Elie Wiesel was a correspondent for a Jewish newspaper in Paris, France, in 1954. A decade earlier he was a prisoner in a Jewish concentration camp. A decade later he would be known as the author of Night, an account of the Holocaust. Eventually he'll be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor, Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the Nobel Peace Prize. But tonight Elie Wiesel is a twenty-six-year-old unknown newspaper correspondent. He is about to interview the French author François Mauriac, who is a devout Christian. Mauriac is France's most recent Nobel laureate for literature and an expert on French political life. Wiesel shows up at Mauriac's apartment, nervous and chain-smoking, his emotions still frayed from the German horror, his comfort as a writer still raw. The older Mauriac tries to put him at ease. He invites Wiesel in, and the two sit in the small room. Before Wiesel can ask a question, however, Mauriac, a staunch Roman Catholic, begins to speak about his favorite subject: Jesus. Wiesel grows uneasy. The name of Jesus is a pressed thumb on his infected wounds. Wiesel tries to reroute the conversation but can't. It is as though everything in creation leads back to Jesus. Jerusalem? Jerusalem is where Jesus ministered. The Old Testament? Because of Jesus, the Old is now enriched by the New. Mauriac turns every topic toward the Messiah. The anger in Wiesel begins to heat up. The Christian anti-Semitism he'd grown up with, the layers of grief from Sighet, Auschwitz, and Buchenwald — it all boils over. He puts away his pen, shuts his notebook, and stands up angrily. "Sir," he said to the still-seated Mauriac, "you speak of Christ. Christians love to speak of Him. The passion of Christ, the agony of Christ, the death of Christ. In your religion, that is all you speak of. Well, I want you to know that ten years ago, not very far from here, I knew Jewish children every one of whom suffered a thousand times more, six million times more, than Christ on the cross. And we don't speak about them. Can you understand that, sir? We don't speak about them."1 |
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Love is patient. — 1 Corinthians 13:4 |
Love is patient. — 1 Corinthians 13:4 |
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Mauriac is stunned. Wiesel turns and marches out the door. Mauriac sits in shock, his woolen blanket still around him. The young reporter is pressing the elevator button when Mauriac appears in the hall. He gently reaches for Wiesel's arm. "Come back," he implores. Wiesel agrees, and the two sit on the sofa. At this point Mauriac begins to weep. He looks at Wiesel but says nothing. Just tears. Wiesel starts to apologize. Mauriac will have nothing of it. Instead he urges his young friend to talk. He wants to hear about it — the camps, the trains, the deaths. He asks Wiesel why he hasn't put this to paper. Wiesel tells him the pain is too severe. He's made a vow of silence. The older man tells him to break it and speak out. The evening changed them both. The drama became the soil of a lifelong friendship. They corresponded until Mauriac's death in 1970. Mauriac even dedicated a book on Jesus to him: "To Elie Wiesel, who was a crucified Jewish child." "I owe François Mauriac my career," Wiesel said, and it was to Mauriac that Wiesel sent the first manuscript of Night.2 What if Mauriac had kept the door shut? Would anyone have blamed him? Cut by the sharp words of Wiesel, he could have become impatient with the angry young man and have been glad to be rid of him. But he didn't and he wasn't. He reacted decisively, quickly, and lovingly. He was "slow to boil." And because he was, a heart began to heal. May I urge you to do the same? "God is being patient with you" (2 Peter 3:9 ICB). And if God is being patient with you, can't you pass on some patience to others? Of course you can. Because before love is anything else, love is patient (1 Corinthians 13:4). |
- David Aikman, Great Souls: Six Who Changed the Century (Nashville: Word Publishing, 1998), 341–42.
- Aikman, Great Souls, 338–44.
Excerpted with permission from Stories for Your Soul by Max Lucado, copyright Max Lucado. * |
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Think about how patience and grace are related. How have patience and grace appeared in your life? Patient love means choosing to love someone even when you don't feel like it or it isn't easy. When was the last time you've given or accepted patient love? How did love make the situation better? Come share your thoughts with us. We want to hear from you! ~ Devotionals Daily |
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Stories for Your Soul: Ordinary People. Extraordinary God. |
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+ FREE shipping on all orders over $35 | Life can be hard: grief, loss, busyness, financial hardships, abuse, broken relationships, and illness are just some of the difficulties we all face on a regular basis. It's easy to lose faith in your neighbor and feel like you're alone--but Max Lucado assures us that hope is here. Stories for Your Soul: Ordinary People. Extraordinary God. by pastor and New York Times bestselling author Max Lucado will reestablish your faith in people and the Lord by sharing the good in the world. Compiled from Max's catalog of treasured stories, this collection of ordinary miracles sheds light on the ways that everyday people are doing God's work while also sharing their gifts with others. |
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Throughout Stories for Your Soul, you'll read about: - Nicholas Winton, a twenty-nine-year-old stockbroker, who rescued 669 children during World War II
- Favio Chavez and Don Cola Gomez--two men recycling the world's trash into musical instruments
- Jimmy Wayne and how complete strangers gave him a home and became his family
- And many more amazing stories
At the end of each inspiring story, you'll find two reflection questions to help you dig deep into your life and identify ways you can use your own gifts to change the world while deepening your faith in God. |
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Hear from Max about his new book |
Max shares the verse he handwrote on the first page of his worn-out beloved Bible. |
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this devotion with someone who needs it today |
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