RUBY'S PRAYER
Ruby Hamilton, a businesswoman in her fifties, was
stunned at the loss of her husband of 32 years in a car accident. Her
anger and disappointment went deeper than a more typical expression of
grief though. She had become a follower of Christ in her late twenties,
but her husband didn't share her newfound interest in spiritual things.
Nonetheless, she had set about praying for him feverishly and
unceasingly that he would come to know the Lord. And one day when she
was praying, she felt a wave of peace wash over her, and that still
small voice assuring her that her husband would be okay. She eagerly
awaited the day when her husband surrender his life to Jesus. And now
this.
What do you do when faith doesn't make sense? When God
doesn't seem to be answering or opening doors or being found? Ruby
Hamilton stopped living for God.
Roger Simmons was hitchhiking
his way home. He would never forget the date - May 7th. His heavy
suitcase was making him tired and he was anxious to take off that army
uniform once and for all. Flashing the thumb to the oncoming car, he
lost hope when he saw it was a black, sleek new Cadillac. To his
surprise the car stopped.
The passenger door swung open. He ran
toward the car, tossed his suitcase in the back and thanked the
handsome, well-dressed man as he slid into the front seat. "Going home
for keeps?"
"Sure am."
"Well, you're in luck if you're going to Chicago."
"Not quite that far - do you live in Chicago?"
"I have a business there, the driver said. My name is Hamilton."
They
chatted for a while, and then Roger, a Christian, felt a compulsion to
share his faith with this fiftyish, apparently successful business man.
But he kept putting it off, till he realized that he was now just 30
minutes from his home. It was now or never.
"Mr. Hamilton, I
would like to talk to you about something very important." Then he
simply told Mr. Hamilton about the plan of salvation and ultimately
asked him if he would like to receive Jesus as his savior and Lord.
The
Cadillac pulled over to the side of the road. Roger expected that he
was about to get thrown out of the car. Instead, the businessman bowed
his head and received Christ, then thanked Roger "This is the greatest
thing that has ever happened to me."
Five years went by. Roger
married, had a couple of kids and a business of his own. Packing his
suitcase for a trip to Chicago he found a small white business card that
had been given to him by Hamilton five years previous. In Chicago, he
looked up Hamilton enterprises. The receptionist told him that it was
impossible to see Mr. Hamilton, but he could see Mrs. Hamilton. A little
confused, he was ushered into a beautiful office where he found himself
facing a keen-eyed woman in her fifties.
She extended her hand "You knew my husband?"
Roger
told her about how Hamilton had picked him up while he was hitchhiking
home after the war. "Can you tell me what day that was?"
"Sure it was May 7th, five years ago, the day I was discharged from the army."
"Anything special about that day," she asked.
He
hesitated, not knowing if he should mention how he shared the message
of Jesus with her husband. "Mrs. Hamilton, I explained the gospel to
your husband that day. He pulled over to the side of the road and wept
against the steering wheel. He gave his life to Christ that day."
Explosive
sobs shook her body. Finally getting a grip on herself, she sobbed, "I
had prayed for my husband's salvation for years. I believed God would
save him."
"Where is your husband, Ruby?"
"He's dead. He
was in a car crash after he let you out of the car. He never got home.
You see, I thought God had not kept his promise. I stopped living for
God five years ago because I thought God had not kept his word!"
(Considerable
influence for this message came from John Piper's "The Spring of
Persistent Public Love", DesiringGod.org. From a sermon by Bret Toman,
Power to Live the Golden Rule, 1/3/2011)
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