The Wayward Dresser


A neighborhood finally sees the end of a long‑standing wooden menace

Somewhere in a small town in Pennsylvania — For months, a battered dresser stayed on a narrow strip of land. The township maintained this land. It lay sprawled there, unattended. Its warped frame and swollen drawers formed an eyesore. Residents could not ignore it, yet somehow never addressed it. It started as discarded furniture. Slowly, it evolved into a fixture of quiet defiance. The wooden intruder seemed to grow bolder with each passing week.

The dresser did not move or speak, but its presence carried a strange authority. It reclined on its side. It seemed to intentionally pose. Its puffed‑out drawers gave the impression of a chest lifted in pride. Neighbors walked past it with the same uneasy tolerance. It was akin to how one responds to a stray dog refusing to leave the porch. Drivers slowed down to stare. Children pointed out from car windows. Yet no one touched it. Not the landlord. Not the maintenance crew. Not even the township, responsible for mowing the very ground on which it rested.

Like Goliath standing in the Valley of Elah, the dresser’s power came not from action but from endurance. It simply remained, day after day, mocking the neighborhood with its refusal to budge. And like the armies of Israel, an entire community of capable adults adjusted their routines around it. They waited for someone else to take responsibility.

A Giant in the Grass

Residents described the dresser as if it possessed a personality. It seemed to smirk at passersby, daring anyone to challenge its claim to the land. Rain bloated its panels. Sun bleached its finish. Frost cracked its edges. Yet the dresser held its ground with the stubbornness of a giant that believed no one would ever confront it.

The longer it stayed, the more impossible it seemed to remove. What should have been a simple task gradually became a symbol of collective hesitation. The dresser was not strong, but it was unchallenged, and that was enough.

The Arrival of a David

The stalemate ended on an ordinary afternoon. A resident decided that the dresser’s reign had lasted long enough. There was no announcement, no committee meeting, and no official directive. A neighbor quietly offered a tool — a sledgehammer. This gesture was reminiscent of Jonathan placing his sword and shield into David’s hands before the battle.

With this borrowed weapon in hand, the resident approached the dresser. The resident had the calm resolve of someone who had reached the end of patience. The dresser, for the first time in months, appeared vulnerable.

The First Strike

The first swing landed with a sharp crack that echoed across the yard. A drawer burst open, releasing a puff of dust as if the dresser had been holding its breath. A second blow splintered a leg. A third sent fragments scattering across the grass. The giant that had lounged in smug defiance for months was suddenly reduced to a trembling heap of particle board.

As in the biblical account, once the first strike was delivered, help arrived from an unexpected source. A passing neighbor stepped out of her vehicle, surveyed the scene, and gladly joined the effort. Without hesitation, she gathered the fallen pieces. She carried them to the dumpster. She worked with the efficiency of someone who understood the importance of finishing what had begun.

Within minutes, the dresser was gone. The patch of ground it had occupied for so long stood empty. It was now restored to the quiet normality it had been denied.

The Moral of the Story

In the biblical account, Goliath stood in the valley for forty days, taunting Israel with his presence. He did not need to swing a sword or launch an attack. His mere existence, unchallenged, was enough to paralyze an entire army of trained, armored fighting men.

The dresser played the same role. It did not move, speak, or strike. It simply sat there, day after day. It occupied a space it was never meant to occupy. It grew comfortable in its defiance. It mocked the neighborhood with its stubborn refusal to leave. And like Israel’s soldiers, the community adjusted their routines around it. They walked past it. They ignored it and pretended it was not their problem.

That is the quiet danger of tolerated nuisances — and of unrepented sin. What begins as a small inconvenience becomes, over time, an obstacle that feels immovable. What starts as a minor irritation grows into a fixture of defeat. What should have been removed immediately becomes something we learn to live with.

