
Angels in the Off Season
But
godliness with contentment is great gain.
--
1 Timothy 6:6
January must
be the favorite time of the angels, when they look back on the Christmas season
and all the good they did, and smile. Do angels have an off season? I doubt it.
But I know they are extra active in December, right around Christmas, because
that's when I hear the most about wonderful things that happen that have an
angelic twist about them that I just love.
A friend
was telling about a co-worker of hers, a legal (!) immigrant with an unemployed
husband and two preschoolers. They were living in a one-bedroom apartment and
just very deprived and disadvantaged, even though the co-worker showed up with
a smile on her face for work every day and didn't complain.
My friend told
another friend about it, and in turn, she told her husband, who's an old
softie. Their hearts went out to this poor, struggling immigrant. He told his
wife to go to the ATM and take out the max cash, $200, to give to the friend to
give to the co-worker.
Meanwhile, the
immigrant had asked her boss for an advance on her paycheck to cover a day-care
enrollment fee. It was crucial that the child get in to that center so that her
husband could look for work. Because it was an irregular request, though, the
boss had to ask her boss. He said no. So the boss - herself a struggling single
mother - gave the immigrant the money out of her own pocket. There went HER
Christmas cushion, money she was planning on using for a number of Christmas
extras and mini-extravagances. But oh, well. It was for a good cause, and all
that.
How much
was that day-care enrollment fee that the boss covered? You guessed it: $200.
The exact
same amount that the couple had given to help the immigrant they'd never met.
What a
"coincidence." Yeah. Right.
Naturally, our
friend handed over the $200 to the nice boss, to make up for the $200 she'd
handed over in sacrificial thoughtfulness to the immigrant. So she got paid
back for her generosity - which seems to only inspire more and more of the same
kinds of good deeds.
Just to ice the
cake, it turns out she used to work as a hospice nurse, and she recognized that
couple's name, because she had taken care of one of their favorite relatives in
her last illness. They, in turn, remembered her as being extra loving and
caring. They were so happy to be able to return the favor.
Angel
payback! It's the best kind!
Of course,
money can't buy the best angelic acts. Just before a recent Christmas, a huge
snowstorm shut down the Denver airport, threatening the Colorado Christmas
plans of an Omaha family looking forward to a big family reunion. Western
Nebraska was iced in; they couldn't drive. If they couldn't fly, they'd
literally be out in the cold.
The parents
stayed on "hold" with the airline for four hours. No soap. They went to the
Omaha airport, anyway, and stood in line with hundreds of other agitated, would-be
travelers.
They hailed
a guy who appeared to be an airport employee, asking him if they were doing the
right thing by standing in that line.
He popped
an odd little smile, and asked:
"How many
of you are there?"
"Five."
"You got
any luggage?"
"Nine
bags."
Instead of
exclaiming, "NINE BAGS?!?!?" he said with a twinkle in his eye:
"Come with
me."
WHAAAAAT?
He didn't
have a nametag on. All he would do is smile. Was he a real guy? Or was he . . .
an angel?
He fixed it
so that they could get on board that plane. They were the last ones on, by the
skin of their teeth. They arrived just in time to enjoy a magical, beautiful
Christmas at Estes Park with all the fam.
It was just
. . . you know . . . WOW.
The
following week, the mom of this family was at a grocery store 20 miles from the
Omaha airport when her son thought he spotted the guy at the airport who'd
gotten them on that plane. "There's our Christmas angel, Mom! Go talk to him!"
She did. He
recognized her right away. "You're that family of five." He was smiling again.
She told
him how wonderful he was, and how much it had meant to them that they got on
that plane, and had the joy of having Christmas with their family.
"It's good to hear good things once in a
while," was all he said, still smiling.
He turned,
and there was a flash of a blinding white wing . . . well, maybe.
But they
heard him exclaim, 'ere he wheeled his cart down the aisle:
"It makes
me happy that you're happy."
Yup. That's what
angels say. †