Life Saved
Life’s a little thing! Robert Browning once wrote. But a
little thing can mean a life. Even two lives. How well I remember. Two years
ago in downtown Denver
my friend, Scott Reasoner and I saw a tiny and insignificant change the world,
but no one else even seemed to notice.
It was one of those beautiful Denver days. Crystal clear and no humidity, not a cloud in
the sky. We decided to walk the ten blocks to an outdoor restaurant rather than
take the shuttle bus that runs up and down the Sixteenth Street Mall. The
restaurant, in the shape of a baseball diamond, was called The Blake Street
Baseball Club. Tables were set appropriately on the grass infield. Many
colorful pennants and flags hung limply overhead.
As we sat outside, the sun continued to beat down on
us, and it became increasingly hot. There wasn’t a hint of a breeze, and the
heat radiated up from the tabletop. Nothing moved, except the waiters, of
course. And they didn’t move very fast.
After lunch Scott and I started to walk back up the
mall. We both noticed a young mother and her daughter walking out of a card
shop toward the street. She was holding her daughter by the hand while reading
a greeting card. It was immediately apparent to us that she was so engrossed in
the card that she did not notice a shuttle bus moving toward her at a good
clip. She and her daughter were one step away from disaster when Scott started
to yell. He hadn’t even got a word out when a breeze blew the card out of her
hand and over her shoulder. She spun around and grabbed the card nearly
knocking her daughter over. By the time she picked up the card from the ground
and turned back to cross the street, the shuttle bus had whizzed by her. She
never knew what almost happened.
To this day, two things continue to perplex me about
this event. Where did that one spurt of wind come from to blow the card out of
that young mother’s hand? There had not been a whisper of wind at lunch, or
during our long walk back up to the mall. Secondly, if Scott had been able to
get his words out, the young mother might have looked up at us as they
continued to walk into the bus. It was the wind that made her turn back to the
card– in the direction that saved her life and that of her daughter. The
passing bus did not create the wind. On the contrary, the wind came from the
opposite direction.
I have no doubt it was a breath from God protecting
them both. But the awesomeness of this miracle is that she never knew. As we
continued back to work, I wondered at how God often acts in our lives without
our being aware. The difference between life and death can very well be a
little thing.
Miracles often blow unseen through our lives!
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