By Mark Adams
In 1877, James A. Harding (for whom
Harding University is named) went to Clark County, Kentucky,
where he held a gospel meeting. When asked how the meeting
went, one of the elders at the congregation responded, “It
was not much of a meeting.
Oh, brother Harding did his usual
powerful preaching, the attendance was fair, but the results
were negligible. Only little Jimmy Shepherd was baptized.”
God doesn’t always perceive things
the way that we do. When we work hard to serve people in the
name of Christ and few respond to our message, it is easy to
think, “The results of my work are negligible.”
But we must never underestimate the power
of one seed that really takes root. In the case of little
Jimmy Shepherd, the sole response to Harding’s preaching in
that guospel meeting, he stayed dedicated to the cause of
Christ all of his life. He is better known to some as James
W. Shepherd. While he was in college, he began preaching. In
1883, he helped to establish the Berea Church of Christ in
Madison County. In 1888, he left with his family to do
mission work in New Zealand for several years, preaching all
around the country, as well as in Australia.
Upon returning to the states, he worked
from 1905 to 1912 as the office editor of the Gospel
Advocate, where he both wrote and edited some works that
have been treasured for decades.
In Luke 8:8, Jesus is teaching a
parable about a sower. Though much seed might never take
root or grow, the seed which does take root can produce “one
hundred times” what has been sown. Every seed you plant
matters, because only God knows just how much good can be
done when a person plants a seed through a single act of
Christian conviction.
- Mark Adams; via
The
Encourager, the weekly bulletin for the Calvert
City church of Christ, Calvert City, KY. Lance Cordle
preaches for the congregation. He may be contacted
through the congregation's website:
http://www.calvertchurchofchrist.com
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