a man's skin did not mater to Roosevelt. Here was a traveler whose
burdens he could lighten, and he gave him a helping hand. No wonder
he became President. It has been said that "no other President
lived the life of America so completely." The door of the White
House was open to all classes during his administration, and Roosevelt
was universally loved. Genuine love, which really comes from the
heart, cannot be valued in gold or silver. We may have a form of
kindness without love in our hearts, but we just cannot love without
being kind. There will never be love without kindness and courtesy
and helpfulness.
A young storekeeper
had closed his store after a hard, trying day, and was hurrying
home to his evening meal, when he met a little girl. Her mother
had sent her to the store to buy a spool of thread. Recognizing
the young merchant, she told him of her errand. He retraced his
steps, opened the store, secured the spool of thread for her, and
registered the five-cent sale on the cash register. He was not obliged
to do this, but it cheered her tiny heart and won many friends for
the merchant.
One day Abraham
Lincoln met a young girl on the street crying bitterly, and he stopped
to see if he could be of any help. He asked what the trouble might
be and if he could help. She was sobbing and crying but managed
to tell him that the drayman had promised to come and pick up her
trunk and take it to the railroad station, for she was gong away
on the train. It was near train time, and the man had not come for
the trunk. Mr. Lincoln asked her to show him where the trunk was,
so she led him into her house. He took the trunk on his back and
carried it off to the station for her. She and her mother caught
the train.
True courtesy
has always been a real asset to people, and to business concerns,
too. It has helped many young men and women to positions of trust
and responsibility. The lack of kindness and courtesy has shut the
door of opportunity against many, too. What a simple thing it is
to say, "Thank you"; yet how important it is. Kindness
pays big dividends. A kind deed will always leave at least two people
happier. It blesses the doer of the deed as well as the one for
whom it is done.
***
Hands
That Speak
Miss Caroline
Winters slipped the last golden-brown pie out of the over, and setting
it on the shelf beside three others, stood a moment or so viewing
her handiwork with unconcealed pride. Then, her work completed for
the afternoon, she sat herself down in the coziest rocker on her
back porch, her hands busy with a bit of tatting, as she listened
to the snatches of music that floated out from the open windows
of the little house next door.
Once in awhile,
across the green hedge that separated her house from the Winslows',
Miss Caroline could see Lisa's bare, bronzed arms, flashing in the
sunlight as she energetically shook her duster out of the window.
Mostly, though, she could only hear her neighbor whistling cheerfully
to herself, as she swept and dusted and baked. That merry whistle
always told Miss Caroline whether things were going well with Lisa;
it was the most infallible of barometers.
For many months
now, ever since the little mother had gone away and left the care
of the three youngsters to her capable eldest daughter, Miss Caroline
had kept her weather eye--no, ear on that barometer for signs of
storm.
Naturally, there
had been many times during those months when the whistling had stopped
for a little while--times when Lisa needed just a bit of encouragement--and
once or twice there had been a long interval of silence. Once, right
at the beginning of things, when it seemed for day after day that
nothing Lisa tried to cook would turn out right, and once, later
on, when little Bobby had the Whooping cough.
And every time
when the little house was still, Miss Caroline managed to find some
excuse that would take her through the hedge. Lisa often wondered
how Miss Caroline always happened to be on hand just when she needed
her most, but she never guessed that she, herself, sent out the
trouble call.
Today everything
had been running smoothly. A few minutes more and Lisa would be
through with her work, ready to go up to her room to dress for the
afternoon. Miss Caroline had been "listening" so long
that she knew practically every move Lisa made during the day. Yes,
she had figured things out correctly this time, for here was Lisa
at the window, giving the duster a last vigorous shake, with an
extra gay flourish in Miss Caroline's direction.
And then something
happened, for the whistling died away in the middle of a note. Miss
Caroline peered out of her back porch, and caught a glimpse of Mary
Ellen Tracy just turning up the Winslows' walk.
Mary Ellen Tracy,
in her new yellow frock, was delightfully in accord with the sunshiny
afternoon, and exceedingly pretty to look at, yet Miss Caroline
frowned at the sight of her.
So that was
what had choked off the whistle! Lisa must have caught sight of
Mary Ellen when she came to the window to give her duster that last
shake before putting it away. Poor Lisa, with her morning dress
still unchanged, and a dust cap covering her pretty hair--it was
more than thoughtless, it was downright mean, of Mary Ellen to come
before Lisa was ready to receive callers, and flaunt her lovely
clothes and dainty slippers in front of this other girl who loved
pretty things equally as well, but who had so little time to wear
them.
After what seemed
an interminable wait, Mary Ellen went dancing off down the walk,
all unconcernedly, and Miss Caroline say and listened. But there
was not a sound from the little house across the hedge.
The frown deepened
in Miss Caroline's face, and was supplanted, after a moment of study,
by a look of comprehension.
At once she
went into her kitchen, and selecting the crispest and most golden
brown of the pies on the shelf, marched herself over to the Winslows;
and in through the back door, without so much as knocking.
