Over the next couple of weeks, posts here will be either scanty or super-abundant. I’m off to England, Scotland and Sarkozist France, meaning that I’ll either be too busy for blogging or will fill idle minutes with it. In the latter case, I promise not to post (i) photos of places that are the subject of 10,000 postcards, (ii) trite observations of the differences between America and Europe, or (iii) complaints about the inconveniences of travel. If UAL loses my luggage, the blogosphere will not hear about it.
Having said that, I already have one travel story worth relating: I’ll be in a party with two friends, one of whom got a new laptop last month. He is also a devout atheist. Last week, he broke the laptop screen. Best Buy said that it could be repaired, but screens for his model are in short supply and the estimated date of completion was well into January.
He grumbled to his Internet buddies, one of whom, as devout a Christian as my friend is a nonbeliever, said that he would pray for the laptop. Maybe he was engaged in friendly goat-getting, but –
Best Buy called the next day to say that a replacement screen had turned up at a nearby store. The repaired machine was ready for pickup on Christmas Eve.
Modern medicine can take care of so many physical ills that Lourdes is becoming obsolete. Now it’s high-tech gizmos that need the power of prayer.
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