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Our Daily Bread
by Zach Smith

There's an old woman that works part-time in my office. She's a sweet grandmotherly person who hasn't had the easiest life. After some time I started to go more out of my way to be nice to her. Simple things: showing interest, asking her how she was, making sure she had a ride home.

I even gave her a ride home one day. She tried to pay, but the five-dollar bill was slyly slipped back into her purse.

We would talk.

She would tell me stories about the department from before my time, the people who have come and gone, the old directors, the day she worked twenty-eight hours straight.

I’d tell her about myself, my home life, my wife, and how I liked to bake in my free time.

I asked her what church she went to, as part of my job dealt with the local churches. Apparently she thought it was for other reasons, and asked me to pray for her friends and relatives from time to time.

I’m an atheist, so my prayers would probably do more harm than good.

“You got it,” I would say.

Was it a lie? What exactly is the difference between saying you will say a prayer and actually saying one? If you believe that saying a prayer would do more harm then good for the recipient, isn't the act of not saying a prayer more of a blessing? These are the deeper questions that I don’t know the answers too.

One day she left a little pamphlet on my desk, devotional called “Our Daily Bread.”

I took a deep breath and had a difficult choice to make.

Should I tell her that I’m not particularly interested in such books, or tell her that I read it? Be honest or lie?

Lying would be more what she wanted to hear, while the truth might cause her to stop talking to me, which only bothered me somewhat, but it would be one less person looking out for her at work, and that bothered me more.

However lying could lead to worse things, she might invite me to go to church with her, and I wasn't sure what kind of song and dance I could do to get out of that.

Worse yet I might not lie, and actually read the devotional and have some kind of religious experience and be forever altered.

Sometimes you just have to tell the truth.

“I’m sorry,” I said, handing the copy of Our Daily Bread back to her. “I appreciate your concern, but I’m not really interested in religious stuff.”

“I know that,” she said. “You're not exactly quiet about your opinion of religion.”

“So is this you trying to convert me?”

“No,” she said. “Flip through the pages, it’s a cookbook.”