Scripture
John 20:28
Acts 2:42–47; Psalm 118:2–4,13–15,22–24; 1 Peter 1:3–9; John 20:19–31
Sermon Week/Year
Most of us know the name Helen Keller. What is sometimes forgotten is the moment when her world first opened.
As a small child, Helen Keller lost both her sight and her hearing. Without language, she lived in a kind of silent isolation. Her family loved her deeply, but they could not reach her. Words had no meaning yet. The world around her was a blur of sensations without names.
Then a young teacher named Annie Sullivan entered her life.
Sullivan began patiently tracing letters into Helen’s palm with her finger. She would spell a word—doll—and then place a doll into the child’s hands. Again and again she repeated the process: word, object… word, object.
At first it meant nothing.
Then one day they stood beside a water pump. Annie Sullivan placed Helen’s hand under the flowing water and slowly spelled into her palm the letters W-A-T-E-R.
Suddenly something changed.
Helen…
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