So, on the train ride home there was time to ponder the book I read just today, with a story of God using the prayer of an evangelist to heal a blind man. It was a true miracle, and as I read that story I wondered if God could use my prayers to heal someone... and maybe He did, but in a different way. Which is more of a miracle? For a disabled person to be healed by prayer, or by prayer prevent someone from needing prayer in the first place? Maybe that lady at the busy intersection was spared injury.
I say this because there is a back story to Paragraph One:
I initially planned to ride the train to Philly on Wednesday, but plans changed. Because of a full parking lot, I managed to miss Wednesday's 10:36 a.m. train. I was bummed. I cried. On the 20-minute return drive home, I was able to decompress and briefly wondered if there was a reason why I missed that train since I am timely, and rarely miss an appointment.
Maybe Thursday or Friday would work to go to Philly. Fortunately, the two bedrooms in our new home that still needed attention after our recent move benefited from missing that train.
Thursday came and went, with no time for Philly. And Friday's garage sale had me wondering whether or not Philly could be squeezed into afternoon plans. At 7:30 a.m. sharp I was open for business, ready to give free cupcakes to the first six customers and sell our dining table and everything. I waited. And waited. And had time to re-read a story in the book mentioned above. No customers whatsoever came, for 2 hours, so there was no need to stay open. Again I cried, this time because of a garage sale fail. Actually, it was a mega-fail. (A couple of hours later I discovered that my Craigslist post vanished, plus the sign at the end of the street that I thought was rudely taken down in reality fell down.)
This stay-at-home lightweight might be grasping at straws, but if I hadn't failed to catch the train Wednesday, and if Friday's garage sale hadn't been a total flop (most importantly with time to re-read some of the book that encouraged the prayer), and if discouragement kept me from putting one foot in front of the other... with all that happened this week to get me to that busy Philly intersection Friday at approximately 3:45 p.m. to stand next to that older stranger, with an ideal vantage point to see her and Mr. Lawless simultaneously, close enough to naturally stop the lady's forward motion. Maybe it all happened to keep her from stepping into a scary situation.
And the icing on the cupcake, to pause and punctuate a highly convoluted week plus that morning's book take-away, was that unexpected, complimentary one-way train ride into the city. Free always gets our attention! Some may call Friday's event random or over-rated, but because of odd circumstances and seeming fails that seamlessly combined together to orchestrate it, and the added 40-minute train ride home in the pondering "quiet car" (no chatting allowed or you get shhhsh'd), I feel obliged and compelled to not downplay it, and to label it a rather-ish? miracle.
Two Market Street safety situations mean preserved 6th grade crossing guard days are restored. More than enough for purpose-a-plenty. Meaningful pretirement can be about chutzpah or boldness, prayerfully-applied. Otherwise, crossing guard, or healing acts like when Jesus rubbed spit mud on a stranger's eyes, could seem rude or overly dramatic (The Bible, John chapter 9).
God can partner uniquely with anyone, so pray for opportunities. I am humbled.


