Saturday Sisters: Dorcas Women

Today my friend Debbie Scales is a guest blogger.  Thank you, Debbie, for your regular encouraging words!
I know several women like Dorcas and want to tell you about one of them.
This Dorcas woman
taught students in an elementary school for over 20 years. During that time she received many honors, for she was a compassionate yet challenging teacher.
It is no wonder she was honored. She was usually the first teacher to enter the school in the morning and the last to leave. Many Saturdays and Sunday afternoons she also was at school, preparing for her classes.
This busy woman also teaches Sunday school classes. She preps for hours to teach each class, decorates her classroom to represent the Bible stories she will tell, and invites her students to her house for parties.
In addition to caring for her family, spoiling her grandchildren, and spending entire days with her aging mother, this retired teacher searched out other ways to serve.
And that is when she met Sadie.
Sadie was an elderly, homebound woman who lived in a tiny apartment and owned literally nothing of value. She received her meals from Meals on Wheels and spent most of her time listening to tape-recorded sermons and gospel music.
The kind woman cleaned Sadie’s apartment every week; washed and braided Sadie’s long, thin hair; took her food and small gifts; and listened as the lonely old woman talked. Sadie craved conversation.
One day Sadie brought out an old dress the woman had never seen. It was well worn, even torn in places.
Sadie said, “I think this is the best dress I have to be put away in when the time comes.”
“Okay, Sadie,” said the woman, fingering the old dress. But she was thinking, You will not be put away in that old dress, Sadie.
A few weeks ago Sadie died. The woman grieved the loss of her good friend. She provided a nice dress for Sadie to be buried in and even went to the funeral home and braided Sadie’s hair. Then she spent several days cleaning her apartment.
“Who is this woman?” you ask.
I’m sorry. I can’t tell you. She asked me not to use her name.
I am honored to know this woman and others like her. They often do unglamorous work like helping old women bathe, washing their hair, and trimming their nails. And they do these good works with grace and kindness, preserving the dignity of the ones they serve.
Often no one else ever knows about it.

         Again, thank you, Debbie, for letting me share.  i am honored to know YOU!
         "Dorcas Women" was originally posted at https://dscales24.com/2017/07/18/dorcas-women/

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