Meet Edwin Thomas, a master of the stage. During the latter half of the 1800s,
this small man with the huge voice had few rivals. Debuting in Richard III at
the age of fifteen, he quickly established himself as a premier Shakespearean
actor. In New York he performed Hamlet for one hundred consecutive nights. In
London he won the approval of the tough British critics. When it came to tragedy
on the stage, Edwin Thomas was in a select group.
When it came to tragedy in life, the same could be said as well. Edwin had two
brothers, John and Junius. Both were actors, although neither rose to his
stature. In 1863, the three siblings united their talents to perform Julius
Caesar. The fact that Edwin's brother John took the role of Brutus was an eerie
harbinger of what awaited the brothers-and the nation-two years hence.
For this John who played the assassin in Julius Caesar is the same John who took
the role of assassin in Ford's Theatre. On a crisp April night in 1865, he stole
quietly into the rear of a box in the Washington theater and fired a bullet at
the head of Abraham
Lincoln. Yes, the last name of the brothers was Booth--Edwin Thomas Booth and
John Wilkes Booth.
Edwin was never the same after that night. Shame from his brother's crime drove
him into retirement. He might never have returned to the stage had it not been
for a twist of fate at a New Jersey train station. Edwin was awaiting his coach
when a well dressed young man, pressed by the crowd, lost his footing and fell
between the platform and a moving train. Without hesitation, Edwin locked a leg
around a railing, grabbed the man, and pulled him to safety. After the sighs of
relief, the young man recognized the famous Edwin Booth.
Edwin, however, didn't recognize the young man he'd rescued. That knowledge came
weeks later in a letter, a letter he carried in his pocket to the grave. A
letter from General Adams Budeau, chief secretary to General Ulysses S. Grant. A
letter thanking Edwin Booth for saving the life of the child of an American
hero, Abraham Lincoln. How ironic that while one brother killed the president,
the other brother saved the president's son. The boy Edwin Booth yanked to
safety? Robert Todd Lincoln.
Edwin and James Booth. Same father, mother, profession, and passion-yet one
chooses life, the other, death. How could it happen? I don't know, but it does.
Though their story is dramatic, it's not unique.
Abel and Cain, both sons of Adam. Abel chooses God. Cain chooses murder. And God
lets him.
Abraham and Lot, both pilgrims in Canaan. Abraham chooses God. Lot chooses
Sodom. And God lets him.
David and Saul, both kings of Israel. David chooses God. Saul chooses power. And
God lets him.
Peter and Judas, both deny their Lord. Peter seeks mercy. Judas seeks death. And
God lets him.
In every age of history, on every page of Scripture, the truth is revealed: God
allows us to make our own choices.
And no one delineates this more clearly than Jesus. According to him, we can
choose:
a narrow gate or a wide gate (Matt. 7:13-14) a narrow road or a wide road (Matt.
7:13-14) the big crowd or the small crowd (Matt. 7:13--14) We can choose to:
build on rock or sand (Matt. 7:24-27) serve God or riches (Matt. 6:24)
be numbered among the sheep or the goats (Matt. 25:32-33) "Then they [those who
rejected God] will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal
life" (Matt. 25:46 NIV). God gives eternal choices, and these choices have
eternal consequences.
He Chose The Nails, p. 51 - 53. Copyright. W Publishing, 2000,Max Lucado. Used
by permission.
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