Exactly as she
had guessed, Lisa was sitting there at the kitchen table, her head
on her arms.
"What is
the matter, child?" asked Miss Caroline, understandingly--"Are
you worried about your clothes?"
"No, not
clothes," denied Lisa, lifting her head, and bravely attempting
a smile, which was a failure. "Hands!"
"Hands!"
exclaimed Miss Caroline, taking one of Lisa's in both of hers, and
stroking it soothingly. "What on earth is the matter with this
small hand, I wish you would tell me? It is strong and capable and
healthy and beautifully shaped--"
"And scratched
and burned and bruised and sunburned--look!" She held out her
other hand and disclosed a big bandage around one finger. "I
cut that just a little white before Ellen came--"
"Ah!"
nodded Miss Caroline, "I was right. Mary Ellen had something
to do with it. Surely you are not envying her, dear child?"
"Oh, but
I am!" admitted Lisa. "Have you ever noticed her hands?
They are too beautiful and exquisite to be truthful, white and smooth
and soft and tiny!"
"Exactly!"
snorted Miss Caroline indignantly. "They are too exquisite
to be true, just as you say. They are also too exquisite to be any
good on earth!"
"Why, Miss
Caroline," exclaimed Lisa in amazement, "do you not like
Mary Ellen's hands?"
"I do not,
" declared Miss Caroline firmly. "Neither do I like curly
white lap dogs, or statuettes or tramps or anything else that is
of no use in the world."
"But do
you not think they are beautiful?"
"I do not,"
repeated Miss Caroline. "Pretty to look at, yes. But beautiful,
no indeed!"
"Oh, Miss
Caroline, how can you say that?"
"Why I
mean it, child. You are forgetting what true beauty is. Do you not
know that every blessed scar on these hands of yours is a mark of
service given, and every scratch is a symbol of work well done?
And you would exchange them for hands like Mary Ellen's that have
nothing to say for themselves--just soft and smooth and white--and
expressionless as a retouched photograph!"
Miss Caroline's
voice was eloquent with righteous scorn.
"Beautiful?"
Why, your hands are just like your mother's hands, child, and I
always said that she had the most beautiful hands I ever saw. There
never were hands more exquisitely shaped than hers--yet not for
one moment did she consider them too fine to perform any act of
service that was needed."
"Mother
did have lovely hands," agreed Lisa, reflectively. "I
always thought so; they were so firm and strong and, oh, so willing.
And they could do anything. I guess they must have been scarred,
too, but I never thought about that. I never thought about mine,
either, until I saw them next to Mary Ellen's."
"Take a
look at yours again," suggested Miss Caroline, "and see
if they do not speak of work well done and service rendered."
Lisa held her
hands out in front of her and looked at them through new eyes.
"They do,
do they not?" she admitted. "Maybe you are right, Miss
Caroline. Mary Ellen is always afraid to do things, for fear she
will hurt her hands. I would hate to be like that!"
"Of course!
And the time will come when you will be thankful that, instead of
being soft and white and helpless like Mary Ellen's, your hands
are strong and willing and unafraid to do tasks that others would
fear to attempt. And Mary Ellen will realize some day, that never,
never can her hands be so beautiful as yours."
At the end of
her prophecy, Miss Caroline suddenly seemed to remember that she
had a home of her own, and started to go. At the door she turned
and said, offhandedly, "I made too many pies today. Do you
suppose this one will come in handy for supper?"
"Oh, you
darling!" exclaimed Lisa. "I just know you made too many
on purpose. And is that how you happened to come in, just now?"
But her visitor,
who had already reached the hedge, only turned and smiled.
Miss Caroline's
prophecy did come true--and a great deal sooner than she had anticipated.
It was only
a week later that she saw Mary Ellen again turn primly up the walk
to the little house next door. With Mary Ellen was her five-year-old
sister, Gertrude, a small, rosy cherub of a youngster, all daintily
dressed.
"More trouble
for Lisa," thought Miss Caroline, grimly. "Now, why could
not Mary Ellen have had sense enough to leave Gertrude home?"
For golden curls, her wide blue eyes, and her angelic smile, could
think up more mischief even than Bobby Winslow--and Bobby, all by
himself, could manage to keep Lisa well occupied thwarting the wild
stunts he invented.
Miss Caroline
could well imagine Lisa's mental comments as she caught sight of
her small visitor, but not for an instant did she betray herself
to her guests.
Bobby and Gertrude
jumped eagerly at her suggestion that they play hopscotch up and
down the walk, and the two older girls settled themselves comfortable
on the veranda.
"Now tell
me about your New York trip," Lisa commanded, then interrupted
herself, as a sudden howl of distress came from Gertrude. "But,
Mary Ellen, Bobby is so strenuous; perhaps you had better not let
Gertrude play with him. It is a shame to have her get all mussed
up--"
And immediately
Mary Ellen's protest, "Oh, what does that matter if she does
spoil things?"
