Fifty-Two Story Talks to Boys and Girls by Howard J. (Howard James) Chidley
page 43 of 83 (51%)
page 43 of 83 (51%)
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pick up. They are shaggy and dirty and yellow. The people stone them and
kick them, and do not call them by kind names. So the people who had gathered about this dog were making unkind remarks about it, saying how ugly it was, when Christ came up, and looking at the dog, He said, "But do you see what beautiful, even, white teeth he has?" Then, it is said, the people knew this must be Christ, who could find something to praise even in a dog like that. But that was the way Christ always dealt with people. He always saw something good in them. And when people knew that Christ saw something good in them, they tried to live up to what He saw, and to be good. You remember how Zaccheus, the little, short man who had been robbing the people by collecting too much tax-money, climbed up into a sycamore tree to see Christ pass by. Christ told him that He was going to take dinner with him. And when Christ dined with him, Zaccheus felt that Christ thought he was better than he was, and he became so ashamed of what he had been doing that he went and gave the money back. And Christ's rule is a good rule for us to follow. If we wish people to be good, we must look for the good things in them. If we _expect_ them to be good, they will _try_ to be good. There is a jailer in Chicago who, when a man has served his term in jail, gives him a letter of recommendation so that he can get a job. And the men who get these letters are ashamed to do wrong and to get into jail again, because of the disappointment they will cause the jailer who believes in them. A girl once said to her mother, who was always finding something good instead of bad to say of people, "Mother, I believe you would have |
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