The Grands Letter – Special Edition (GLJ)

on April 23, 2020 7:08 pm (CST)
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Dear Grands,

Virus Brings Unlikely Faith Fellows Together

April 23, 2020

By Tony Perkins

Whitney Tilson had come down from his Fifth Avenue apartment to walk the dog when he noticed the trucks. Right there, in Central Park, were stacks of tarps and white tents, all “bearing a name he had never heard of — Samaritan’s Purse.” He found out the group was building a field hospital for his fellow New Yorkers and asked if he could help. He hasn’t stopped, Yonat Shimron writes , since.

The Tilsons had never heard of Franklin Graham. Whitney says he’s never been particularly religious, and his wife, Shimron explains, is Jewish. But in a powerful story of people helping people, none of that matters. For four weeks, the Tilsons and their daughters have been spending hours a day at the field hospital, helping spread mulch, set up barriers, feed the volunteers, and any other job that needs to be done. He’s donated shovels, supplies, thousands of dollars of food, coffee, soda, potato chips, and other snacks. “It’s an incredibly impressive organization,” the retired financial expert tells Yonat. “I have no doubt they are delivering world-class critical care to my fellow New Yorkers stricken with COVID-19. Every single person I’ve met has been a genuinely nice person and very competent and good at their job.”

But not everyone was able to look past their own views to the greater good. When Whitney circulated a request to Central Synagogue, where he and his wife were members, asking for spare boots and socks for the medical team, some people balked. “The values harbored by this group and its founder just completely fly in the face of what Central stands for,” one person fumed to an online magazine. But despite the fact that Franklin and Whitney are “polar opposites” politically, he stood his ground. “I’m supporting a hospital that is saving people’s lives,” Whitney said. “I’m not endorsing [an] ideology…” And then he filled up his car with so much food for the workers that he couldn’t see out his rear window.

Franklin was so grateful that he called Whitney and invited the family down to Samaritan’s Purse headquarters — a trip they’re eager to make. “He’s a great human being,” Franklin agreed. “He might disagree with me, and I might disagree with him, but that’s not going to stop us from working together to help people.”

Near tears on a viral video he taped to Samaritan’s Purse, Whitney says, “Everyone’s been thanking me,” he choked up, “but I want to say, thank you. No one is paying you to help my city in our hour of deep, deep need.” New Yorkers, he believes, should be grateful for the group. “Their primary mission in life is not to go out and have hatred toward gays,” he said. “They believe what the Bible says, that homosexuality is a sin — yes. But it is not what drives them. What drives them is, ‘How can I do God’s work by healing people and saving lives?'”

Family Research Council

Heartily in Christ Jesus,

(Dado III)

Gene L. Jeffries, Th.D.

Springdale, Arkansas 72764

United States of America

“We never know that God is all we need

until He becomes all that we have.”

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