His arms are covered with tattoos, and probably the rest of his body too, judging from the body art that peeks out from under his black t-shirt. He sports a ring in his nose, the kind that pierces through the lower septum and sticks out both nostrils. He's already lost all sense of professionalism, and no wonder. After all, his shop will close in 2 days and he'll be jobless anyway.
I set my books on the counter, nothing I'm too excited about, but worth purchasing at 80% off--a book on animism in Africa, a retelling of old testament stories, an exercise journal (already relegated the the second tier behind the books I actually use), and a memoir about a religious woman who tries not to believe in God.
The title caught my attention:
Breaking Up With God. It speaks to me of what so many have done, turned their backs on their creator and refused to take his calls. I want to understand what drives people to seek a different life. I want to know how to tell them God still loves them even when they don't feel it.
The cashier slides one book after another across the bar code reader. I don't even notice him reading the titles I've selected. I don't expect him to care.
"Are you into this kind of literature?"
His voice startles me. I didn't think he was paying any attention to me.
"Which one?" I strain to see which title caught his eye.
It's the one about leaving God, of course.
"I don't know. I haven't read it yet." A Homer Simpson
Doh! hits the inside of my skull. What a dumb thing to say.
The cashier is animated now. He's looking around for something, A pen, a scrap of paper.
"Here are some other books you might like to read." His eyes are bright, his voice eager. He slides the paper across to me. "Read them."
I don't know what to say.
You've got it all wrong. That's not who I am.
The titles he's selected are non-fiction, instruction manuals for how to abandon God. I don't want them, but I stuff them in my wallet.
I stammer for an answer.
What makes you so happy to teach people how to live apart from God? What happened in your life to make you so evangelistic? I don't say anything. He's already turned his attention to the next customer.
An opportunity lost, a moment in time when I could have spoken a word of truth, a word of grace, and instead I stand dumbfounded and let the broken preach to me.