Hank the Tank and the Repairman

Ting-a-ling, the doorbell was ringing. Who is at the door?  Could it be a visit from the postman with a letter for O’Toole’s mother?  Could it be the milkman with more milk?  Has somebody come to visit O’Toole or visit his mother?

Ting-a-ling, Ting-a-ling the doorbell was calling.   O’Toole was hurrying, he wanted to open up the front door. When O’Toole’s mother opened the door then O’Toole knew who was at the door. The Plumber has come to stop the drip in our kitchen. He brought a big bag of tools. Big shiny tools.  Little tiny tools and a great big box.  Lots and lots of wrenches and screwdrivers. All of the tools were shiny and colorful.  Hank the Tank really likes sniffing in the Plumber’s toolbox.

O’Toole’s mother said — O’Toole you’re going to need to stand back and let the Plumber do his job.

Hank the Tank said — Yes Mother, we will stand back so the Plumber can do his job. Can we watch from a distance?

O’Toole’s mother said – Yes, it is ok for you to watch, as long as the Plumber can do his work.

Ratatat, the hammer started making all kinds of noise. The hands of the Plumber moved very fast. He steps outside and goes into the storage room of the house. He turns the water off. Soon the drip stops.

Bit by bit, all the parts for the faucet come off of the sink. The Plumber pulls the faucet out of the sink. He opens the faucet up and puts parts inside the faucet. The Plumber puts a faucet back together.

Ratatat, the clanging sound starts again. The Plumber installs the faucet in the sink. I can hear the creaking sound as the Plumber tightens up the connections for the faucet. Then he picks all of his tools up and moves them away from where he is working. He looks at the faucet from the top. He looks at faucet from the bottom. He scratches his chin and says I think I’m ready to turn the water on.

Then the Plumber walked into the storage room and turned the water on.  He came back into the kitchen and looked for leaks or drips. O’Toole could not see any leaks or drips. The Plumber reaches out and very slowly turns the water on at the sink. The water comes out of the faucet. The Plumber turned off the water. He puts all of his tools back in his toolbox and checks for leaks and drips. Then the Plumber calls my mother into the kitchen to look at the faucet.

The Plumber asked – Does the faucet look ok?

O’Toole’s mother replied — yes it looks very nice. Thank you for coming and helping me with this project.

The Plumber said — I was glad to be of help. Call me if you need other things fixed. I’m leaving now.

And just like that, the Plumber picked up his tool bag, headed to the front door, and left the house.

O’Toole’s mother said — O’Toole, you did very good. You did not disturb the Plumber. Thank you.

She reached over and scratched Hank the Tank on the chin. She let Hank the Tank know he had done a good job keeping O’Toole out of trouble.  O’Toole’s mother picked up the phone and called a Carpenter. She wanted him to come and fix the back steps of O’Toole’s house. The Carpenter agreed to come soon to repair the back steps. A little while later O’Toole heard the doorbell ring again. Ting-a-ling, ting-a-ling, O’Toole can hear that doorbell ring. He ran to the door. Just before O’Toole got to the door, his mother got to the door. She opened the door.  O’Toole looked around the corner to see who it was. He saw another toolbox and big pieces of wood. Oh boy he thought, this looked like fun.  It was the Carpenter.

O’Toole’s mother said to the Carpenter — have you come to fix my back step?

The Carpenter said to O’Toole’s mother – Yes, I am here to fix your back step. And who is this young man looking from around the corner?

O’Toole’s mother said — This is O’Toole my son and his dog, Hank the tank.  Mr. Carpenter, why don’t you come in and I will show you the location of the back step.

The Carpenter said — Thank you. Show me the way.

O’Toole and Hank the Tank followed the Carpenter to the back step. The Carpenter looked at the step and scratched his chin. Then the Carpenter made a plan.  He opened up his tool bag.  O’Toole was very happy to see more shiny tools. But these tools did not look like the Plumber’s tools. They look different. O’Toole wondered what the tools would do.

Just like that, the Carpenter got his hammer and started pounding – ratatat. Then the carpenter got his saw out — Oompa. Sawdust was flying. The Carpenter removed the old stair steps and just like that he put on the new steps. He trimmed up the wood to the right length. And then checked to be sure the step was right by using a level.  He showed the tool to Hank the Tank and explained how the bubble in the tool told the Carpenter that the stair was just right. The Carpenter called my mother to take a look. He showed her the level. She knew how to read the level to be sure that the stairs were correctly installed. She looked.  She smiled. The Carpenter smiled and packed up his tools.  He walked out of the front door.

The Carpenter looked back and said to O’Toole’s mother – call me if you need more help!

