The purchase of a secondhand couch from a thrift store in Michigan led to an incredible discovery for Howard Kirby. Afterward, however, Kirby and his daughter felt something not quite right inside one of the couch cushions.
Once Kirby decided to do what he felt was right, he contacted the manager of the Saginaw-Shiawassee Habitat for Humanity thrift store, and they managed to track down the person who had donated the couch, Kim Fauth-Newberry, whose grandfather had originally owned it.
For the Fauth-Newberry family, the whole story was “just crazy,” as Kim said. Kirby and the Fauth-Newberrys have since developed a relationship. “I think I got something that $43,000 just isn’t going to buy if I kept it, and that is friendship,” Kirby said. Yet, that friendship led to something more: the family, alongside Habitat for Humanity, offered to help replace Kirby’s roof.
Store manager Rick Merling was just as stunned by the gesture as the couch’s original owners were. He shared, “To me, this is someone that despite what they’re going through—and in spite of their own needs—says ‘I’m just going to do the right thing.’”
Meanwhile, Kirby appreciates the clean conscience his good deed brought him. “I’ve heard about it happening before and I always thought, what would I do if I found that money? Now I know,” he shared. “Makes me feel good. I believe I’m doing the right thing.”
He added, “I know that there have been other comments, my son brought up on saying that I was crazy for doing it, well yeah I am crazy. I’m crazy for Christ.”
Faith was a major factor for many who decided to donate to the initiative. One donor who grew up in Kirby’s hometown of Ovid, Michigan, shared, “We never know the impact one godly decision can have on many others. Jesus said the seeds planted in rich soil would reap a hundred fold, and this is a present day example of that illustration!”
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