“There’s your sign!”
In the South, that’s slang for “You’re stupid!” basically.
You’re in the park flying a kite when a man walks up and
asks if you’re flying a kite. There’s your sign.
You run over the garden hose with the lawnmower. Twice. “There’s
your sign!” (Though my little sister “accidentally” did this two weeks in a row
before Dad punished her by no longer
being allowed to use the mower. Not so
dumb, actually.)
You spend an hour curling your hair before looking out the
window to see the rainstorm. Sign.
Urban dictionary attributes the phrase to Comedian Bill
Engvall in the late 90’s:
“I went up to the
ticket counter in the airport and told the lady she lost my luggage. She looked
straight at me and said, ‘Has your plane arrived yet?’ There’s your sign.”
This jovial barb is often used with friends and family and
is a way of making light of our mistakes and slap-your-forehead moments. I’ve
probably said it to my sister 793 times.
It’s not her fault. I’ve always thought if Mom had gone to
the hospital when she first went into labor instead of waiting until the end of
that episode of The Waltons, my
sister would’ve had a better start in life.
Thankfully the VCRs that came later protected newborns from
having to wait for Goodnight, John Boy
before they could enter the world.
There’s your sign!
All joking aside, signs are a big part of my ministry. Most
of the homeless have signs.
I have one too.
Actually, I have two and they are on the side of my van.
Shortly after we began going out to feed the homeless, I got
a pair of magnetic signs to put on my van. I hadn’t given it a lot of thought, just decided it would be nice.
The impact of the signs has been greater than I could’ve
possibly imagined.
First, it lends some protection and safety for me and those
I’m ministering to. If I offer someone a ride, the signs on the van convey
ministry, not serial killer. And I stopped getting approached at intersections
with little baggies as I traveled through rough neighborhoods. Now the dealers
either wave or ignore me. I pray for them too.
Second, my van has become something of a rolling
confessional. Complete strangers will come up to me in store parking lots and
tell me their stories and ask for prayer. The signs have our motto Serving Christ by Serving Others along
with our phone number. We’ve been asked for directions, rides, money,
food, prayer, and advice. All because of
the signs.
Perhaps the most important part of the signs, though, is the
accountability. When people see MINISTRY on
the side of my vehicle, they should see compassion. When they see Serving Christ by Serving Others, they
should see Jesus.
They should not see someone laying on the horn and yelling
because they were cut off in traffic.
Or yelling at the drive-through cashier because the plain
cheeseburger had pickles on it.
On most days, this is hardly a struggle. I’ve overcome too
much to get upset because someone took the parking spot I was waiting on.
I knew things had changed the day my husband and I came out
of Wal-Mart and we were nearly hit by a car in the crosswalk. The couple next
to us started yelling and cursing at the driver before I realized that I was on
a completely different train of thought.
I was wondering what type of car ran so smoothly that you
couldn’t hear it approach and what a difference that was from my
hear-it-a-mile-away van.
I call that peace.
It’s not a given.
Nor do I have it 24/7.
So on those days that my peace is hard to find, I remember
the signs.
They remind me that I’m representing Christ.
Many store owners and wait staff tell us that Christians are
the worst customers of all.
Why is that? And what can I do about it?
For starters, I can make sure that the signs on the outside
of my car reflect the person within.
In all circumstances.
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