This is what happened to me: I was driving the ice cream truck...
And I stopped for a nice family who was buying their child ice cream for the first time. I am wearing my big colourful “cat in the hat” style hat that I always wear selling ice cream. Since it was the little boy’s first ice cream truck experience I wanted it to be a good one. So after delivering the ice cream into his hands I performed a quick but impressive juggling routine. In response, the mother tipped me and said “God bless you!” I responded “Thank you, you too” and sung a little “Blessed Be Your Name” in my head. What made it a particularly good witness was the tip, a small but immediate and tangible blessing, symbolic of spiritual blessings.
The only thing better would be a blessing instead of a tip at a restaurant. I don’t know if people actually do this but I feel like sometimes we attach a cash value to blessings. It’s like we think we can spend some of the treasure we know we are storing up in heaven with all our witnessing on credit and let God settle up the bill. It’s like if we say “God bless you” instead of giving spare change, we are sure that YHWH’s reign of shalom is going to pour down from heaven bringing healing and abundance to that homeless person’s life, not necessarily immediately, or we might wait to see it happen, but sometime while we have moved onto our other important errands. We also have just offered to talk about Jesus to that person (if we ever see them again) and we have an amazing testimony to share at our life group. Don’t get me wrong, I think blessings can be important and powerful but, precisely because they are, let’s not use them as a cop outs.
Is the phrase “God Bless You” effective in witness?
Why is it difficult to talk about our spirituality?
Have you ever received “spiritual help” when you needed physical help?
Has Soul Cravings given you a format that helps you relate your faith to life in a way that makes it easier to talk about?
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