Sandra felt
as low as
the heels of
her
Birkenstocks
when she
pulled open
the florist
shop door,
against a
November
gust of
wind. Her
life had
been as
sweet as a
spring
breeze and
then in the
fourth month
of her
second
pregnancy, a
"minor"
automobile
accident
stole her
joy. This
was
Thanksgiving
week and the
time she
should have
delivered
their infant
son.
She grieved
over their
loss.
Troubles had
multiplied.
Her
husband's
company
"threatened"
to transfer
his job to a
new
location.
Her sister
had called
to say that
she could
not come for
her long
awaited
holiday
visit. Then
Sandra's
friend
suggested
that
Sandra's
grief was a
God-given
path to
maturity
that would
allow her to
empathize
with others
who suffer.
"She has no
idea what
I'm
feeling,"
thought
Sandra with
a shudder.
"Thanksgiving?
Thankful for
what?" she
wondered.
"For a
careless
driver whose
truck was
hardly
scratched
when he
rear-ended
her? For an
airbag that
saved her
life, but
took her
child's?"
"Good
afternoon,
can I help
you?"
Sandra was
startled by
the approach
of the shop
clerk.
"I.... I
need an
arrangement,"
stammered
Sandra.
"For
Thanksgiving?
Do you want
the
beautiful
but
ordinary, or
would you
like to
challenge
the day with
a customer
favorite I
call the
'Thanksgiving
Special'?
I'm
convinced
that flowers
tell
stories,"
she
continued.
"Are you
looking for
something
that conveys
'gratitude'
this
Thanksgiving?"
"Not
exactly!"
Sandra
blurted out.
"In the last
five months,
everything
that could
go wrong has
gone wrong."
Sandra
regretted
her
outburst,
and was
surprised
when the
clerk said,
"I have the
perfect
arrangement
for you."
Then the
bell on the
door rang,
and the
clerk
greeted the
new
customer,
"Hi,
Barbara...let
me get your
order."
She excused
herself and
walked back
to a small
workroom,
then quickly
reappeared,
carrying an
arrangement
of greenery,
bows, and
what
appeared to
be
long-stemmed
thorny
roses.
Except the
ends of the
rose stems
were neatly
snipped:
there were
no flowers.
"Do you want
these in a
box?" asked
the clerk.
Sandra
watched for
the
customer's
response.
Was this a
joke? Who
would want
rose stems
with no
flowers! She
waited for
laughter,
but neither
woman
laughed.
"Yes,
please,"
Barbara
replied with
an
appreciative
smile.
"You'd think
after three
years of
getting the
special, I
wouldn't be
so moved by
its
significance,
but I can
feel it
right here,
all over
again." She
said, as she
gently
tapped her
chest.
Sandra
stammered,
"Ah, that
lady just
left with,
uh.... she
left with no
flowers!"
"That's
right, said
the clerk.
"I cut off
the flowers.
That's the
'Special'. I
call it the
Thanksgiving
Thorns
Bouquet."
"Oh, come
on! You
can't tell
me someone
is willing
to pay for
that!"
exclaimed
Sandra.
"Barbara
came into
the shop
three years
ago, feeling
much as you
do, today,"
explained
the clerk.
"She thought
she had very
little to be
thankful
for. She had
just lost
her father
to cancer;
the family
business was
failing; her
son had
gotten into
drugs; and
she was
facing major
surgery."
"That same
year I had
lost my
husband,"
continued
the clerk.
"For the
first time
in my life,
I had to
spend the
holidays
alone. I had
no children,
no husband,
no family
nearby, and
too much
debt to
allow any
travel."
"So what did
you do?"
asked
Sandra.
"I learned
to be
thankful for
thorns,"
answered the
clerk
quietly.
"I've always
thanked God
for the good
things in my
life and I
NEVER
questioned
Him why
those GOOD
things
happened to
me, but when
the bad
stuff hit, I
cried out,
"WHY? WHY
Me?!" It
took time
for me to
learn that
the dark
times are
important to
our faith! I
have always
enjoyed the
'flowers' of
my life, but
it took the
thorns to
show me the
beauty of
God's
comfort! You
know, the
Bible says
that God
comforts us
when we're
afflicted,
and from His
consolation
we learn to
comfort
others."
Sandra
sucked in
her breath,
as she
thought
about the
thought that
her friend
had tried to
tell her.
"I guess the
truth is, I
don't want
comfort.
I've lost a
baby and I'm
angry with
God."
Just then
someone else
walked in
the shop.
"Hey, Phil!"
the clerk
greeted the
balding,
rotund man.
"My wife
sent me in
to get our
usual
Thanksgiving
arrangement...twelve
thorny,
long-stemmed
stems!"
laughed Phil
as the clerk
handed him a
tissue
wrapped
arrangement
from the
refrigerator.
"Those are
for your
wife?" asked
Sandra
incredulously.
"Do you mind
telling me
why she
wants a
bouquet that
looks like
that?"
"No... I'm
glad you
asked," Phil
replied.
"Four years
ago, my wife
and I nearly
divorced.
After forty
years, we
were in a
real mess,
but with the
Lord's grace
and
guidance, we
trudged
through
problem
after
problem. The
Lord rescued
our
marriage.
Jenny, here
(the clerk)
told me she
kept a vase
of rose
stems to
remind her
of what she
had learned
from
"thorny"
times. That
was good
enough for
me. I took
home some of
those stems.
My wife and
I decided to
label each
one for a
specific
"problem"
and give
thanks for
what that
problem
taught us."
As Phil paid
the clerk,
he said to
Sandra, "I
highly
recommend
the
Special!"
"I don't
know if I
can be
thankful for
the thorns
in my life."
Sandra said
to the
clerk. "It's
all
too...fresh."
"Well," the
clerk
replied
carefully,
"my
experience
has shown me
that the
thorns make
the roses
more
precious. We
treasure
God's
providential
care more
during
trouble than
at any other
time.
Remember
that it was
a crown of
thorns that
Jesus wore
so we might
know His
love. Don't
resent the
thorns."
Tears rolled
down
Sandra's
cheeks. For
the first
time since
the
accident,
she loosened
her grip on
her
resentment.
"I'll take
those twelve
long-stemmed
thorns,
please," she
managed to
choke out.
"I hoped you
would," said
the clerk
gently.
"I'll have
them ready
in a
minute."
"Thank you.
What do I
owe you?"
"Nothing.
Nothing but
a promise to
allow God to
heal your
heart. The
first year's
arrangement
is always on
me." The
clerk smiled
and handed a
card to
Sandra.
"I'll attach
this card to
your
arrangement,
but maybe
you would
like to read
it first."
It read:
My God, I
have never
thanked You
for my
thorns. I
have thanked
You a
thousand
times for my
roses, but
never once
for my
thorns.
Teach me the
glory of the
cross I
bear; teach
me the value
of my
thorns. Show
me that I
have climbed
closer to
You along
the path of
pain. Show
me that,
through my
tears, the
colors of
Your rainbow
look much
more
brilliant."
Praise Him
for the
roses; thank
Him for the
thorns.
---Author
unknown