Well, it seems that the Christmas season is upon us. By all counts, spending should set a new record: Americans will spend, surveys tell us, nearly two billion dollars on Christmas gifts this year.
Should we be happy? I'm happy for the people these sales will employ. I'm happy for the people who will enjoy the gifts they receive. I'm happy for the joy many people feel in this season.I'm most happy, however, at how the Christmas season should cause us to examine what we are doing with our money. In the end, it's all about giving, giving, that is, to others rather than ourselves.
Thinking about the congregations in Macedonia many years ago, the apostle Paul observed that, "According to their ability, and beyond their ability, they gave of their own accord, begging us with much urging for the favor of participating in the support of their brethren" (2 Corinthians 8:3-4). Consider: these people didn't wait to be asked to give; they instead begged for the opportunity to give. Moreover, they gave beyond what anyone thought they could give. They understood that, "God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that always having all sufficiency in everything, you may have an abundance for every good deed" (9:8).
If God is there--and he is--we can never give enough.
Let the retailers worry about what we should get. What do they know? Let us concern ourselves with what we can give. As you go forth to "conquer" the stores before you, realize that it's no challenge to "get." We can always do that. The far greater challenge is to give.
Life is a gift; give of it freely.
No comments:
Post a Comment