Gettysburg Times - Apr 23, 1926
FAITH IN SOMEONE ELSE
By GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS
By GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS
It is a little strange how just faith works. Especially when that faith comes out of the heart of someone else and is applied to you.
We keep our chins quite a deal higher because someone else has faith in us.
The misfortune of others touch us because we, too, have had them.
We have wanted people to pat us on the back, encouraging us. And so we take our opportunity to pat someone else on the back.
In reading a lovely book the other evening, called "Footsteps in a Parish" by John Timothy Stone, I came across this sentence about the man for whom the book was written: "To know Dr. Babcock well, to realize what a friend he could be—one must have trouble."
Faith given one in trouble often changes the course of one's life. A large number of the failures that are strewn about us are failures largely because faith wasn't poured their way.
When somebody has faith in us, and we know it, then we begin to climb.
But just let one person who is near and dear to us lose faith in us—and then the sun goes behind a cloud at once.
We would rather have our pay in this life come to us in the shape of faith in any other way.
Then why not put your faith in someone else? Why not keep giving your faith away—out at "interest", for instance?