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Jimmy Cochran Columnist |
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This was my introduction
to a lady a few years ago that would prove to teach me much about determination,
strength and character.
“I just got laid off my
job and need just a few dollars to pay my phone bill this month. I really hate
to ask, but I really need just this little bit until I can get work.”
In my job at the time, I
dealt with people who needed assistance for various and sundry things. Rent,
utilities, clothes, gasoline, food, somewhere to live, a job, medical care and
almost everything that we take for granted in our daily lives. We try to help
out as best we can, as do other churches and agencies, but funds are short and
the needs are great.
As I talked and helped
with Tonya more and more over the following year, her story unfolded to me and I
realized this lady had more life than most folks I know. She has no
transportation, so she rides a bike everywhere she goes; and I mean everywhere.
From the Highway 155/East Lake area up to the McDonough Square trying to find
work and then back again. She had a serious drug and alcohol problem until four
years previously when she got herself clean, but her face shows the harsh scars
of knife fights and beatings during that period of her life. Her priority is to
remain clean, and find a long-term job so she can take care of herself without
asking for more help.
As the year passed,
Tonya and I spoke of her broken family, of her problems in the past and her
efforts to get a break in life. I rarely spoke to her about the need of God’s
place in her heart because she needed some physical food and shelter before she
could begin to understand about God’s Love and provision. She could not relate
to a loving Heavenly Father when all she had known in her earthly life had been
verbal and physical abuse, crime and isolation. Perhaps I was wrong, but I felt
she needed more at the moment than spiritual talk when her stomach was growling
and she still had a seven-mile trip on a bicycle to get home. But, each time we
talked, we would have a prayer.
One day Tonya showed up
at my office beaming as she excitedly told me that she was leaving her man and
moving to a shelter where they would help her stay clean, find her a job and set
her up in an apartment when she was ready to be on her own. All she had on her
bike was a paper bag with some clothes and a couple of pictures. She spoke sadly
of leaving her house and belongings, but was thrilled at the anticipation of a
brand new start in her life. Her smile and the glistening tears on her cheeks
made the knife scars invisible and I saw a true child of God standing there
waiting for a new life. She said that she knew God was working in her life and
she was ready to finally listen. We were both crying as we walked her out the
door to her bicycle where she put a new Bible I gave her into her basket and
rode off to start a new life.
She promised to keep in
touch, but we all know how that goes. What I do know is that a lady named Tonya
entered my life one day needing assistance and giving far more to me than I ever
provided for her.
“Then Jesus said, if you
have provided for any of My Children, then you have provided for Me.” (Matthew
25:40)
And for today my
friends, this has been the gospel according to Jimmy.
Jimmy Cochran is a resident of McDonough, author, musician and Minister.