I must have strong puritan roots somewhere in my history. Maybe
Quaker. I prefer to live simply and shy away from extravagance. Why buy a new
shirt for $25 when you can buy a perfectly good used one at the thrift store
for $3? I’m the kind of person who thinks Target is a fancy store.
It’s not that I’m cheap (although that is also true); I believe
that the way a person spends their money speaks loudly to their priorities and
values. Am I selfishly spending all my money on me and my own? Am I giving to
others? Am I using my resources to help people in need? A quick peek into the
old checkbook can tell you a lot about someone.
My husband and I had to shop for a car recently, to replace my
totaled van. I tended to gravitate towards older, cheaper, no-frills models.
Just give me a car that doesn’t break a lot, gets decent gas mileage and has
enough seats for everybody. My husband, on the other hand, wanted a beautiful
car, loaded with snazzy features. A frilly model, if you will.
“I’m OK with the [old, ugly] minivan,” I said, ever the righteous
martyr. “Think of all the things we could do with the money we aren’t spending
on a vehicle.”
“No,” he replied, looking at the fancy pants car with its heated
seats and MP3 player. “This is what I want for you.”
I closed my fool mouth and signed the papers because somewhere in
there I realized someone who loves me was trying to give me a gift.
What do you do when frugality collides with generosity, when
blessing conflicts with blessed?
I think I do alright in the giving department. But for some
reason, I get weird and squirrely when it’s time to receive. I believe in radical
generosity – just not directed at me.
Our God is a loving and generous deity, a doting grandpa pouring
out favor on his people. And I’m all, uhhhh really? This is too nice for me;
here, let’s give this to someone else. Like I’m some kind of crazy blessing
re-gifter.
It’s
something I struggle with: should Christians display the trappings of wealth?
Are we better off with vows of poverty and horsehair shirts? You cannot serve
both God and money but can you have both
God and money?
I really don’t
know the answer but it is an important question to wrestle with, especially now
that we’re back in the land of Excess. It was easy to live simply in a country
accustomed to lack. How do we cope with a culture that encourages
overindulgence in every aspect of life?
I will say
that I am glad we bought the fancy car. And not just because I can start the
car from the living room ya’ll! Where
it’s warm! And the car automatically turns on the seat warmers when remotely started.
Toasty buns for meeeeeeeeeeee!
Ahem.
I am also
really happy for my husband. As we drove away he said to me with bright shining
eyes, “I never dreamed I’d own something like this.” For one second I could see
the little boy that grew up with nothing. That boy suffered under the crushing
hand of poverty for a long time. That boy almost didn’t go out with me because
he said he came from a poor family and had nothing to give me. That boy grew to
be the man I love best of everything.
His joy is worth even more than heated
seats.