Matthew
6:19-21 - Don’t collect for yourselves
treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in
and steal. But collect for yourselves treasures in
heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves don’t
break in and steal. For where your treasure is,
there your heart will be also.
Nearly 18 months ago my wife and I relocated to Connecticut to plant
churches around the urban areas in the state. As part of the preparations for
the move, we decided to downsize the amount of stuff we owned. This took a lot
of effort because our home in Vermont was an old farmhouse built around 1860.
It had large rooms and lots of nooks and crannies to put stuff. We spent
countless hours cleaning out closets, garages, attic space, and bookshelves.
Every time we thought were done, we found one more corner that we had not sorted
yet.
We sold some of the stuff. A lot of it
we gave away to people in our church, to the Salvation Army, to a family that
had lost their home to a fire, and to a church yard sale that raised money to
help needy children. After getting rid of so much, we still had a lot of stuff
to move!
Somewhere in the process of cleaning,
sorting, packing and distributing all this stuff, it occurred to me again how
rich Americans are. Only in America do we have clothes stored in totes and
boxes because we cannot wear them all. Only in America do we have a set of
dishes that we use only at Christmas and another set we use only when guests
come for dinner. Only in America do we have chairs, tables, beds and decorative
items that we have not used in months, or even years, which serve no real
purpose other than to impress guests a few times a year. Who really needs that
many clothes or dishes or beds or chairs or tables?
This effort to downsize our lives gave
us opportunity to think through the consumerism that so grips our nation. It
helped us consider how we could use our excess to help those around us and
expand God’s Kingdom instead of just accumulating it in extra rooms. Perhaps we
need to clean more than our physical closets and attics? Perhaps it is time to
clean our hearts from the hunger that drives us to want more and more and more.
When we clean up our emotional and spiritual closets and attics, the physical
ones become much easier to tackle.
Lord,
help us to focus on what is really important in life instead of becoming
consumed by accumulating stuff. Amen.
This post is an excerpt from the book, The
Heavenly Mundane: Daily Devotions from Ordinary Experiences. Filled with stories of how God spoke in
big ways through small events, the book will encourage people to look for God
in the mundane things of life. Great for both personal use and to give as a
gift to friend, either the print version or the e-book version may be purchased
at this link:
Simple answer is: yes, we have too much stuff... at least in this world.
ReplyDelete