2 Timothy 1:7 (NIV)
For the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but
gives us power, love and self-discipline.
Not many people realize that President Calvin Coolidge
did not always live in the White House. As Vice-President, he became President
upon the death of Warren G. Harding. Mrs. Harding continued to live in the
White House for a time, so the Coolidges remained where they had been living -
in the third-floor suite of the nearby Willard Hotel.
Once in the middle of the night, the new President awoke
to see an intruder going through his clothes. He watched as the thief first
removed a wallet, then unhooked a watch chain. Coolidge calmly spoke up from
the darkness: "About that watch, I wish you wouldn't take that."
The startled man, gaining his voice, asked,
"Why?"
Coolidge answered, "I don't mean the watch and
chain, only the charm. I'm very fond of that charm. It means a great deal to
me. Take it near the window and read what is engraved on the back of it."
The burglar read: "Presented to Calvin Coolidge,
Speaker of the House, by the Massachusetts General Court." And now he was
more surprised!
"Are you President Coolidge?" he asked. He
evidently did not think he'd find the President sleeping in a hotel!
"Yes, I am, and I don't want you to take that
charm," he said. Then he asked, "Why, Son, are you doing this?"
The young man explained that he and a friend traveled to
Washington during their college break. They spent all of their money and had no
money to pay the hotel bill or pay for train passage back to school. "If
you don't mind," he said, "I'll just take the wallet."
Coolidge did mind. He knew he had about $80 in his
wallet. So he said, "How much will it take to pay your hotel bill and get
you and your friend back to the campus? Sit down and let's talk this
over."
Coolidge added up the room rate and two rail tickets. It
came to $32. That may not sound like much now, but it was a considerable sum
then. "I'll give you the $32 as a loan," the President said,
"and I expect you to pay me back."
The youth thanked him. Coolidge then advised him to leave
by the same window he used to enter the room, as secret service agents were
sure to be patrolling the hallway. As the young man climbed out, Coolidge left
him with this admonition: "Son, you're a nice boy. You are better than you
are acting. You are starting down the wrong road. Just remember who you
are."
It wasn't until after the death of Mrs. Coolidge in 1957
that this story was allowed to come out. It was first published in the
"Los Angeles Times." And most interesting of all is that the
President's notes show that the young man was indeed better than he was acting.
He repaid the $32 loan in full.
Kurt Hahn, the founder of Outward Bound, said this:
"There is more in us than we know. If we can be made to see it, perhaps,
for the rest of our lives, we will be unwilling to settle for less."
Are you better than you are acting?
Dear Lord, help our actions be the right actions. Help us
live our life in an honorable way. Help us look for the better way to live. In
Jesus’ Name, Amen.
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