Pass this on to your list.
- - -
This is a very sweet story ......
There is a school like many others that caters to learning for disabled
children. Some children remain in it for their
entire school career, while others can be main streamed into conventional
schools.
At a fund-raising dinner, the father of one such child delivered a speech that
would never be forgotten by all who attended.
After extolling the school and its dedicated staff, he cried out, "Where is the
perfection in my son Shaya? Everything God
does is done with perfection. But my child cannot understand things as other
children do. My child cannot remember facts
and figures as other children do. Where is God's perfection?

The audience was shocked by the question, pained by the father's anguish and
stilled by the piercing query. "I believe,"
the father answered, "that when God brings a child like this into the world, the
perfection that He seeks is in the way
people react to this child."
He then told the following story about his son Shaya: One afternoon, Shaya
and his father walked past a park where some boys Shaya knew were playing
baseball. Shaya asked, "Do you think they will let me play?" Shaya's father knew
that his son was not at all athletic and
that most boys would not want him on their team.

But Shaya's father understood that if his son were chosen to play it would give
him a comfortable sense of belonging.
Shaya's father approached one of the boys in the field and asked if Shaya could
play.
The boy looked around for guidance from his team-mates. Getting none, he took
matters into his own hands and said, "We
are losing by six runs and the game is in the eighth inning. I guess he can be
on our team and we'll try to put him up to
bat in the ninth inning."
Shaya's father was ecstatic as Shaya smiled broadly. Shaya was told to put on a
glove and go out to play short center field.
In the bottom of the 8th inning, Shaya's team scored a few runs but was still
behind by three. In the bottom of the ninth
inning, Shaya's team scored again and now with two outs and the bases loaded
with the potential winning run on base.
Shaya was scheduled to be up. Would the team actually let Shaya bat at this
juncture and give away their chance to win
the game?
Surprisingly, Shaya was given the bat. Everyone knew that it was all but
impossible because Shaya didn't even know how
to hold the bat properly, let alone hit with it. However as Shaya stepped up to
the plate, the pitcher moved a few steps to lob
the ball in softly so Shaya should at least be able to make contact.
The first pitch came and Shaya swung clumsily and missed. One of Shaya's
team-mates came up to Shaya and together
they held the bat and faced the pitcher waiting for the next pitch. The pitcher
again took a few steps forward to toss the ball
softly toward Shaya.

As the pitch came in, Shaya and his team-mate swung at the ball and together
they hit a slow ground ball to the pitcher.
The pitcher picked up the soft grounder and could
easily have thrown the ball to the first baseman. Shaya would have been out and
that would have ended the game.
Instead, the pitcher took the ball and threw it on a high arc to right field,
far beyond reach of the first baseman. Everyone
started yelling, "Shaya, run to first. Run to first."
Never in his life had Shaya run to first. He scampered down the baseline
wide-eyed and startled. By the time he reached
first base, the right fielder had the ball.

He could have thrown the ball to the second baseman that would tag out Shaya,
who was still running. But the right fielder
understood what the pitcher's intentions were, so he threw the ball high and far
over the third baseman's head.
Everyone yelled, "Run to second, run to second." Shaya ran towards second base
as the runners ahead of him deliriously
circled the bases towards home.
As Shaya reached second base, the opposing shortstop ran to him, turned him in
the direction of third base and shouted,
"Run to third."
As Shaya rounded third, the boys from both teams ran behind him screaming,
"Shaya run home." Shaya ran home,
stepped on home plate and all 18 boys lifted him on their shoulders and made him
the hero, as he had just hit a "grand
slam" and won the game for his team.
That day," said the father softly with tears now rolling down his face, "those
18 boys reached their level of God's perfection."
Funny how simple it is for people to trash different ways of living and
believing and then wonder why the world is going to
hell.
Funny how you can send a thousand 'jokes' through email and they spread like
wildfire, but when you start sending messages regarding life choices, people
think twice about sharing.
Funny how the lewd, crude, vulgar and obscene pass freely through cyberspace,
but the public discussion of morality is
suppressed in the school and workplace.

Funny isn't it?
Funny how when you go to forward this message, you will not send it to many on
your address list because you're not sure
what they believe, or what they will think of you for sending it to them.
Funny how I can be more worried about what other people think of me than what I
think of me.
Funny isn't it?
Perhaps it's not funny at all !!! Sad actually - we can all do better.
Please pass it on !
Charles LeBlanc
P.O. BOX 25047
Saint John
New Brunswick
Canada
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
1-506-696-6645


For private reply, e-mail to "Tom Simms" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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