“Never mind; we can manage somehow!”
So the widow received the wanderers, and did not know how to feed them.
“How shall I feed you?” the widow said. “I only have one little crust of bread and a mere handful of flour, and my cow is calving and has no milk. I have to wait for her to calve. You cannot look for bread and salt here.”
“Well, woman,” the Saviour said, “have no fear—we shall all be satisfied. Give us all you have. We will eat the crust. Everything, woman, comes of God.”
So they sat down to table and began to feast, and they were all fed on the one crust of bread. There were even crumbs left behind.
“Lo and behold! woman, you said that there was nothing to feed us on,” the Saviour said. “Look, we are all satisfied, and there are some crumbs over. Everything, woman, comes of God!” And so Christ and the Apostles stayed with the poor widow.
In the morning the widow told her sister: “Go and scrape up any flour you can find in the corn-bin; possibly we may make a tiny pancake so as to feed our guests.” The girl went and brought up a clay pot full. The old woman was not astonished when so much came—she simply took it as it came and started making a pancake. And the girl told her: “There is as much again in the corn-bin.” So the woman cooked the pancake for the Saviour and the twelve Apostles, telling them: “Come and eat of the good fare, kinsmen, which God has sent.” And so they ate and bade farewell to the aged widow and went on the road.
And when they were on the way there was a grey wolf sitting on a knoll. He bowed low to Christ and asked for food.
“Lord,” he bayed, “I am hungry. Lord, I should like to eat.”
“Go,” said the Saviour to him, “to the old widow and eat her cow with the calf.”