The $5 Bill

I spotted the bill on the carpeted hospital hallway as I rounded the corner from the rehab unit where I’d been sitting with a loved one.


Folded twice, it looked like mine.


Instinctively, I reached into my left pocket and felt the few ones and fives I carried rather than fidget with a purse at the hospital café.


Earlier that morning, I’d pulled out a $5 bill for the drive-through carwash. But the line was too long, so I stuck the money back in my pocket. Had I later tugged it out with a restless hand?


What if the $5 belonged to someone else who walked this hall as often as I? Someone who needed it more. What if finding it was a test—by God or security cameras?


Part of me felt it would be poor stewardship of my money to leave it there.


And part of me felt like a thief as I picked up the bill and shoved it in with my double-folded wad on my way to the elevator. Surely God would forgive me if it wasn’t mine.


An hour later as I pulled out of the Walmart store parking lot, I waited for traffic at the main exit where a young man stood holding a cardboard sign: “Iraqi war veteran. Anything will help.”


I didn’t have to fumble with my purse and wallet because the $5 bill slipped easily from my pocket. I rolled down the passenger window and held it out.


“Thank you,” he said. “God bless you.”


Then I turned left onto the road for home.


It didn’t matter if the man was pulling a fast one on soft-hearted shoppers.


It didn’t matter if the man went home to a nice apartment and a girlfriend with a job.


It didn’t matter what he spent the money on. That was between him and God in the same way my act was between God and me.


What mattered was that the $5 bill on the hospital floor made its way to his hand.


 


 


“Give and it shall be given to you …” –Jesus

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 19, 2015 06:38
No comments have been added yet.