Skip to main content

The Crabby Customer and The Preacher



My heart felt like it would burst as I listened to Christians call in to the Christian radio station and testify about the great preacher, Billy Graham, this week.  The man of God loved people and labored across the world to share Good News.

I never met Billy.  My mom and I watched one of his crusades on T.V. in the sixties.   But I have my own Billy Graham story and I hope it honors him.

Years ago, Mrs. Richardson purchased a home from our office.   She became ill after she moved into her new home where the master shower developed problems.  Business increased and our office contractors couldn’t handle the service load.  But tenacious Mrs. Richardson kept calling and seemed crabbier each time.

One afternoon after I returned from lunch, the office manager offered to give me the rest of the day off if I would visit Mrs. Richardson and assure her we would fix her shower. 

When I parked my car in her driveway, I distinctly heard in my spirit that I should offer to pray on my knees with Mrs. Richardson.  I dismissed that prompt.  Why confuse a business call with a time of ministry, I reasoned.


The dear woman, disabled and in a wheel chair, smiled cheerfully when I entered.  Her caretaker took me into the bathroom to show me the problem.  I assured Mrs. Richardson that I understood her dilemma and validated her need.   But I realized immediately the reason why I was sent.


The caretaker served us tea in the living room while Mrs. Richardson and I chatted endlessly and I witnessed her loneliness.   I noticed the bookcase next to her wheel chair and scooted on the floor in front of the very bottom shelf where a book by Billy Graham caught my eye.  I grabbed it and asked her if she liked him.  She shared an emotional account of a long, lost time of hopelessness.  She attended a crusade and answered the call for prayer afterward.  She loved the way he prayed with compassion and authority. 

I told Mrs. Richardson I, too, am a Christian but I’m no Billy Graham.  However, I believe the same God Billy prayed to put us together that afternoon and asked if I could pray for her back to be healed. 

“Oh, yes!” she replied.  “But, honey, I can’t get on my knees.”

That’s when I realized I was, indeed, sitting on my knees right in front of her.  After our time of prayer and visiting, I let myself out at the front door.  Mrs. Richardson asked me to come again soon.

“The weather is so nice.  We can sit outside on the patio!  I can open a bottle of wine,” She offered.


I’ll never forget that afternoon and how I realized God has no limits.  He’s everywhere and ready to love people and touch them where they hurt.  I also became a little bit less afraid of thinking outside the box and a little more daring to allow Him to use me wherever He sees fit.

Comments

  1. I love this story, Mary! What a two-fold blessing that your office manager led you to Mrs. Richardson! Did the two of you have more opportunities to visit, to connect and pray? I'd love to know what became of her.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I love this! I'm glad you listened and followed that prompting.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I believe prayer has the greatest chance to be answered when each prays for oneself (except of course if the person is unconscious and unable to do so). However, it is very nice when someone offers you to pray for you and or with you, as you've done for that lady in the wheelchair. In this case, both get blessed by God: the one that offers to pray, and the one that needs the prayer.
    Lovely story!

    ReplyDelete
  4. What a beautiful story. I love it when God orchestrates those kind of moments!!!
    HUGS!
    Kim

    ReplyDelete
  5. I can't imagine the God-given discernment Billy Graham had and his willingness to obey the Lord where he was called to go. Through his passionate service for the Lord, many heard about the Good News. That's what I learned from the Lord. He might take us to places where it's not comfortable. Scary and makes us doubt ourselves. But when we heed and ask for His leading, those scary and doubtful experiences lead actually to victories! And in those moments, that was where I found the most fulfilling spiritual lessons! It was nice for you to discern the true need from that lady. Even nowadays ring true for many sad and weary souls! I'm glad you were there and discerned the need for prayer. A vital weapon indeed to win over the spiritual enemies always ready to devour someone. Thank you for the reminder...That we have a duty to always share the Good News wherever the Lord plant us. Be it a comfortable or not kind of place. After all, it is Him Who makes everything possible. Without Him, we are nothing! God bless you sister and praying the Lord's discernment, guidance, and all of His richest blessings over you and your beautiful family. Stay strong in the Lord's mighty power!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Oh dear Mary, you are such a blessing. Thank you for sharing this wonderful testimony to how God's love is spread one person at a time and how it met the need for a lonely handicapped person. xx

    ReplyDelete
  7. Mary, what a beautiful testimony to God's direction and power in our lives. Being from N.C., we've had first hand coverage of Billy Graham's death and the outpouring of love from so many people. He touched many lives and was certainly used in a mighty way by God....

