Over a recent Thanksgiving holiday I did my version of Black Friday
shopping. I slept in, had breakfast,
took a shower, and then we all went out as a family. I was rested, fresh, and full of energy. After facing the frantic shoppers all morning
they . . . well, they didn’t look so good.
BTW I do most of my shopping on my phone now.
Shopping has taken on a whole new meaning since the internet. At one point a magazine was all we got to
wish for a wonderful holiday season. For my kids it’s the toys R us catalog,
but for me growing up it was the Sears Wish
Book.
The first Sears Wish Book was
printed in 1933. (I don’t remember that.
I looked it up.) Over time it has
diminished in size and was even discontinued at one point. It was revived in 2007, but the one I saw was
nothing in size compared to the books I remember from my youth. Children today don’t really need one. They have the Internet and their high tech
toys to cruise the information highway to identify their holiday “wants.” But “back in the day” the Sears Wish Book helped us answer the seasonal
question: “If you could have anything for Christmas, what would you ask
for?”
Every year I would look through the catalogue and either dog-ear a page or
circle our choices in pen. I didn’t want
Santa to miss my requests.
You may not need the Sears Wish
Book today, but you have some wishes too, don’t you? Next Christmas how would you answer the
question, “If you could have one thing in the world, what would it be?”
Solomon had to answer that one. He
asked for wisdom. And God gave it to
him. But by the end of his life he had
accumulated more and more: more gold, more horses, more wives. He had it all and wanted more. In the midst of all these gifts he lost sight
of the Giver. He turned away from God
and lost it all.
Another King gave us another path to follow. He had it all and gave it all . . . for
us. And regardless of the season of life
you can guard yourself from the tyranny of too much stuff by giving. Simply give so that others can simply
live. That’s what the King born as a
baby in the manger did.
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