Blessed2Bless by Steve Klusmeyer
Cover Story
by Rhonda Rhea
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My husband once told me that there are two kinds of people in this
world: "coverers" and "users." My grandmother was a coverer. There were
hand towels on my grandfather's TV chair, a blanket on the sofa - she even
had special clear plastic seat covers made for her Chevy.
Don't get me wrong - Grandma's house was always fun. But I can't tell
you how UN-fun it was to sit in her car in the summer. Actually, the
sitting wasn't so bad. It was the getting up that was painful. I remember
thinking after I got out of the car that I needed to reach back in and
peel the rest of my legs off the plastic. I wouldn't be surprised if
someone could do a skin graft with the parts of me I left on Grandma's
plastic seat covers.
I spent every summer with my grandma when I was growing up. Still, I
don't think I ever saw her sofa. One of my chores at her house was to
straighten the blanket that covered the sofa. When I was about twelve
years old, I finally asked, "Grandma, how come the sofa has to stay
covered all the time?" She said, "So it will stay nice." So I asked,
"Well what good does it do to have a nice sofa that we've never seen?"
She just chuckled.
Maybe watching Grandma encouraged me to become a user. I've never had
china so good that we couldn't use it. The best towels are always out.
Sadly, it doesn't take long at all for those good towels to turn into
mere strings. They look like fringe hanging from the towel bars, but
they're out. My furniture, too, is forever uncovered. We go through a
sofa every other year or so, but we at least get to watch it
disintegrate.
As a matter of fact, right before I had children I bought a light
peach-colored sofa. Somewhere around the third baby or so, the sofa was
probably about 75% apple juice. And that's only the good fluid it had
absorbed. I shudder to think how many miscellaneous baby drippings were
coagulating in there.
If you're a coverer, you're probably asking why a good sofa had to die
so young. OK, you're right. It could've been saved if I had been more
careful. Maybe there's some place in the middle where users and
coverers can meet and find a healthy harmony - a balance somewhere this side of
skin-snatching plastic covers and the other side of sofas that could
start plagues.
When it comes to God's Word, though, we should all be users. James 1:22
says, "Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do
what it says." No need to save the treasure of his Word for a rainy day
when we can use it every day. And it's funny, because God's Word is
also our cover - in the nicest, non-plastic way. It covers us and protects
us from foolishness and sin.
So let's read it - from cover to cover!
Used by permission.
-from Daily Wisdom.
Contributed by Rhonda Rhea.
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Copyright © 2002 ... to infinity, and beyond Steve Klusmeyer. All rights reserved.