Proverbs 24:16 (New King James Version)
For a righteous man may fall seven times
And rise again, But the wicked shall fall by calamity.
Once upon a time there was a little boy named Sparky. At
least that's what his classmates called him. He was given the nickname in honor
of a comic strip horse named Spark Plug. Sparky hated the name. But
name-calling was the least of his worries.
School was tough for Sparky. His favorite subjects were
recess and lunch. He failed every single subject in eighth grade. High school
was no better. He flunked algebra, English, Latin, and physics. In fact, to
this day he holds the record for the lowest physics marks in his school. Sports
weren't much of an improvement. He made the school's golf team, but his poor
play ended up costing his team the championship.
Sparky was a loser when it came to friendships too. No
one seemed to notice him. He was astonished if a classmate said hello. Afraid
of rejection, he never asked a girl out. Instead, he devoted himself to the one
thing he really enjoyed: drawing cartoons. No one thought they were any good,
but that didn't stop him. He practiced on binders and scribblers, and by the
time he was a senior in high school, he got up the nerve to submit some
cartoons to the yearbook staff.
They were rejected.
After graduating from high school, Sparky wrote a letter
to Walt Disney Studios inquiring about job opportunities. He received a form
letter requesting samples of his artwork. The letter asked him to draw a funny
cartoon of "a man repairing a clock by shoveling the springs and gears
back inside it." Sparky drew the cartoon and mailed it off with his fingers
crossed. He waited anxiously for a reply. Finally it came. Another form letter
spelling out rejection.
Sparky was disappointed but not surprised. He had always
been a loser. This was just one more loss. Looking in the mirror one day, he
smiled with the realization that in a weird sort of way, his life was funny.
Almost like a cartoon character. Then a thought hit him. Why not tell his own
story? Why not draw cartoons of the misadventures of a little boy loser, a
chronic underachiever? He had no idea where his idea would take him.
This boy who failed the eighth grade, the young artist
whose work was rejected by his own yearbook, was Charles Monroe
"Sparky" Schultz-creator of the Peanuts comic strip and the little
boy whose kite never quite flies.
You know him as Charlie Brown.
Dear Lord we pray today that we would never give up. We thank
You that You are there to lift us up when we fall. We pray that we would
completely trust in You today. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
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