| Making the Most of Life |
Chapter 14 |
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Our work for Christ that fails in what we intended may yet leave a blessing in some other way. A faithful Bible class teacher through many months visited a young man, a member of her class, in sickness. She read the Bible to him and sang sweet hymns and prayed by his bedside. He was not a Christian, and she hoped that he would be let to Christ. But at length he recovered and went out again, unchanged, or even more indifferent than ever to his spiritual interests. All the faithful teacher’s work seemed to have been in vain. Then she learned that a frail, invalid girl, living in an adjoining house, had been brought to Christ through the loving work done for the careless scholar. The songs sung by the sick man’s bedside, and which seemed to have left no blessing in his heart, had been heard through the thin wall of the house in the girl’s sick room, and had told her of the love of the Saviour.
The records of Christian ministry are full of such good work done unintentionally. Failing to leave a blessing where it was hoped a blessing would be received, it blessed some other life. We may not say that any good work has failed until we know in the last great harvest all the results of the things we have done and the words we have spoken.
“Not all who seem to fail have failed indeed;
Not all who fail have therefore worked in vain’
For all or acts to many issues lead;
And out of earnest purpose, pure and plain,
Enforced by honest toil of hand or brain,
The Lord will fashion in his own good time
(Be this the labourers proudly humble creed),
Such ends as in his wisdom, fitliest chime
With his vast love’s eternal harmonies.
There is no failure for the good and wise;
What though thy seed should fall by the wayside,
And the birds snatch it? –Yet the birds are fed;
Or they may bear it far across the tide,
To give rich harvests after thou art dead.”
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