O’Toole’s mother said – I will call you soon.  I have other things that need fixing.

O’Toole’s mother said – O’Toole, I am going to get you a bowl of ice cream. Thank you for behaving so well while the repair men were here.  Hank the Tank, I am getting you a bowl of really nice food. Both of you behaved very well today I am very thankful that you let these repairmen get their job done. I thanked God that you two honored my request to be nice when the repairmen were in the house.

Hank the tank was really surprised. O’Toole was really surprised. The ice cream was really good. O’Toole was happy. It is good to behave.  O’Toole felt good he had honored and obeyed his mother. Hank the Tank curled up in the corner and let the evening sun warm his tummy.  O’Toole went outside and set on the new back steps. O’Toole watched the sunset.

The end.

Written by Margret O. Hyde, published in Humpty Dumpty Childrens Magazine, October 1955

Adapted for ShalomTalk by Dan

The Vine And The Branches

I am the Real Vine and my Father is the Farmer. He cuts off every branch of me that doesn’t bear grapes. And every branch that is grape-bearing he prunes back so it will bear even more. You are already pruned back by the message I have spoken.

Live in me. Make your home in me just as I do in you. In the same way that a branch can’t bear grapes by itself but only by being joined to the vine, you can’t bear fruit unless you are joined with me.

I am the Vine, you are the branches. When you’re joined with me and I with you, the relation intimate and organic, the harvest is sure to be abundant. Separated, you can’t produce a thing. Anyone who separates from me is deadwood, gathered up and thrown on the bonfire. But if you make yourselves at home with me and my words are at home in you, you can be sure that whatever you ask will be listened to and acted upon. This is how my Father shows who he is—when you produce grapes, when you mature as my disciples.

John 15:1-5

God is Self Sufficient

It has been my observation while reading Psalms 50 that God is fully self-sufficient. He says – “I know every bird in the mountains, the insects in the fields are mine. If I were hungry, I would not tell you, for the world is mine, and all that is in the world” (Psalms 50:11-12). In this single observation a core truth of God quietly appears. Asaph is telling us that God is self-sufficient (self-contained, stand-alone, all-encompassing). The one true living God is contained within himself. All life is in God and from God, whether we are discussing the lowly simple prokaryotes, the light from the sun, or intelligent life force of an angel, everything emanates from God. This life that God has, was not given to him, it was not a gift to him, he did not take it from something else, it simply exists in Him always – period. If there was another being that granted the gift of life to the one true living God, or any other gift, then the other being that granted the gift to God would be superior to the one true living God. Our God would not be whom we think he is. Continue reading “God is Self Sufficient”

Moral Absolutes

It has been my observation while strolling through Proverbs there is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way to death (see Proverbs 14:12). I noted something similar in Isaiah 5:20 – Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter! (NIV) Continue reading “Moral Absolutes”

Had I Been Joseph’s Mother

Had I been Joseph’s mother
I’d have prayed/ protection from his brothers
“God keep him safe./ He is so young,
so different from / the others.”
Mercifully, / she never knew
there would be slavery/ and prison, too.

Had I been Moses’ mother
I’d have wept/ To keep my little son;
praying she might forget/the babe drawn
from the water /of the Nile.
Had I not kept/ him for her/ nursing him the while,
was he not mine – and she/ but Pharoah’s daughter?

Had I been Daniel’s mother
I should have pled / “Give victory!
-this Babylonian horde / godless and cruel –
Don’t let him be a captive – better dead,
Almighty Lord!”

Had I been Mary,/Oh had I been she,
I would have cried/ As never mother cried,
Anything, O God, / Anything…- but / crucified.”
With such prayer importunate
My finite wisdom would assail
Infinite Wisdom. God, how fortunate
Infinite Wisdom / should prevail.

Ruth Graham was born in China; her parents were American medical missionaries at the Presbyterian Hospital 300 miles north of Shanghai. Ruth was a Christian from an early age. She graduated from Wheaton College, Illinois, where she met her future husband Billy Graham. They were married on August 13, 1943 in Montreat, NC when she was 23. Her husband became a full time evangelist preaching the gospel all over the world. She loved to move behind the scenes, away from the spotlight, and helped him craft and research sermons and even books. She wrote as an emotional release, while her husband was so often on the road. Ruth convinced Billy to move the family to Montreat, near her parents, when their first child was on the way. Her ministry flourished in the mountains of western North Carolina, where she built the family homestead and raised five children. Ruth and Billy were married over 65 years and had 19 grandchildren and numerous great-grandchildren. Ruth Graham died at the age of 87.