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Jesus in the Thrift Shop
by Deborah Akel
Sometime around 1991, my mother asked me to write this story.
I was working as a writer for the president of an international marketing firm in Canton, Ohio. Mom was proud
of me. Especially the day my car wouldn’t start, and my boss sent his personal chauffeur to our house to pick
me up and take me to work. She thought I’d made the big time.
It was decided that I should write a story for her. All she had was a title: Jesus in the Thrift Shop. “Isn’t that a
neat title for a book?” she announced excitedly.
“But what’s it about?” I asked. I had no idea where to begin. “It’s about Jesus in the thrift shop,” she replied,
as if that should explain everything.
Mom liked to shop in thrift stores. She was always proud when she came home with a bargain. Even back in
the day when it was embarrassing to be seen in a thrift store. Now it’s called “vintage” shopping. Mom was
ahead of her time. She thrifted when it wasn’t trendy.
Mom believed that whenever she found an item she was seeking in a thrift store, Jesus was somehow behind it.
“I was looking for a grey A-line skirt, and there it was!” she would say with childlike amazement and delight.
“I’d been praying that I’d find a skirt just like it.” After several such finds, all of them attributed to prayer, she
suggested that I write a book about the presence of Christ at Value Village.
Always the cynic, I pooh-poohed the idea. “Don’t be ridiculous, Mom,” I chided. “God has more important
things to worry about than your shopping list.” But no matter how many times I tried to burst her bubble, she
never capitulated. She was convinced that Jesus had a hand in her thrifting triumphs.
Over the course of several years, Mom repeatedly asked me to write her book. But I never took her idea
seriously. I thought it was foolish, and that there wasn’t enough material to make a good story. Besides, I was
busy with my own life and didn’t have time to indulge her.
Mom went to heaven on October 30, 2002. It’s taken me nearly 15 years, but I think I finally understand the
story she was trying to tell.
Jesus in the Thrift Shop. What a silly idea, I thought. Mom was forever trying to inject God and Jesus into every
little happening in the course of a day. If she baked a loaf of bread and it came out perfect, it was God’s doing.
If she found a dollar bill lying on the sidewalk, it was Jesus who had left it there for her. Nothing was too trivial
to have been the result of divine intervention. And now she was trying to convince me that the Lord had hung
that white blouse on the sale rack for her at the Next-to-New shop. I wasn’t buying it.
In my infinite wisdom of youth, I often viewed my mom as a sort of simpleton. Gullible, unsophisticated,
fanatical. While I’m politically liberal and open-minded about philosophy and religion, Mom was as conservative
as they come and rigid in her beliefs. We had many clashes over our disparate views. Once I subscribed by
mail to a Zen journal, and discovered that she was secretly throwing it away before I had a chance to read it.
Tampering with the U.S. mail is a felony, but Mom thought it was a greater crime to allow me to travel down
what she thought was the wrong path.
In the three years since she’s been gone, I’ve had time to reflect on who my mother was and what she stood
for. I’ve been able to remove myself from the equation and look at her not in relation to me, but as an
individual. And I’m continuously amazed at what I’m learning about her.
Above all, she was a woman of unshakeable faith. Many of her beliefs were unpopular, and she was often
criticized for being inflexible, unrealistic, or out of touch with society. She may have been all of those things, but
I’ve come to respect her for standing up for her convictions.
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Author Bio
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Deborah Akel is a writer living in Washington, DC. Originally from Canton, Ohio, she has worked in tv news, writing, and political communication in San Francisco, Sacramento, Cleveland, and New York. She wrote this article in
loving memory of her mother and father. Her website is http://home.earthlink.net/~creativewritingsvcs/
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Her strict interpretation of the Bible meant that her lifestyle left no room for pleasures that most of us take for
granted. She never knew the feeling of giddiness from being drunk; the thrill of sex with a new partner; the
excitement of casino gambling. But she also never suffered the anxiety of wondering what life is about. She
knew exactly who she was and where she was going. And she wasn’t afraid to go there.
As it turns out, my mother was not a simpleton. She was smarter and braver and more together than anyone
gave her credit for. She loved the Lord and saw his handiwork in everything - even in her successes at the thrift
stores. That was not foolishness. That was faith.
The story that she so wanted me to tell was that God is everywhere, in everything, and we should acknowledge
and be grateful for it. He’s in that perfect loaf of bread, or that dollar lying on the sidewalk, or the ray of
sunlight that shines through your window. He’s in the biggest and the smallest of things. He’s with you and in
you and around you, and if you believe in Him, you’ll find him.
Jesus was in those thrift shops with my mom, just as she is with him now, walking down streets of gold in
heaven.
This article © Deborah Akel
Used with permission.
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