But when
it comes to giving away our last available resource, our faith isn't strong
enough to trust even our Creator. We
fall into the trap of "What if" suspicion.
There is a legend of a man who was lost in the desert, dying
of thirst. He stumbled on until he came to an abandoned house. Outside the
dilapidated, windowless, weather–beaten, deserted shack was a pump. He stumbled
forward and began pumping furiously, but no water came from the well. Then he
noticed a small jug with a cork at the top and a note written on the side:
"You have to prime the pump with water, my friend. P.S. And fill the jug
again before you leave." He pulled out a cork and saw that the jug was
full of water.
Should he pour it down the pump? What if it didn’t work? All
of the water would be gone. If he drank the water from the jug, he could be
sure he would not die of thirst. But to pour it down the rusty pump on the
flimsy instruction written on the outside of the jug?
Something from inside told him to follow the advice and
choose the risky decision. He proceeded to pour the whole jug of water down the
rusty old pump and furiously pumped up and down. Sure enough, the water gushed
out! He had all he needed to drink. He filled the jug again, corked it and
added his own words beneath the instructions on the jug: "Believe me, it
really works. You have to give it all away before you can get anything
back."
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