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The California Collection
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his059
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race.lzh
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RACE.TXT
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1991-07-11
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41 lines
BBB:The Race
It was a sad day for the children of Israel. The king's son,
Absalom, had rebelled against his father and tried to take over the
throne. King David's armies had fought against Absalom and his rebels,
defeating them and chasing them away. David loved his son and had told
his army not to hurt Absalom. Joab, the king's general, disobeyed David
and killed Absalom anyway. Now someone had to go tell David that his
son was dead.
Joab buried Absalom in the woods while everyone wondered how to
break the news to the king. A young man walked up to Joab and asked if
he could go and deliver the message to the king. When Joab saw that it
was Ahimaaz, he said, "No, you are not the one to go and carry the news
today because the king's son is dead." This made Ahimaaz feel bad. To
him it seemed like no one ever took him seriously. People were always
making fun of him and whispering behind his back. When Joab sent
another boy to run to the king, Ahimaaz felt worse. He told Joab that
he wanted to run no matter what happened. Joab was in a very grouchy
mood and told him to go ahead and run if he wanted to.
For Ahimaaz, this was his chance to show everybody that he was not
as foolish as they thought he was. He knew a shortcut and before long
he was far ahead of the first messenger. Ahimaaz was very proud of
himself. He wasn't thinking about how sad the king would be when he
heard the news. All he could think about was being the first runner to
arrive at the gate. He was sure this would cause people to stop making
fun of him. The guards above the gate could tell it was Ahimaaz by the
way he ran. Possibly they had made fun of the way he had run on other
days.
When Ahimaaz got to the gate he suddenly realized that he'd
forgotten what he was supposed to tell the king. The king was kind to
Ahimaaz and told him to wait until the other messenger arrived, but
Ahimaaz was very embarrassed. No one laughed at Ahimaaz that day, but
when the king had received the message and began to cry, Ahimaaz was
very ashamed that he had been thinking of his own feelings and had been
a foolish messenger.
Taken from II Samuel 18:19-23