Enough stuff is enough stuff
The very next day our eight year old daughter attended a birthday party for one of her young friends. About fifteen children had been invited. And once again, a note accompanied the invitation. The young boy whose birthday it was happens to love animals, so instead of bringing a gift for him, would we please bring gifts for the Humane Society? My wife purchased several gallons of bleach and a couple of large bags of dog food as gifts (Once again, the birthday parents supplied a list of appropriate ideas).
I’m seeing this trend more and more in people’s lives. People who are willing to say, “enough stuff is enough stuff.” It’s not that they don’t appreciate their friends loving them through the giving of gifts, it’s just that real joy comes when we can bless those who are in need.
Living in a culture of consumerism that consistently markets that we need more and more to be happy can only be combated by cultivating an attitude of generosity. For an eight year old boy to be willing to give to the Humane Society rather than receive fifteen more presents for himself is an amazing accomplishment!
So perhaps we could all become part of this trend? Find a charity that is close to your heart and find out what you can do to bless it. I guarantee you that if you ask, they will find a way.
Jesus said, “It is more blessed to give than to receive.” The best way to discover the truth of this statement is simply to try it.
The morning after the Lobsterfest I talked to our friends who hosted it. The wife simply said, “We always appreciated the gifts that people brought, but this was so fun to see the backpacks piling up and knowing that they were going to be given to those in need.”
It truly is more blessed to give than to receive.
2 Comments:
Every year at Christmas my family draws names for a gift exchange. Every year when my parents ask my what I want for Christmas, I say "nothing." I've tried to convince them that it is rather silly. For the most part, most of us buy something when we want it.
So this year I'm suggesting that we each take that $20 (that's our limit) and put it in a fund to adopt a couple of Compassion children in addition to the ones we already have.
Isn't it funny how we have to TEACH ourselves to be generous? It's something that we have to actually learn to do nowadays.
I recently had an encounter with a blessing, in a situation where I was generous, although I didn't really want to be. You get all of those questions in your head, "Should I really do this? Can I afford it? But I really wanted to do _____ with what I had." I sat there and argued with myself to stop being so selfish, and reminded myself of all the times that I had been generous and that God had acknowledged it and blessed me in return.
I did this annonymously cuz I'm really into that whole "right hand/left hand" thing. But word DID get back to me about the person I was generous towards...that he had been praying so desperately for a blessing and he just couldn't thank his mysterious benefactor enough. He was crying.
I almost cried! I had done the right thing, and the feeling of having blessed someone just overwhelmed me. What a rush!! =D One would think that we would want to have those feelings all the time!...but being stingy is something we always have to push through to get there. It's worth it, though.
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