He was 9in a Sunday school class of
8-year-olds. Eight-year-olds
can be cruel.
The third-graders did not welcome Philip
to their group. Not just
because he was older. He was different. He suffered from
Downs
syndrome and its obvious manifestations: facial characteristics, slow
responses, symptoms of retardation.
One Sunday after Easter the Sunday school
teacher gathered some
of those plastic eggs that pull apart in the middlethe kind in which
some ladies pantyhose are packaged.
The Sunday school teacher gave one of these
plastic eggs to each child.
On that beautiful spring day each child
was to go outdoors and discover
for himself some symbol of new life and place that symbolic seed
or
leaf or whatever inside his egg.
They would then open their eggs one by one,
and each youngster would
explain how his find was a symbol of new
life.
So
The youngsters gathered round on the
appointed day and put their eggs
on a table, and the teacher began to open them.
One child had found a flower. All the children
oohed and aahed at the
lovely symbol of new life. In another was a butterfly. Beautiful,
the girls
said. And its not easy for an 8-year-old to say
beautiful.
Another egg was opened to reveal a rock.
Some of the children laughed.
Thats crazy! one said. Hows a rock supposed
to be like a new life?
Immediately the little boy spoke up and
said, Thats mine. I knew
everybody would get flowers and leaves and butterflies and all that stuff,
so I got a rock to be different.
Everyone laughed.
The teacher opened the last one, and there
was nothing inside.
Thats not fair, someone
said. Thats stupid, said another.
Teacher felt a tug on his shirt. It was
Philip. Looking up he said, Its
mine. I did do it. Its empty. I have new life because the tomb is
empty.
The class fell silent.
From that day on Philip became part of the
group. They welcomed
him. Whatever had made him different was never mentioned
again.
Philips family had known he would
not live a long life; just too many
things wrong with the tiny body. That summer, overcome with infection,
Philip died.
On the day of his funeral nine 8-year-old
boys and girls confronted
the reality of death and marched up to the altarnot with flower. Nine
children with their Sunday school teacher placed on the casket of their
friend their gift of lovean empty egg.

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