"I suppose
it does not matter," came Lisa's voice, "if you do not
have to make them yourself, or wash and iron them."
Poor Lisa. Miss
Caroline longed to spank Mary Ellen for the little, self-satisfied,
commiserating way she laughed.
Indignantly,
she gathered up her work and went inside. Once there, a thousand
tasks claimed her attention, and for a time she half forgot the
trials of her young next-door neighbor.
Passing by a
window, Miss Caroline glanced across the lawn and saw Gertrude and
Bobby coming out the back door, carrying a box of matches. Quickly
she started for her neighbor's backyard.
Luckily, however,
the girls were ahead of her.
Lisa, warned
in the middle of a sentence by the ominous silence (silence she
had found, was always ominous where small brothers were concerned),
decided to investigate.
She and Mary
Ellen had just rounded the corner of the house in time to see Gertrude
strike a match from the forbidden box in Bobby's hand and, holding
the top of a long curl in the flame, laugh with impish glee as it
sizzled; then, as she caught sight of the older girls, instinctively
let the match slip from her fingers as she started to run.
The lighted
match, as it fell to the ground, caught the flimsy material of Gertrude's
dress, and it flamed up as she ran.
Mary Ellen started
after her, then stopped short, seemingly rooted to the spot and
quite voiceless, as she saw what had happened. Little Gertrude,
discovering her flaming dress, started for her sister. But Mary
Ellen, her tongue suddenly loosed, cried out in horror: "Do
not come near me, do not--you will set me on fire, too. Oh, no,
do not come here."
The mischief
was done. At the terror in her sister's voice, Gertrude turned and
fled, shrieking at the top of her lungs.
"Gertrude,
lie down; lie down on the ground," commanded Lisa, trying to
cut across her path as she ran, but Gertrude only ran faster.
It was just
then that Miss Caroline arrived at the hedge and headed her off.
Turning, Gertrude ran straight into Lisa.
Without an instant's
hesitation, Lisa caught the child, and laying her on the ground,
slipped down on tope of her, beating out, with her hands, the flames
that she would not smother with her body.
It was all over
in two minutes--but they were two minutes that brought Mary Ellen
to her senses. A most illuminating mirror had been held up on front
of her, and she shrank from looking at the picture of her real self
that it presented to her.
Miss Caroline
was bending tenderly over Lisa, who lay there motionless on the
grass. She raised her head as Mary Ellen spoke.
"You must
not judge yourself too harshly, my dear," she answered gently,
trying to take the sting out of Mary Ellen's bitter discovery. "You
had been brought up to think of yourself first. Now, come and help
me please."
Mary Ellen helped
the best she knew how, and waited, scarcely breathing, as Miss Caroline
pronounced the little sister practically unharmed, except for a
few burns on her arms and legs, and the loss of her beautiful curls.
"But, if
it had not been for Lisa--" Mary Ellen Shuddered. Then she
knelt and lifted one of the hands that had saved her sister. Involuntarily,
she shut her eyes at the pitiful sight.
Then she held
her own white hands out in front of her and looked at them as if
they were something loathsome. "Oh, I shall never, never be
able to look at my hands again without hating them! Is there not
something, anything, that I could to try to make atonement?"
Miss Caroline
bathed the poor, bruised, blistered fingers with oil, and started
to bandage them before she answered. "It will be days before
Lisa will be able to use her hands again. You might, if you are
sure you really want to, give up your New York trip and help keep
house for her until she is able to do it once more," she suggested.
Some time later,
after the doctor had been there to see Lisa and had pronounced that
the scars would not be disfiguring, as they had feared, Miss Caroline
and Mary Ellen were in the kitchen. Miss Caroline had been showing
her how to get supper.
"Miss Caroline,"
began Mary Ellen, as she lifted the lid off the carrots and set
it down on the stove while she tested them with a fork, "What
was it that Lisa kept muttering all the time she was delirious,
about 'hands that speak'?"
Miss Caroline
told her as kindly as she could.
"Why, how
could I ever have thought that my hands were beautiful," marveled
Mary Ellen, "When they were just speechless?"
Thoughtlessly
she started to pick up the cover again--and dropped it with a sudden
scream.
"Ouch!
That burned!" she exclaimed. Suddenly a thought struck her,
and she looked at the finger searchingly. Had it left a mark? It
had, decidedly.
"I do believe,
yes, Miss Caroline, I do believe the silence is over for good and
all." Proudly she displayed the burn on her rosy forefinger.
"It's the
first word, Miss Caroline,--the very first word they have said--but,"
and Miss Caroline smiled tenderly to herself at the determination
in Mary Ellen's voice, "I can promise you that it is not going
to be the last."
As you read
today's lesson and realize the great love and sacrifice that Jesus
has made for us, I am sure that you will want to receive the blessings
that come from following Jesus' example. May the Lord bless you
in this study.
With Love,
From your friends
at Steps to Life.
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