In These Hard Times
When I was a little girl, my mother taught me to be sure to thank anyone who gave me a gift. She told me that people would get their feelings hurt if they thought I was ungrateful for gifts they had given me. I tried to remember, and if I forgot, my mother reminded me. I remember well when she came to me asking on behalf of one of her friends if I had ever received the gift she sent me for high school graduation. Mother knew that I had received it, and Mother was not taking forgetfulness for a justification of my failure to send a thank-you note.
Parents often tell their children that if they forget to say thank you, they might not get any more presents. That idea is okay as far as it goes, if you are dealing with a three-year-old. It doesn’t carry much water when you become an adult.
In the USA today, the economy is a major topic of discussion. At the level of the politicians, it appears that government action is needed and that the actions of government so far must not have been the right ones, so we need to try again. At the personal level, people have lost jobs or taken pay cuts or now feel trapped in undesirable jobs because there are no better jobs to be had. Families talk about cutting back on gifts at Christmas or they drive the old car another year and so forth. There are all kinds of tips and tricks on the internet and in the news to help families “live within their budget” or “pinch pennies.” Parents tell children that vacations and new clothes and other non-essentials will be reduced or eliminated, because Mother doesn’t have a job any more or Daddy’s hours were cut.
Just writing the words in the paragraph above made me angry. It makes the people involved angry, too. There is a national sense that we have lost something, that we are deprived and put upon. There are certainly political issues involved, but I don’t plan to discuss those issues. I want to talk about the way we cope. Using the language of deprivation and giving up and doing without makes anyone angry. Think how you felt the last time you heard from your boss at work that you need to “do more with less” or “we’re going to be lean and mean.” When a person feels that he has lost something he used to have or that he must give up something he thought he was entitled to, it creates anger, not to mention fear, maybe humiliation, and jealousy. Who got what I was supposed to have?
This is not the way God intended for us to live. In the reality where God is on his throne, God gives gifts to all, the righteous and the unrighteous. Everyone gets sun and rain and winter and summer. For that matter, at the personal level, you could say that in a family faced with less money this year than last, it is still right to recognize that all good gifts and all perfect gifts come from God. Job had it right, and we all need to remember it: The Lord gives and the Lord takes away. Blessed be the name of the Lord. [Job 1:21]
There is another way to look at life, and it applies whether you have much or little, whether you just got a raise or just got laid off. This way of dealing with the economy does not create anger or jealousy. This way of living avoids putting the emphasis on pinching pennies or cutting back or living within a smaller budget. It involves all the disciplines of good money management, but its perspective builds satisfaction, peace and happiness rather than the sense that you can’t wait for this crisis to be over so you can get back to normal. This way of looking at life works all the time. It defuses any sense that you are in crisis, because it starts with the recognition that God’s providence is always adequate, it builds on gratefulness, and it asks completely different questions about the use of God’s provision for our needs.
If you are pinching pennies or trying to fit your budget, you start with the question, where can I cut back? If you are living in gratefulness for God’s provision, you start with the question, how can I use what God has provided in ways that show him how grateful I am?
For example, you may have children whose allowances must be reduced after one parent loses a job. If you tell your children, “Well, you just have to get used to it,” you can be sure they are going to their rooms to implode over that whole idea. They don’t want to get used to it, and they may never actually do that. As long as this is the way money is handled, it is sure to create problems. If you start with the attitude that in God’s providence, the current family income is sure to be enough for everyone, then you can ask everyone, “what can we do to show God how thankful we are for what he has provided us?”
My children are grown and gone, and I don’t have to deal with that problem these days. I do, however, have to deal with the fact that grocery prices are increasing while my income is not. I have to ask myself what I can actually buy with the money I have. If I think that I must “make do” with less desirable cuts of meat or only eat asparagus on special occasions, those thoughts make me unhappy. They make me ask, “when does this end?” However, if I start by thanking God that I have an income, and if I then recall that he has never failed me in all my life, then I can ask for the wisdom to use what he has provided. I can give thanks even before I buy anything for the flavor, color, aroma, texture and delight I will enjoy at every meal. When there are only a few peas left after dinner, I might be tempted to discard them rather than store them away, but if I ask myself, what can I do that shows God I am grateful for these peas, then I am likely to store them and use them the next day in soup.
I won’t try to tell you a lot of tips and tricks for showing your gratitude. That whole idea sort of flies in the face of the concept. After all, everything I do is an expression of the life I live, not your life. One of God’s most wonderful gifts is our freedom to be ourselves, with our unique dreams, visions, and talents. For me to say that you should always save your peas for soup as an act of grateful living, turns that act into checklist morality. It becomes compliance with a guideline or a rule rather than the outgrowth of relationship.
Which is the real point. Relationship. We live in relationship with God, and when we build that relationship by getting to know him better and by becoming more and more aware of his constant blessings and gifts to us, then our attitudes toward things will change. That is when we will see his unique gifts to us, be it money or the ability to draw or curly hair, as part of our heritage of blessing. That is when we will grow to know and love God so deeply that when we use something he has given us – money, food, songs, etc. – we will do it in gratitude and honor toward him. Then we will forget all about being deprived and cutting back and doing without.
If we live with this attitude at all times, then “good” times or “bad” times become alike to us. All times are times to recognize God’s gifts and give thanks to him. No time is the right time to complain that he has failed us. Every day is the “day that the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it.” [Psalm 118:24]