Average time per day for this plan: 5 Minutes
You are working on lesson 6.
Lesson
01
Attempt Great Things for God
Lesson
02
Help Me, Please!
Lesson
03
How Can I Help You?
Lesson
04
Hope in the Mundane
Lesson
05
I Can Plod
Lesson
06
57 Cents and a Little Girl
57 Cents and a Little Girl

I’ve learned by mistake that everything I read on social media is not true so I will often check out the validity of the article. So before sharing this story, I made sure it was true. And according to my research, it is based on facts and it is a perfect way to end the week’s devotions on Little is Much. With the permission of Ilene Roggensack, I share it with you.

57 Cents and the Power of Commitment

Ilene Roggensack

This true story is from a sermon delivered in December 1912 by Russell H. Conwell, pastor of Grace Baptist Church in Philadelphia. He tells the story of his former church home and his encounter there with a little girl named Hattie May Wiatt.

Hattie May Wiatt lived near a church where the Sunday School was very crowded. As head of the church, Rev. Conwell told her that one day they would have buildings big enough to accommodate anyone and everyone who wanted to attend Sunday School at the church.

A short time later, Hattie May became sick - so sick that she died as a child. Rev. Conwell was asked to officiate the funeral, and also was told by the child's mother that Hattie May had been saving her money to help build a bigger church to house the people interested in Sunday School. The mother gave the minister Hattie May's little purse, in which he found 57 cents that the young girl had put away.

Hattie May died in 1886 when 57 cents was no small amount for a little girl from a poor family. Rev. Conwell converted the 57 cents into 57 pennies, then told his congregation the story of little Hattie May's saved gift. Like a seasoned fundraiser, he was able to "sell" the pennies to those in attendance for a return of approximately $250. Additionally, 54 of the original 57 pennies were returned to Rev. Conwell and he put them on display.

Some of the members of the church formed what they called the Wiatt Mite Society, dedicated to making Hattie May's 57 cents grow as much as possible and to purchase property for the Sunday School operations. A nearby house was purchased with the $250 that Hattie May's 57 cents had produced, and the rest is history. The first classes of Temple College - later Temple University - were held in that house. It later was sold to allow Temple College to move and grow. This, along with the Society's founding of the Good Samaritan Hospital (now the Temple University Hospital) are significant testimony to the power of a very small amount of money with a very large share of commitment.

(Ilene Roggensack, reprinted with permission. For more from Ilene, go to thirdsectoronline.com Third Sector Innovations, Inc.)

Read

Matthew 6:28-30, And why are you anxious about clothing? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is alive and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will he not much more clothe you, O you of little faith?

Pray

Lord, when we are tempted to give in to utter hopelessness remind us to look around, open our eyes and hearts to see the “little bit of oil”, the blessings, the very means You will use to help turn our hearts toward You.

Reflect

Remember, little is much when God is in it.

Respond

“Hattie May died in 1886 when 57 cents was no small amount for a little girl from a poor family. Rev. Conwell converted the 57 cents into 57 pennies, then told his congregation the story of little Hattie May's saved gift.”

But this was not the end of the work Harrie started. Hattie’s pastor learned from her mother that Hattie was: “saving her money to help build a bigger church to house the people interested in Sunday School. The mother gave the minister Hattie May's little purse, in which he found 57 cents that the young girl had put away”.

 Would Hattie have ever imagined that her .57 cents would have one day become “Temple College, along with the Society's founding of the Good Samaritan Hospital (now the Temple University Hospital)”. 

The Wrap Up

What is your “.57 cents”, your place to start to attempt great things for God?

 

This content has been adapted from Daily Treasure Devotions written by Sharon W. Betters, and a resource provided by MARKINC.org

Loading controls...
© 2024 iDisciple. All Rights Reserved.