She looked down at the floor and twisted the arm of her little doll somewhat nervously. “I promise, I won’t do it again, Daddy.”
“But you’ve promised over and over and still you mess the house up with mud! Why?”
“What do you think I should do to help you remember?” I asked. “Go to your room and no more television today!”
In tears she sulked down the hall to her room to begin her day of punishment.
I picked up my devotional book to read. The words “. . . for he had a vow” fit well with the beginning of a new year. I must make some resolutions, I thought.
With pad and pencil in hand I began to write: I promise to spend more time in prayer and I will let nothing interfere with my time of devotion.
“But you’ve promised over and over and still . . .” My own words to my little girl somehow split the stillness. I remembered that this resolution had been on my list for many years now.
Shaking the words off, I wrote again: I resolve to give a tithe to the Lord even if I starve to death.
“But you’ve promised over and over and still . . .” There were those words again. Why didn’t they go away?
I promise to . . . but before I could even write anything down the words were filling the room again. “But you’ve promised over and over and still . . . What do you think I should do to help you remember?”
On my knees I prayed, “O God, I forgot, I forgot. Give me another chance, I promise this year . . .”