Some few years ago, I read this wonder write-up
in a small column written by Steve Goodier. I don't know which journal was it, but I had a snippet of it with me. I want to share this with you too!
Someone advised, “If you can’t be kind, at least
have the decency to be vague.” But kindness and goodness extend far beyond how
we talk about each other. The person who dares to be good - and Do good - may
have to find the heart to stand up and be counted.
Not too long into the American Civil War the
Union finally won a victory at Antietam. President Lincoln used the occasion to
produce a proclamation to free American slaves. It was his Emancipation Proclamation. He called his cabinet together
and laid the document before them. He had been shaking the hands of well-wishers
all morning and his arm and hands were stiff. He rested his arm and spoke to
Secretary of State William Seward.
“If my name ever goes into history, it will be
for this act, and my whole soul is in it. If my hand trembles when I sign the
Proclamation, all who examine the document hereafter will say, ‘He hesitated.’”
Then he picked up a pen and signed “Abraham Lincoln” in bold writing. That
signature, coupled with a later Union victory, changed the course of history
forever. American slaves were finally freed.
It’s not always about being nice. It’s about
doing the right thing. And it was never put better by anyone than by eighteen
century church reformer John Wesley:
“Do all the good you
can,
By all the means you
can,
in all the ways you
can,
in all the places
you can,
at all the times you
can,
to all the people
you can,
as long as ever you
can.”
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Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
- T Walling