The image of
Jesus Christ has reportedly been spotted in all sorts of places – in tortillas,
sheet metal, and dental X-rays. While many people draw inspiration from these
miraculous visages, many more who lack such faith are all too eager to ridicule
those who claim they see the image of the Son of God in items like fish bones,
spilled hot chocolate, and the discarded shell of a barbequed shrimp.
In spite of
this likely derision, one brave, local, Christian man, seeing such an image
after asking for a sign from the Almighty, helped spread the word about the
power of God by sharing his story with WAFB’s Paul Gates. Risking vigorous
mockery by heathenish skeptics and certain magazines inclined to satirize such
accounts, Albany resident Robb Keppler proudly professed his faith by telling
South Louisiana and the rest of the world about the miracle of Jesus appearing
in his bathroom sink in the form of a rust stain.
Keppler, whose
21-year-old son went through a bad relationship before joining the Army, said
he prayed for a sign by telling God, “Let me know something.” He told Gates, “I
was having a hard time dealing with it myself and stepped out the shower one
night and saw it plain as day right there.” Pointing to the remarkably
Messiah-like stain, Keppler insisted, “It is an image of Jesus, a clear sign.”
In fact,
Keppler’s spirit was so lifted by the rusty revelation that he awakened his
son, who is serving in Afghanistan, with the good news that very night.
Hallelujah!
As expected, a
few hell-bound unbelievers have used this inspiring testimony of the Savior in
the sink to make fun of Keppler and his faith. They left comments on WAFB’s
website about how the image is actually Darth Vader’s and that the stain is a
sign that Keppler needs to clean his nasty sink. Unsaved reprobates are they
all!
Who’s to say
that Jesus can’t reveal himself as a rust stain at the bottom of a sink in
Livingston Parish? His first miracle was turning water into wine. Why can’t he
perform another miracle by turning water into an iron oxide self-portrait?
While stories
of this sort are typically relegated to the offbeat section of most media
outlets and covered by people like CNN’s Jeannie Moos, Keppler’s miracle was
covered by Louisiana’s News Channel’s chief investigative reporter. This fact
alone gives Keppler much more credence than those who claim they saw Jesus in
the rear end of a three-year-old terrier mix named Angus MacDougall.