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Tweedie's Tale
We were in the midst of a Convention. After the morning meeting
we were on our way to the home of my host for lunch, when we were accosted by a raggedly dressed man.
"Beg pardon Mister, but could you find a hungry man the price of a meal?"
I could have given him a couple of shillings, but something prompted me to put my hand on his shoulder and
to ask him,
He replied, "I'll not hide it from you; I have just come out of gaol."
This man's name was Thomas Tweedie. He tried to work, but again and again, when somebody gave him
employment the police would follow and say, "Be careful of that man. He is a violent criminal."
It was hard but Tweedie was determined that, come what may, he would not revert to crime, though he was
homeless and often went hungry.
His conversion was real and by his testimony, he won other unfortunates for Christ.
"Mount Calvary Mission",
and there he would gather the drunks, the tramps, the discharged gaol-birds and the worst characters of the town, praying
over them, weeping with them and leading them to the Lord Jesus, until they had to add another section to the ramshackle
old army hut.
Tweedie was much used in praying for the sick and laying hands upon them in Jesus' Name, so that remarkable cases
of healing were reported.
The greengrocers and the fruiterers of the city had a great room in the centre of the community. With improved methods
of preserving their produce, this store was no longer needed so they decided to hand it over to Thomas Tweedie.
"MOUNT CALVARY MISSION"
Tweedie could not continue his activities for long, however. He died.
Moreover, beside the coffin they decided to pass round the hat and send a gift to me, working away in the heart of the
Congo forests, "as a thank offering to the man who had pointed Thomas Tweedie to Christ."
I had almost forgotten the conversion of that poor unfortunate, so many years before, when the gift of money arrived, a
gift to help us win other souls for Christ, in the Congo.
How amazing the solemn responsibility which God lays upon us. Just a little apparently chance encounter on the street,
yet one trembles to think of the awful and eternal loss, had I not seized the opportunity to win a soul.
Wm. F. P. Burton from his book "Gospel Nuggets"
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