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Keep
on asking, and you will be given what you ask for. Keep on looking, and you will
find. Keep on knocking, and the door will be opened. For everyone who asks,
receives. Everyone who seeks, finds. And the door is opened to everyone who
knocks.
(Matthew 7:7-8 NLT). Mike Hayes of Rochelle, Illinois,
decided he would test the truth of asking and receiving. In 1987, while a
chemistry freshman at the University of Illinois, he came up with a novel idea
to solve his tuition and college expenses problem. Figuring that just about
anyone could spare a penny, he brazenly asked everyone to do it. He wrote to Chicago Tribune columnist Bob Greene, asking him to request each of
his readers send Hayes a penny. The notion tickled the veteran columnist's fancy
enough that he was willing to go along with it. From Bob Greene's column: No one likes
being used, but in this case I'm willing. It sounds like fun. Mike Hayes, 18, is
a freshman science major at the University of Illinois in Champaign. He is
looking for a way to finance his college education, and he decided that my
column is the answer. "How many people read your column?" he asked me.
I told him I didn't know. "Millions, right?" he said. "All over
the country, right?" I said I supposed that was true. "Well, here's my
idea," he said, and proceeded to explain. I'll break it down simply: Mike
Hayes wants every person who is reading this column right this minute to send
him a penny. "Just one penny," Hayes said. "A penny doesn't mean
anything to anyone. If everyone who is reading your column looks around the room
right now, there will be a penny under the couch cushion, or on the corner of
the desk, or on the floor. That's all I'm asking. A penny from each of your
readers." You
wouldn't think a scheme like that would be wildly successful. But it was. In
less than a month, the "Many Pennies for Mike" fund was up to the
equivalent of 2.3 million pennies. Not everyone was
content
to send merely a penny, many sent nickels, dimes, quarters and even more.
There's something lovable about a kid who asks you for a penny. Ask Debra Sue
Maffett, Miss America 1983. Not only did she send a check for $25.00, but also
her donation was accompanied by a letter saying she admired him. She even signed
the letter 'Love, Debbie'. Donations
were received from every state in the United States, plus Mexico, Canada, and
the Bahamas. Yes, he ended up with the $28,000 he'd set out to get. But 1987 was
a long time ago, you say. Whatever happened to Mike Hayes? He went on to earn
his degree in food science from the University of Illinois. As for why this
scheme worked: ''I didn't ask for a lot of money,'' Hayes said. ''I just asked
for money from a lot of people, 2.8 million people [of Chicago].'' Perhaps the
last word is best left to the lad's father, Bill Hayes: "When Mike first
told me about his idea, I just laughed and said that I thought it was dumb.
Which shows you that he's smarter than I am." I
am not saying this is the answer to your financial needs. However, I am saying
that many people simply don’t receive from the Lord because they don’t ask,
believing. Give faith a chance!
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