Today's message is not something I wrote, but something I read. It touched me and thought I'd share it with you. Most people have at least one teacher that made a difference to them. In my case, Mrs. Adams, Mrs. Keas, and Miss Marshall come to mind.
The Good Lord was creating teachers. It was His
sixth day of "overtime," and He knew that this was a tremendous
responsibility, for teachers would touch the lives of so many impressionable
young children.
An angel appeared to Him and said, "You are
taking a long time to figure this one out."
"Yes," said the Lord, "but have
you read the specs on this order?"
TEACHER:
• must stand above all students, yet be on their
level
• must be able to do 180 things not connected
with the subject being taught
• must run on coffee and leftovers
• must communicate vital knowledge to all
students daily and be right most of the time
• must have more time for others than for
herself/himself
• must have a smile that can endure through pay
cuts, problematic children, and worried parents
• must go on teaching when parents question every
move and others are not supportive
• must have six pair of hands
"Six pair of hands," said the angel,
"that's impossible."
"Well," said the Lord, "it is not
the hands that are the problem. It is the three pairs of eyes that are
presenting the most difficulty!"
The angel looked incredulous, "Three pairs
of eyes...on a standard model?"
The Lord nodded His head. "One pair can see
a student for what he is and not what others have labeled him as. Another pair
of eyes is in the back of the teacher's head to see what should not be seen,
but what must be known. The eyes in the front are only to look at the child as
he/she 'acts out' in order to reflect, 'I understand and I still believe in
you,' without so much as saying a word to the child."
"Lord," said the angel, "this is a
very large project and I think you should work on it tomorrow."
"I can't," said the Lord, "for I
have come very close to creating something much like Myself. I have one that
comes to work when he/she is sick, teaches a class of children that do not want
to learn, has a special place in his/her heart for children who are not his/her
own, understands the struggles of those who have difficulty, and never takes
the students for granted."
The angel looked closely at the model the Lord
was creating and said, "It is too soft-hearted."
"Yes," said the Lord, "but also
tough. You cannot imagine what this teacher can endure or do, if
necessary."
"Can this teacher think?" asked the
angel.
"Not only think," said the Lord,
"but reason and compromise."
The angel came closer to have a better look at
the model and ran his finger over the teacher's cheek. "Well, Lord,"
said the angel, "your job looks fine but there is a leak. I told you that
you were putting too much into this model. You cannot imagine the stress that
will be placed upon the teacher."
The Lord moved in closer and lifted the drop of
moisture from the teacher's cheek. It shone and glistened in the light.
"It is not a leak," He said. "It is a tear."
"A tear? What is that?" asked the
angel. "What is the tear for?"
The Lord replied with great thought, "It is
for the joy and pride of seeing a child accomplish even the smallest task. It
is for the loneliness of children who have a hard time to fit in, and it is for
compassion for the feelings of their parents. It comes from the pain of not
being able to reach some children and the disappointment those children feel in
themselves. It comes often when a teacher has been with a class for a year and
must say good-bye to those students and get ready to welcome a new class."
"My," said the angel, "the tear
thing is a great idea. You are a genius!"
The Lord looked somber. "I didn't put it
there."
from the book, The Heart of a Teacher, by
Paula Fox
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