In 1891, Biddy
Mason was laid to rest in an unmarked grave in Los Angeles. That wasn’t unusual
for a woman born into slavery, but it was remarkable for someone as
accomplished as Biddy. After winning her freedom in a court battle in 1856, she
combined her nursing skills with wise business decisions to make a small fortune.
As she observed the plight of immigrants and prisoners, she reached out to
them, investing in charity so frequently that people began lining up at her
house for help. In 1872, just sixteen years out of slavery, she and her
son-in-law financed the founding of the First African Methodist Episcopal
Church in Los Angeles.
Biddy embodied
the apostle Paul’s words: “I showed you that by this kind of hard work we must
help the weak, remembering the words the Lord Jesus himself said: ‘It is more
blessed to give than to receive’” (Acts 20:35). Paul came from privilege, not
slavery, yet he chose a life that would lead to his imprisonment and martyrdom
so that he could serve Christ and others.
In 1988,
benefactors unveiled a tombstone for Biddy Mason. In attendance were the mayor
of Los Angeles and nearly 3,000 members of the little church that had begun in
her home over a century earlier. Biddy once said, “The open hand is blessed,
for it gives in abundance even as it receives.” The hand that gave so
generously received a rich legacy.
The open hand is blessed, for it gives in abundance even as it receives. Biddy Mason (ODB)