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Friday, April 13, 2007
Chuck Colson :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Blessing of Serving Others
by Chuck Colson
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Over the past few weeks, Americans were often thrilled and sometimes even moved by the NCAA basketball championship, known as "March Madness." I also watched some thrilling and moving basketball in March. While the guys I watched will never play in the NBA, they are even more special.

A few weeks ago, I visited my daughter, Emily, and my grandson, Max, in Boston. As I have previously told "BreakPoint" listeners and readers, Max is autistic.

He is a great kid, and Emily has done a fantastic job raising him. While there are burdens, there can also be sources of great blessing—as the parent of any child with special needs will tell you.

That's because Max and his peers have a way of teaching us what is truly important. They matter, not because of what they can do—much less do for us—but because of the fact they are. And that truth can transform even the bleakest of surroundings.

I saw this when I recently watched Max play in a basketball game for kids with special needs. The gymnasium was a big, beige cube with tiny slits serving as windows, attached to a string of older, one-story buildings. It was architecturally drab, to say the least.

None of that mattered once the players took the court. None of these kids will ever play for the Florida Gators—the best way to describe the quality of play is well-organized confusion. Yet their enthusiasm easily matched anything on display during "March Madness."

Just as inspiring were the volunteers and the parents. Their devotion to these kids lit up that dingy space: If a kid needed to be carried, they carried him; if he needed his hands to be directed toward the basket, that's what they did. One middle-aged mother, always smiling, literally kept her hand on her twenty-something’s collar to brace him to stand. They did whatever it took to affirm the dignity and worth of theses kids who, in turn, were clearly grateful for the affirmation.

Sitting on a chair in that gymnasium, I watched two destructive myths being shattered.

The first was Darwin's "survival of the fittest." According to Darwin, natural selection would "rigidly destroy" any variation that would hurt its possessor "in the struggle for life." If any "variations" should qualify for such "rigid destruction," it would be those disabilities on display on the court. Yet, they are still here. They were not selected out. Why not? Because of something that natural selection can't account for: human kindness and altruism.

Which leads me to the other myth being destroyed: the selfish individualism that dominates our contemporary culture. We live in an age in which the individual's desires and needs reign supreme.

Obviously, these parents know that is false: that real joy is seeing their kids make a basket, so to speak. Max and his peers teach us that true fulfillment and blessing is found, not in self-gratification, but in serving others. And ironically, the Darwinians in our midst who would rid the world of these so-called "unproductive" kids would deny us the real joy of life.

This is why God gives us kids like Max: to help us understand His real blessings.

Today's BreakPoint Offer Continued...

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About The Author
Chuck Colson was the Chief Counsel for Richard Nixon and served time in prison for Watergate-related charges. In 1976, Colson founded Prison Fellowship Ministries, which, in collaboration with churches of all confessions and denominations, has become the world's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners, crime victims, and their families.
 
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Missing the point
Without the light of Christ our True God, it would seem that many who have replied to this fine column cannot see the forest for the trees.
The issue at hand is selfless love and caring for the weak and vulnerable and helpless---- those virtues that set us apart from Animals and those characters that are elevated by the Christian Faith far more than any other belief system, religous or political.
Charles Colson is one of the best voices in America for our generation
Too many people are fixated on the Ayn Rand approach, which is the Idol of self and self advancement, economically.
The great sacred cow of wealth and profit uber alles.

http://touchstonemag.com/archives/article.php?id=16-10-029-f

Correction
"It is rarely the people." ---> It rarely is the solution.
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