Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Restaurant Owner with Down Syndrome Shares His Gift
Restaurant Owner with Down Syndrome Shares His Gift
Jul 1, 2025 12:01 AM

At 14 years old, Tim Harris dreamed of owning his own restaurant. He was born with Down syndrome, sohis parents weren’t quite sure what to think.Yet soon after Tim began his first job as a host at Red Robin, it all started to make sense.

“[Customers] were visibly happy to see him and Tim really developed a following,” saysKeith Harris, Tim’s father. “People e to the restaurant specifically when he was working. As we sat there, we started thinking about how we could harness that for Tim’s benefit.”

Years later, thanks to lots of hard work and the support of his family, Tim’s Place is now open for business, serving “breakfast, lunch, and hugs,” according to the restaurant’s web site, the last of which is the owner’s specialty. For all we know, Tim may be the first and only restaurant owner with Down syndrome.

Learn more about his story here:

“I do not let my disability crush the dreams,” says Tim. “People with disabilities, they can get anything they set their minds to. They’re special. We are a gift to the world.”

Now, through his restaurant, Tim is further enabled and empowered to share that gift with those around him. Yes, he provides high-quality food, but he also offers customers a deeper level of affection and connection, one that is impossible not to sense, even from the other end of puter screen. Tim is contributing to munity, and his contribution has an impact well beyond the burgers and bacon.“The hugs are way more important than the food,” says Tim. “The food is food.”

Tim sees beyond his disability, viewing his value and worth in terms of something bigger and broader and richer: how he serves others. And my what a gift he is.

Those with disabilities needn’t own a business or contribute via “the market” in order to serve, of course. As Jordan Ballor noted in a similar context, “Our service of others may or may not be recognized by the marketplace as something valuable or worth paying for. But each one of us has something to offer someone else…Our very existence itself must be seen as a blessing from God.”

Yet how often do we underestimate the worth and potential of both ourselves and others, unduly limiting the realm of possibilities? From the mundane aspects of day-to-daystewardship and discipleship to the intricacies of macro-level policymaking, do we fully recognize and embrace the dignity and potential of each and every human being?Again, Tim needn’t be in the realm of for-profit business to share his gifts, but even his loving and supportive parents were stunned to learn that he might consider it.

Given how frequently business is lambasted as overly materialistic and predatory in its form and function, Tim’s story also offers an illustration of just how beneficial it can be in the “harnessing” of one’s gifts, as Tim’s dad puts it.“Gift and need are divinely matched,” writeDeKoster and Berghoef, and business plays a significant role in facilitating the discovery process.

Let us be sure to remember that such a divine match occurs in activities as simple and as basic as the transaction of a hamburger and a hug. On my next trip to Albuquerque, I, for one, will be sure to pencil one in.

(HT: Jason Isaacs)

[product sku=”1317″]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Challenging the Micah Challenge
There’s a big, fairly new, global effort by Christians to cut worldwide poverty in half by 2015. Just what is this effort? A new giving initiative? A new network connecting churches in the first world with churches in the third world? A new global faith-based NGO? Sadly, no. The new effort is called the “Micah Challenge,” which turns out really to be a challenge to get Christians to call for government action. The Micah Challenge is described as “a global...
Acton PowerBlog’s first month
The end of April marks the conclusion to the first month of operation for the Acton Institute’s PowerBlog. Thanks to all menters and readers who have made this outreach effective. ...
Over the edge with the religious left
Over the course of the past few months, many leaders on the left have been ramping up their rhetoric against the influence of the much-maligned “religious right” in American politics. The most recent high-profile example came from Democratic Senator Ken Salazar of Colorado, who described James Dobson and his Focus on the Family organization as “…the Antichrist of the world” in response to their strong advocacy against the filibustering of judicial nominees. Salazar later retracted his statement in the face...
2005 Samaritan award applications open
The Center for Effective Compassion has opened its 2005 Samaritan Award applications. The survey and instructions are available from May 2 through June 30. First prize is $10,000; nine runners up will receive grant writing assistance, information technology support, Web site support, and much more from nationally-acclaimed consultants. All Samaritan Award applicants will be listed in the new Web based Guide to Effective Compassion, the first online information resource to provide transparency and accountability data for privately funded U. S....
Blog market
In traversing the World Wide Web, I’ve happened across BlogShares, “a fantasy stock market for weblogs. Players get to invest a fictional $500, and blogs are valued by ing links.” As the Acton Institute PowerBlog heads toward its one month anniversary, check out it’s BlogShare value. Buy now! ...
Remembering Leo XIII
On May 2, 1810, the future Pope Leo XIII, 257th Roman Catholic pope (1878-1903), is born. For a survey of the legacy of Pope Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum and the initiation of Catholic Social Teaching, as well as his confluence with the thought of Abraham Kuyper, read this article by Mark A. Noll, “A Century of Christian Social Teaching: The Legacy of Leo XIII and Abraham Kuyper.” ...
Henry Institute to study civic responsibility
The Paul Henry Institute for the Study of Christianity and Politics at Calvin College has received a $100,000 grant from the Milwaukee-based Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation to study the role of religion in shaping civic responsibility in American life. Henry Institute director Corwin Smidt says, “A study of civic responsibility broadens the analysis to assess both attitudinal, mitments and behavioral responses – as well as the interplay between the two. Since civic responsibility entails moral as well as behavioral...
Law signed protecting filtering industry
President Bush signed a bill into law yesterday that panies such as ClearPlay from litigation for copyright infringement. ClearPlay, for example, offers a DVD player that will filter out “objectionable” content. Consumers are free to purchase this item or not, depending on the sensitivity of their tastes and the ability of the ClearPlay device to cater to their demands. My initial reaction is that this is a positive move from the government, protecting a potentially prosperous and burgeoning industry. It...
Immigration confusion
There’s been a lot of talk in recent days about the question of immigration, both legal and illegal. A number of issues are involved, including questions about national security, economic concerns, and cultural values. Most recently the Minutemen have begun border patrols and are looking to extend their efforts to the northern U.S. border. You may also remember a scuffle when President Bush put forth the proposal for a guest worker program. The Acton Institute has published two pieces that...
Verse of the day
Via Job 19:25 (New International Version) I know that my Redeemer lives, and that in the end he will stand upon the earth. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved