February 4, 2012 — by David H. Roper
Our Daily Bread
Eighty
years ago, Hungarian author Frigyes Karinthy wrote a short story he
called “Chain-Links,” in which he proposed the idea that any two
individuals in the world are connected through, at most, five
acquaintances. The thesis has been revived today and is usually
described as “Six Degrees of Separation.” It’s an unproven theory, of
course. But there is a dynamic at work that links us to others around
the world: It is the wisdom and providence of God working through His
Word to accomplish His will.
Some years ago, I received a letter from a man whom I had never met
telling me that a note I had sent to a nearby friend had found its way
to him, and it had encouraged him in a time of weariness and dark
despair. The friend to whom I had sent the note sent it to a friend,
who, in turn, sent it to a friend, and so on, until it was sent to the
man who wrote to me.
It may be that a simple word offered in love, guided by the wisdom
of God, and borne aloft on the wings of the Spirit will have eternal
consequences in someone’s life.
Should we not then fill ourselves with God’s Word and pass it on to
others with the prayer that God will use it for His intended purposes? (Should
we not then fill ourselves with God’s Word and pass it on to others
with the prayer that God will use it for His intended purposes? (Isa.
55:11).
Do a deed of simple kindness,
Though its end you may not see;
It may reach, like widening ripples,
Down a long eternity. —Norris
Though its end you may not see;
It may reach, like widening ripples,
Down a long eternity. —Norris
As the blossom can’t tell what becomes of its fragrance, we can’t tell what becomes of our influence.

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