DOLLARS FOR SELF, AND CENTS FOR CHRIST.
“Yes, I always give for missions and everything else,” said Phil. “I give something every Sunday; don’t you?”
“Why, no; I give five or ten cents when I think I can spare it, when I have a good deal of money and don’t want it for anything,” said Tom.
“I give whatever papa or mamma gives me for it,” said James. “Sometimes it’s more, and sometimes it’s less.”
“Oh, I always give my own money!” said Phil. “I don’t think it’s any giving at all unless you do that.”
“Yours is the best way, I’m sure,” said Tom, soberly. “They say it’s the regular giving that counts.”
“And then, of course, what you give is just so much out of what you’d like to spend on yourself.”
“Yes,” said Phil, feeling very self-denying and virtuous.
“I’m going to try your way,” said Tom. “And I’m going to keep an account and see what it will amount to.”
The three boys were on their way home from Sunday-school, where they had heard from a missionary some very interesting accounts of the great work which is going on in Africa. He had succeeded in deeply stirring the sympathies of his young hearers, so that many of them went away with the solemn feeling that they should in some sense be held answerable if they did not strive to hold out a helping hand to those in such sore need. For the present it was plain that missionary interest was to be centered in the “dark continent,” and little societies were formed among Sunday-school children, they believing it would be pleasanter to put their gifts together than to offer them separately.
Several boys came to Phil’s house on the next afternoon to talk it over, and Phil brought his account-book to put down their names as the first members of their society, with a preamble in which occurred many high-sounding words setting forth their resolves and intentions.
“What’s this, Phil?” asked his uncle, picking up the book on the same evening, after tea.
“Oh, that’s my account-book, uncle; I brought it down to take names and draw up resolutions for our missionary society.”
“May I read it, or is it a secret organization?”
“Certainly, you may. I am simply, you know, trying to work up the idea of liberal giving among the boys.”
“A most excellent idea,” said his uncle, concealing his amusement at Phil’s rather pompous tone. “Let me see: Bananas, twenty-five cents; soda water, ten cents; peanuts, twenty-five cents; bat, thirty-five cents; candy, fifteen cents; base-ball cap, seventy-five cents; Sunday-school, six cents——”
“Oh, stop, Uncle George; that isn’t in it! That’s when I was visiting at Cousin Tom’s, and I promised mamma that I’d put down every cent I spent.”
But Uncle George seemed not to hear, and went on:
“Peanuts, fifteen cents; bananas, twenty-five cents; getting shoe mended, forty cents; soda water, ten cents; missionaries, five cents; getting bat mended, fifteen cents; lemonade for the boys, fifty cents; bananas, twenty-five cents; collection in church, two cents.”
“Please give me the book, uncle.”
“I’m glad you don’t forget your charitable duties, Phil,” said his uncle, giving up the book with rather a mischievous smile.
Phil took it in some confusion. He had heretofore thought but little more of his spendings than to remember his mother’s wish that he should keep an account of the money with which she had kept him so liberally supplied. Now, in looking over his hasty entries, he was astonished.
“Well, well!” he exclaimed, as he added up one page: “two dollars and ninety cents for eating and play, and seventeen cents for giving, and I bragging to the boys what a good thing it is to give regularly!”
He was a conscientious boy, and his heart smote him as he ran over the long list, and thought with his newly-awakened feelings, of the bread of life which that money might have carried to starving souls. If his mother had aimed to teach him a lesson through his account-book, she had not failed.
He got up at last and stood before the glass.
“Now, my young man,” said he, shaking his head very threateningly at the boyish face he saw there, “you know very well that a quarter for peanuts doesn’t look any larger to you than a pin’s head, and that a quarter for giving looks as big as a cart-wheel—but that’s got to stop, sir! This book isn’t going to hold any more accounts of dollars for trash and cents for Sunday-school.”—The Christian Giver.