Sin often arrives without fanfare. It simply appears, settles in, and occupies ground it was never meant to hold. It lingers. It mocks. It grows comfortable. It dares anyone to confront it. And the longer it remains unchallenged, the more unbeatable it seems.

The day the dresser fell is a reminder. Giants — wooden or spiritual — collapse the moment someone steps up. They take the first swing and refuse to tolerate what should never have been allowed to stay. Sometimes the greatest victories begin with a simple, decisive moment of clarity: enough.

When that moment comes, the giant falls, the nuisance is removed, and the ground it occupied is restored to peace.

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This Week’s Tail Feathers


  1. Taking on the ‘class warfare’ debate. Demonizing the rich in order to excite the masses for political gain is a tactic as old as time itself. Although the political parties attempt to draw a distinct line between the have’s and the have not’s reality is not quite so neat. This report shows how the takers are spread evenly across all income levels and all social orders. Those who feel obligated to the wealthand property of others is not a rich versus poor argument, it is a symptom of a government set on enriching itself with as much power and influence possible in order to continue to amass power unto itself.The only remedy to this social ill is to return again to the biblical foundation upon an orderly civil society can best operate. The answer is found in the golden rule which is a simplification of the ten commandments. Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. One of the ten commandments says; Thou shalt not covet. Thou shalt not desire anything that belongs to thy neighbor. Imagine how many social ills could be eliminated by this one simple rule.

  2. The Class Warfare We Need Identifying the Parasites, Pirates, and Predators to wealth creation ow.ly/84IBu
    December 19, 2011 1:17:07 PM EST
  3. This story I found very informative. A list of our economic ills. Take the time to read through this and see for yourself why we are facing an economic meltdown in the United States.I can not help but be reminded of the scripture which teaches… the borrower is subject to the lender…

  4. 50 Facts About the American Economy that will Shock You amplify.com/u/a1kvxq
    December 19, 2011 1:17:07 PM EST
  5. December 19, 2011 11:04:13 PM EST
  6. “Do not muzzle an ox while it treads out grain. Deuteronomy 25:4 (HCSB) Here is a story that argues the moral supremacy of Capitalism. Allowing every individual to pursue their happiness and allow them to keep the results of that pursuit. Our declaration of independence declares that “all men” everyone is entitled to certain rights granted to them by their CREATOR and not allocated by government. Our form of government was established to PROTECT these inalienable rights endowed to us by God. Our Constitution set to limit governments ability to restrict or deny the people these inalienable rights.

    Personal pursuits and the owning of private property is the foundation upon which this country grew from obscurity into the greatest wealth producing nation in all of history. The steady diet of one socialistic government program after another has been weakening our financial health and making slaves of us all.

    Again we find wisdom in the pages of scripture. Preventing the ox from eating while treading out grain only weakens the ox and before long the ox will die and no work will go forth. Government feels that by squeezing the golden goose somehow the goose will produce more golden eggs. History has proven the Marxist approach does not work anywhere it has been tried.

  7. The Moral Case For Capitalism – the only “fair” system in the world ow.ly/825L6
    December 19, 2011 1:17:07 PM EST
  8. Like tying a stone to a sling, so is giving honor to a fool. Proverbs 26:8 (GW)
  9. And last but not least here is this week’s DoDo bird award winner presented to Time Magazine for their 2011 Person of the year award nominee. And some still regard this publication as a worthy news source. Like the DoDo bird Time magazine is headed for extinction.
  10. December 19, 2011 11:23:23 PM EST
  11. DoDo Bird Award Winner : Time Magazine which named the Protestor as their 2011 Person of the Year bit.ly/sWMpyb
    December 19, 2011 1:17:07 PM EST
  12. Until next time, may the Lord bless you and keep you and may the Lord make his face to shine upon you and grant you peace.
  13. December 19, 2011 11:25:55 PM EST
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Thanksgiving and Leftovers


A Turkey.

