North Carolina restaurant offers a 15 percent discount to pray in public
North Carolina restaurant offers a 15 percent discount to pray in public
A Winston-Salem restaurant is giving customers a 15 percent discount if they pray in public.
Marys Gourmet Diner in Winston-Salem gives the discount for anyone who takes the time to appreciate their food before digging in. Although the restaurant has been offering the special for four years, a recent Facebook post featuring a receipt with the discount has gone viral, highlighting the practice.
Jordan Smith was on a business trip when she got her discount. She told HLN that she and her colleagues "prayed over our meal and the waitress came over at the end of the meal and said, "Just so you know, we gave you a 15 percent discount for praying."
A Christian radio station, Z88.3, Orlando Fla. , posted an image of the receipt to its Facebook page, where it has received more than 7,400 likes.
Some have speculated it was an Internet hoax, yet owner Mary Haglund told FoxNews.com that this is the real deal.
"Its about the whole idea of gratitude," she said. "It's not a religious thing, it's a spiritual thing."
She says getting the "prayer discount" is simple. Anyone who comes into the eatery --which specializes in farm-to-table comfort food - seen "having a moment" gets 15 percent off the bill. They don't advertise it, nor do they tell the customers ahead of time. They just deliver the bill with the price reduction.
"Its not a policy and we do it very randomly," Haglund says, who notes that there are people who dont agree with the practice and that they dont make them to enforce it.
Haglund, 60, the daughter of a preacher and a missionary, spent her teen years in the Philippines where she said she saw poverty. She says today she's not a religious person, rather a spiritual person, and stresses that those who see every plate of food as a gift should be rewarded.
"I'm so grateful for the beautiful food," she says.
Tags
Who is online
409 visitors
"Its about the whole idea of gratitude," she said. "It's not a religious thing, it's a spiritual thing."
The notion of being grateful for ones blessings in life is found in many cultures worldwide.
Unfortunately, however, it seems like,(at least in the U.S.), many seem to be slipping back into a spiritual morass.