The Ant and the Grasshopper
A mother of a 9 year old boy, Mark, received a phone call in
the middle of the afternoon. It was the teacher from her son's
school.
"Mrs. Smith, something unusual happened today in your son's
third grade class. Your son did something that surprised me so
much that I thought you should know about it immediately."
Mother's seldom want to hear from their child's teacher in the
middle of the day. The mother was uneasy and nervous by such a
beginning to a phone call. "What now?" the mother wondered.
The teacher continued, "I have been teaching for many years
and nothing like this has happened until now. This morning I
was teaching a lesson on creative writing. And as I always do,
I tell the story of the ant and the grasshopper. The ant works
hard all summer and stores up plenty of food. But the
grasshopper plays all summer and does no work.
Then winter comes. The grasshopper begins to starve because he
has no food. So he hops to the ants house and begins to beg.
'Please Mr. Ant, you have much food please let me eat, too.'
Now boys and girls your job is to write the ending to the
story.
Your son, Mark, raised his hand. "Teacher, may I draw a
picture?"
"Well, yes, Mark, if you like, you may draw a picture. But
first you must write the ending to the story."
The papers came in. As in all the years past, most of the
students said that the ant shared his food through the winter
and both the ant and the grasshopper lived.
As always, a few children said, 'The ant said, "No, Mr.
Grasshopper. You should have worked in the summer and not
played. Now, I have just enough food for myself." So the ant
lived and the grasshopper died.
But your son ended the story in a way different from any other
child, ever. He wrote, "So the ant gave all of his food to the
grasshopper; the grasshopper lived through the winter. But the
ant died."
And the picture?
At the bottom of the page, Mark had drawn three crosses.
"Jesus gave up his life so that we might live eternally."
-- Author Unknown


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