2006
Unto the Least
December 2006


“Unto the Least,” New Era, Dec. 2006, 41

Unto the Least

I was determined to have a bad attitude as my mom picked my brother and me up from school and drove us downtown. It was Christmastime, and I was supposed to be shopping with my friends. Instead, I was headed to a homeless shelter in our city to help fulfill an assignment that our stake had been given to clean the shelter and serve food to the people there.

When we arrived, my mood darkened as I was assigned to clean out the industrial-size refrigerator, which had recently been left open and now had all sorts of mold growing inside. I rolled my eyes and sighed in disgust at the green mess before me. With rubber gloves up to my elbows, I started scrubbing halfheartedly.

As I worked, a small boy in worn clothes stepped out of the food line to watch my progress. He stood at the door and simply smiled at me. And then without a word, he walked away. I was touched as I watched him go, and a scripture came to my mind: “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me” (Matthew 25:40).

“How well would I clean if I were doing this for Christ?” I thought to myself. “How hard would I work for Him?”

A smile spread across my face, and I turned back to my task. And with new perspective, I scrubbed the fridge until it shined.

Painting by Heinrich Hofmann, courtesy C. Harrison Conroy Co. Inc.