Small Steps toward God

Before COVID, I took communion to residents at a local nursing home.  Sometimes residents afflicted with Alzheimer’s were not able to physically receive the Body of Christ in the host, so I would offer to say the Lord’s Prayer with them.  As I started to say the Lord’s Prayer, they would often try to say it with me.  A small step for both them and me, but one where God was fully present! 

The Book of Acts reports that sometime after Pentecost, Peter and John were entering the temple and a man crippled since birth asked them for money.  Peter looked straight at him and said, “Look at us!”  So the man, expecting to get something from them, gave them his attention.

Then Peter said, “I have neither silver nor gold, but what I do have I give you.  In the name of Jesus Christ, the Nazorean, walk.”  Taking him by the right hand, he helped him up, and instantly the man’s feet and ankles became strong.  Then he went with them into the temple courts, walking and jumping, and praising God. (Acts 3:1-10)

Before the man could be healed he had to look at the presence of God in the person of Peter.  He had to be willing to look God’s way before God could act in his life.  It may have been a first step for him, a small step in moving toward God, but it was a small step that led to him leaping for joy in praise of God.

God in his love and mercy will take the smallest movement from us toward him and act on it.  Having been a cripple since birth, this man had probably been begging for many years at the temple gates.  He was likely ignored by most people passing by.  For the few that dropped a coin in his cup, even they may have gone on without acknowledging him. 

So here was Peter, who did something hardly anyone ever did.  He stopped, gave the man his full attention, talked to him and offered him God’s presence and healing. 

There is a lesson here for people on both ends of this spectrum.  To followers of Christ Jesus, we have the capacity to bring the presence of God through the power of the Holy Spirit to the people and circumstances in our lives.  To those who are lame, in need, and impoverished in spirit, the smallest response on their part toward God begets a response from God. 

What small step are you able to make to bring God’s presence to someone?


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