Christ
should be the focus of our life today and every day.
“The life of the
Christian has three distinguishing aspects: deeds, words and thought. Thought
comes first, then words, since our words express openly the interior conclusions
of the mind …. Each of us must examine
his thoughts, words and deeds, to see whether they are directed toward Christ
or are turned away from him.” [From a treatise on Christian
Perfection by Saint Gregory of Nyssa, bishop]
Whatever you do in
word and deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus. [Colossians 3:17]
Mary Lempke did in
thought, word and deed follow the Lord. Here
is her story.
In
1952, May Lempke a 53-year-old retired nurse received a phone call from a
Milwaukee hospital. “A baby was born blind, mentally retarded,
& had cerebral palsy… he didn’t respond to sound or touch. His parents abandoned him. The hospital
didn’t know what to do with the baby… somebody remembered May Lempke … that she
had raised five children of her own…. They
asked May to take the infant, saying, ‘He’ll probably die young.’ She responded, ‘If I take baby the baby, he
won’t die young; and I’ll be happy to take him.’ She named the baby Leslie; it wasn’t easy to
care for him. Every day she massaged the
baby’s entire body.
She prayed over him;
she cried over him; she placed his hands in her tears.
As Leslie grew so did
May’s problems, she had to keep him tied in a chair to keep him from falling
over. He was 16 yrs. old when May
finally taught him to stand-up by himself.
But all the time May … continued to love him and pray over him.
One day she saw him
plucking a string on a package, and wondered if he might be sensitive to
music? She surrounded him with music,
even bought a piano and put it in his room.
May took Leslie’s fingers in hers and showed him how to push keys down,
but he didn’t seem to understand. Then
one winter night, May awoke to the sound of someone playing Tchaikovsky’s Piano
Concerto no. 1.
She went to check;
Leslie was sitting at the piano smiling and playing by ear. May dropped to her knees and prayed, ‘Thank
you, dear God. You didn’t forget
Leslie. Soon Leslie played the piano
[professionally] and he still plays today.
He is an autistic savant. May
Lempke extravagantly sowed the seed of her love and her prayers for years. (The Word in & out of Season,
pp.273-275, Bausch)
She was
privileged to see the harvest of her prayers and her love; few of us are
granted such a privilege. Our privilege
is to fall in love with God - do the sowing and let the harvest to God!
To view May's story in more detail look at this short video interview: May Lempke's Story
May God Be Blessed!
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