ILLUSTRATING
THE EXPENSE OF IMPATIENCE: THE PARABLE OF SHOES
Thursday,
August 16, 2018
James [GW] 1:14 Everyone
is tempted by his own desires as they lure him away and trap him.
1John 2:15-17
Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love
the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world,
the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not
of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth away, and the lust
thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.
Gertrude and Norman attended the same high
school as Sabrina. But they were drastically different in culture and were
deemed so by Sabrina’s “My people.” Sabrina and her people were the epitome of
fun and fashion. They cruelly labeled Gertrude the Geek and Norman the Nerd.
Though close intellectual pal with Gertrude,
Norman longed for Sabrina. He dreamed of someday marrying her and being happy
ever after. This was not what happened. Sabrina married the captain of their
school football team.
Norman and Gertrude graduated with high
honors, and after completing college soon decided “Hey, why not continue our
closeness in marriage.” It wasn’t long before their home included 3 cerebral
analytical children. All went well, organized, high bracket earnings, mortgage
soon paid off et al. Nice.
Sabrina and Jack never got over high school.
Party and vacation were two top words in their vocabulary, which of course
included “worrisome debt”.
Norman saw Sabrina at the supermarket one day
staring at a head of lettuce and his old sappy teen feelings for her surged.
Though he didn’t acknowledge his presence, Norman developed the habit of
driving by her house on the way to and from his business. His constant brain
refrain being “I wish I was in Jack’s shoes!”
Though warned about the effect of his
affection for booze, Jack ceased not. Though only 35, he died.
Reading Jack’s obituary Norman formulated a
plan. First he espied Sabrina’s routines. Then he timed happenchance encounters
while meanwhile eroding his marriage. Then there was that first cup of coffee
carefully followed by using his wealth to wine, dine, clad, and transport
Sabrina. Then he informed weary Gertrude that he was having an affair and
didn’t love her any more. He quickly had his lawyer, a groupie lower classman
from high school, draw up a lucrative divorce agreement that Gertrude readily
agreed to.
Sabrina soon thereafter agreed to marry
Norman. He spent freely setting up a palatial lifestyle, even giving away his
large collection of books and literature.
After a few months Norman began driving by
the cemetery morning and evening, repeating “I wish I was in Jack’s shoes!”
EBB4, James
4:1-10
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