More Steve Goodier
You may remember the old Flip Wilson routine
when someone asked the
comic about his religion. He answered, "I am a
Jehovah's Bystander."
"A Jehovah's Bystander?" remarked his friend. "I
never heard of a
Jehovah's Bystander."
Flip said, "Well, they asked me to be a witness,
but I didn't want to
get involved."
In these troubled times, I think Edmund Burke is
right. "The only
thing necessary for the triumph of evil," he
says, "is for good men to
do nothing."
We can complain about injustices, we can lament
the suffering of the
world and even feel sorry for the helpless
plight of others. Or we can
do what we can, even if it's only a little.
Theodore Roosevelt read a book by New York
newspaperman Jacob Riis
titled HOW THE OTHER HALF LIVES. We often think
of the "other half" as living in luxury. The
other half are those who are powdered and
pampered. The rich and famous. Movers and
shakers.
But the book did not describe the wealthiest few
of society. Instead
it described the slums of the city, with all its
vice and crime.
Families living in poverty and fear - too afraid
to leave their homes
after dark. The other half, said Riis, were the
poor among us.
Theodore Roosevelt was moved to action. He went
at once to the
newspaper office where the author worked, but
Riis was not in.
Roosevelt left his card and wrote on it, "Have
read your book and have
come to help."
He did not say, "Have read your book and have
come to discuss." Or,
"Have read your book and have come to compliment
you on your writing."
He said, "Have read your book and have come to
help."
"I am only one, but I am still one; I cannot do
everything, but still
I can do something, and because I cannot do
everything I will not
refuse to do the something that I can do."
Nineteenth century writer
Edward Everett Hale said that.
He speaks to me today.
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