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by Todd Temple
(Editor's Note: Though Todd Temple no
longer writes his monthly BW column, we've
scoured the archives for some of his best and
will be re-running them, one a month, over the
next several months.)
I knew a man whose monthly house payment
was $30,000. Working 22 weekdays a month,
he had to earn $1,364 per day – $136 in every
hour of a ten-hour day. And that was just to
make the mortgage. Double it to cover the rest
of his monthly needs.
I knew a woman who spent at least $20,000
every month on clothes and jewelry alone. It
was worse around Christmas.
I knew a man in Haiti who earned about $300
per year to support his family of six. They lived
in a mud and reed hut: dirt floor, no water, no
heat, no electricity.
All these people had something in common:
they couldn’t afford what they wanted.
The first man struggled to make his house
payment, and some months he fell behind.
Why didn’t he sell his $3 million home and
settle for something he could afford...like a
modest $2 million home? Because he
didn’t want that.
The woman struggled to pay her credit card
bills every month, but she carried a $10,000
unpaid balance. There never seemed to be
enough money in her checking account to pay
off the balances, so she paid an extra $150 in
finance charges each month. Sure, she could
have limited her monthly fashion purchases to
just $15,000, but there was always some new
occasion that demanded another $5,000
dress: a party, dinner in Paris, a night at the
ballet.
And my friend in Haiti would have liked a wood
house, better education for his sons, and a
mule. But he, too, always ran out of money
before he ran out of wants.
What Money Won’t Buy
It’s a fact: We will never be able to
afford what we want. The reason is that nearly
all of us suffer from materialism – that
pernicious tendency to place greater value in
physical things than in spiritual or intellectual
things. So we spend our days eating, drinking,
getting high, having sex, or buying stuff just to
bring us happiness.
The problem with materialism is that the
happiness it delivers is never quite enough to
fill the needs we have. So we keep buying,
eating, drinking, sleeping around, or whatever.
But we never feel satisfied.
The most popular form of materialism is
consumerism, whose followers play by
the rule, "He who dies with the most toys
wins." To compete, you must keep buying toys
and clothes and shoes and CDs and
electronic gadgets and cars and anything else
that gives you pleasure. Until you die or run
out of money.
The companies that sell this stuff tell us that
their products will provide the very things we
feel are missing on the inside: clothes that will
make others think us smart or serious, suave
or sexy; a car that identifies us as the success
we want to be; high-priced toys that announce
to the world that we know how to have fun. But
if you’ve played this game at all, you know that
products always fall short of the advertisers’
implied promises.
You know the feeling. You’ve felt the thrill of
buying some really great stuff, only to have that
thrill shrink to a sense of profound emptiness
when the stuff doesn’t satisfy – it doesn’t fill
the void. It’s more than buyer’s remorse. It is a
deep longing for something that can’t be
bought, no matter how much you spend.
It comes down to this. If the material world
cannot fill our deepest longing, then there are
two possibilities: Either life is a cruel joke -- a
frustrating and pointless search for a
satisfaction we can never have – or it’s merely
a riddle whose solution is found beyond the
material world.
I’m certain it’s the latter. I believe that Jesus
came from that beyond-the-material world to
answer this riddle. His solution – that our
deepest longing can be satisfied only in a
relationship with our Creator – works for me.
That’s not to say that I don’t continue to seek
other solutions. When my faith wanes, when
the thrills and chills of this world clamor for my
attention, I set aside what I know to be true
and seek satisfaction in stuff. It’s a
constant struggle. Maybe it is for you too.
Holiday Clutter
This is especially true for me in the Christmas
season. I’m easily distracted from the things
spiritual by things solid and shiny. Too many
tempting treats, sales, blinking lights. And
tinsel.
Like many Christ followers, I’m not happy
about the commercialization of Christmas. As
a culture, we’ve turned the celebration of our
Savior’s birth into a shopping frenzy. How
ironic. We intensify our hopeless materialism
to celebrate the arrival of the one who gave us
the only true hope. It’s like firing guns in the air
on Martin Luther King Day.
Yet this Christmastime contradiction actually
makes perfect sense. No matter how hard our
culture tries to bury the reason for the season,
folks can’t help but ask life’s deeper
questions during the holidays, which only
leads to our greater awareness of the longing.
It’s no surprise that as our sense of this
longing intensifies, so too do our attempts to
satisfy it.
Perhaps, in the end, this is a good thing. The
greater our sense of need, the more open we
are to a solution – even one that seemed
dubious when our sense of need was not so
great. If all the materialism packed into the
harrowing weeks of the Christmas season
still can’t feel the void, then maybe we’ll
become desperate enough to stumble upon
the fact that what we really need is
beyond our purchasing power.
Christmas Wish
If you’re a Christ follower, you already know
what this means. God purchased our solution
– our salvation, our reconciliation with him –
for us. Jesus was the priceless payment. But
how do we convey this truth to others?
I suggest we do it not by spending our
holidays sulking over the loss of "the true
meaning of Christmas," but by standing
amidst all the commercial clutter, ready to
offer our friends and families and other
shoppers a taste of what they’re truly seeking.
Though they won’t find it in the checkout stand
or under the tree or in a third helping of
pumpkin pie, there’s a good chance that after
coming up empty in these places, they’ll be
more open to hearing our non-material
alternative.
And then we can tell them about the best
Christmas gift we ever received, given by the
Birthday Boy himself.
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