Image via Wikipedia

Ah those wonderful Thanksgiving dinner leftovers!  They are just as good the day after as the day of, at least in my opinion.  I can eat turkey sandwiches for a week after Thanksgiving and not tire of them.  It is the week after Thanksgiving.  Many have left the warm confines of their homes and ventured out into the wild world of Black Friday.  Some were out at midnight for those specially advertised sales.  Others have been waiting in line since way before daylight.

But not me; nope  I have made it a rule for myself to do everything possible to never even leave home on the day after Thanksgiving.  If at all possible I’m staying in, watching movies and yes, eating on those delectable Thanksgiving leftovers.  I might even watch the news to see how shoppers have fared on their day-after excursions.  Some of the stories are tragic and others just plain old funny.  On either end of the stick I’m glad that I’m not one of the stories.

Now don’t get me wrong.  I don’t have anything against those who enjoy the Black Friday experience – To each his own.  I really hope they find what they are looking for and have a wonderful time in the process.  Folks it just isn’t my cup of tea and I don’t think you’ll ever find me out in the crowd.  If you need me, I’ll probably be right here at home.

The word “leftovers” often doesn’t get the right rating.  A lot of people snarl their nose at leftovers.  In the Bible there were two times when a miracle of Jesus produced leftovers.  Once He had fed five thousand people with a few fish and a few loaves of bread and on another occasion the number was three thousand with the same menu.  Each time there was more leftovers than what He originally started with.  You know what; I think I might have liked to have tried those Heavenly leftovers.

In Nehemiah 12:46 we read, “For in the days of David and Asaph of old there were chiefs of the singers, and songs of praise and thanksgiving to God.”  The people were remembering how it had been during the days of David and Asaph.  The offices of the singers were very important to these men in the worship of God.  After their thanksgiving celebration the people of Israel under Nehemiah’s direction were trying to duplicate that so as to re-establish the wonderful worship of days gone by.  In a sense they were making trying to stretch the leftovers of their own worship for the coming days.  I believe that was a good thing.

When we have an unusually good time of worship with our Lord we want to bask in the leftovers of that experience, and we should.  That wonderful feeling of worship and closeness to God is something we want to last on and on.  It makes us to want to stretch that experience until the next one.  It’s a Heavenly leftover that we can always look forward to.

I pray that you had a wonderful Thanksgiving Day.  I sincerely hope that things went well for you and you made memories that will serve as pleasant leftovers for a long time to come.  We should want those kinds of leftovers.  We need to cherish those times and remember them in our hearts.  We never know when tragedy may strike and take away some of those family members we love.  But we can always relive those good times in our minds.

It’s the same with our spiritual thanksgiving.  Those times well spent with our Lord serve as pleasant memories that can encourage us in days to come.  Hold fast to them.  Never forget them.  Keep them close to your heart.  Then draw from them as the need arises.  Of course there will be new experiences in the Lord.  We’ll have more good times to come.  But never forget them and always give thanks.

Jerry D. Ousley is the Author of five books, “Soul Challenge”, “Soul Journey” “Ordeal” “The Spirit Bread Daily Devotional” and his first novel “The Shoe Tree.”  Listen to the daily broadcast Spirit Bread.  Find out more by visiting www.spiritbread.com

Article Source: http://www.faithwriters.com

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Train Up a Child in the Way He should Go and When He is Older He will go that way


And we wonder where they learned this stuff. Another example of a failed education.

Isn’t It Amazing How Some Things Just Never Change?


https://i0.wp.com/netrightdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Obama-Unemployment.jpg

No matter what happens the story remains the same. I inherited this crisis and I am doing everything I can to make things better but as it will only get worse since I inherited this crisis.

The more money the government spends on ECONOMIC STIMULUS plans the more the unemployment rate goes up, and yet the administration never makes the connection that perhaps it is his policies that is causing the crisis that he inherited. Oh well November is almost here and then we can start to get to work on erasing this Obama crisis we Americans inherited with his nomination in 2009.

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