    ReplyDelete
  8. Sweet Mary, isn't God amazing at how He works. He never makes a mistake. I just love this true story. God sent you there that day for way more than a business call! I attended a Billy Graham crusade in Jacksonville, Fla. Thousands and thousands came forward to accept Christ as their Lord. He was truly anointed. His message so simple that a child could understand. But as you said dear friend. The same Lord Billy prayed too so can we. The power of prayer is awesome. Hugs and blessings, Cindy

    ReplyDelete
  9. Oh, what a wonderful story! I am sure Mrs. Richardson never forgot you or that special time you shared together. So thankful for you, dear friend, and for your faithfulness to carry the Gospel with you wherever you go. We are SO sad over the loss of dear Billy Graham. He touched our lives in such a special way, too...I suppose he did that to nearly everyone in the world. I can't imagine there EVER being another one like him. Thanks for sharing your special memories.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Spiritual Sundays ~ Flamboyant Love

I was shopping for a birthday card during my lunch hour last week when I overheard an elderly woman in the card aisle talking to her niece, a woman about my age. Here is what she said: “ I threw out all my cards. They never meant those words anyway .” Lots of laughter followed. How sad I thought to be unable to receive the love sent to her in the sentiments of a card. This incident got me thinking about the love of God and resolving to embrace it when it is offered to me. It doesn’t matter if I think I’m worthy of such extravagant love; He thinks so! In contrast, just a day later I received one of those gorgeous hand-crafted cards in the mail from my friend, Kay, who loves paper crafting. It was so pretty and love and joy just oozed out of it when I opened it. This is a sample of her designs at Creativity is Good. Kay wrote a beautiful note to me in the card reminding me of God’s tender love for me. She ended her thoughts with “The God of the universe loves us more than we can ever f...

Holiday Movie Comes to Life

It’s uncanny when a new holiday movie comes out and resembles your personal life.   I came clean to my husband on that drive to the Harkins in Sedona confessing that the movie got bad ratings.   It isn’t the type of movie that he would choose to see in the first place.   Rotten Tomatoes gave it one star.   My prince charming replied:   “ Let’s see what we think of it and rate it ourselves.”   Yes!   High five to his palm! It started out as a fun afternoon date.   It would have been perfect if the lady directly in front of me didn’t have on super-strength perfume.   Smells can be troublesome when you’re prone to headaches.   I stuck my head in a big bucket of buttered popcorn; you know-- to alleviate her fragrance, because popcorn smell is less offensive.   What else is a girl like me to do? We named the genre “drama with comedy.”   Cast of characters acted like the typical family scene at Christmas tim...

Abba's Lap

I noticed a behavior pattern in little Amy, twenty months old, that I want to imitate.  She moves fast engaging in one toddler activity after another spinning like a whirlwind from one room to another.  Yet, she pauses,  intermittently , long enough to get refreshed.   I want to be like this grandchild of mine because she knows where to go and how to get comforted. Amy moves at record speed, putting more miles on a pedometer in one hour than my accumulated weekly workouts at the gym.  She can build a skyscraper so tall, I wonder why those bright pink Lego’s don’t topple to the ground as she continues to stack just one more piece on top. I learned never to leave the room to get another cup of coffee.  Once, when I returned, I found her climbing past the couch with hands and feet reaching for the living room drapes. She has a consistent habit that I admire.  In the midst of her activities, as she moves robustly from one play...