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Sharing the Savior’s Story
From Trash to Treasure III
It was during the Depression that a woman tried to make ends meet by
cleaning houses. To her amazement, one of her customers kept throwing
away stuff that seemed perfectly serviceable. One day a Chinese flower
vase ended up in the trash and the cleaning lady asked to take it home.
With permission, she did so and put it in the kitchen and used it to
display her flowers.
That's the way it was for over 20 years. Then a friend talked her into
showing the vase to an appraiser at the Buffalo Museum of Fine Arts.
His decision: “If it's a fake, it’s a valuable fake; it’s
a 200-year-old fake. If it’s real, it’s 2,000 years old
and worth a fortune.” Then, as an afterthought, he asked, “But
what's all this discoloration in the bottom?” He about fainted
when the lady offered, “It’s from the cut flowers I put
in it. It is a flower vase.” The common had become uncommon. The
worthless had been proven valuable. Trash had become a treasure.
Excerpt from The Lutheran Hour broadcast of: March 9, 2003
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