Holidays and Heritage

I apologize for not alerting you to the fact that I was taking the US holiday of Thanksgiving off. Truth is, I wasn’t sure I would and actually hoped to post at least something short. It didn’t happen.

In part it didn’t happen because I had to take care of making my traditional contribution to our family dinner, which first required me to dash to the store for some of the ingredients. I’d tried to take care of this last Saturday only to find that the store I was in didn’t carry one of the items.

So, back to Thursday morning. Not only did I need to go to the grocery store, I also needed gas since I would be traveling to the other side of LA, and my trip to the Anaheim Convention Center on Tuesday had dropped the needle on the gage of my gas tank lower than I was comfortable with.

Happily, I had passed a station posting gas at $3.15 a gallon, a dime cheaper than my regular station and about 7 miles closer! So off I went, first to get gas, then to pick up items for my Thanksgiving dish.

Imagine my surprise when I passed the shopping area (they still call them malls, though there is nothing resembling a true mall in most SoCal shopping centers any more), and found the parking lots brimming with cars. On Thanksgiving Day?

This was duplicated at the grocery store. In fact, I haven’t seen that store so busy … ever. On Thanksgiving Day?

Add to this fact, the night before one news broadcast reported shoppers setting up tents in order to be near the front of the line for store openings on “Black Friday.” Rather than being at home for the traditional “family time,” which is what Thanksgiving has become, these shoppers preferred to increase their chance of finding a bargain.

What’s it all mean? Holidays, which nationally stopped being Holy days a long time ago, are even losing their secondary meanings—a break from the normal work day, time with family, opportunity to express thanks or give tokens of love and appreciation. More and more, these “set apart” days are becoming excuses for buying more stuff.

As if the stuff is what we need.

There used to be a phrase used for the older, affluent businessman, the gift for the man who has everything. Thing is, now that term can be adapted to say the gift for the child who has everything, and it describes the kids in most middle class families.

I realized something just recently. On our money here in the US, we have inscribed the words In God We Trust. Whoever made that decision was insightful—and probably informed by Scripture, because the Bible declares no one can serve God and riches both. (Matthew 6:24) You see, what I realized wasn’t that we had the phrase on our coins and bills but rather WHY we have it there, and not on public buildings or statues or even in churches. It is that when we have abundance, often seen in the form of cash, we can so easily trust in the abundance and not in God.

To think, several hundreds of years ago, people setting up our government foresaw the danger of trusting wealth instead of trusting God! What a remarkable heritage! For that I am truly thankful. For what we have become as a nation of users, not so much.

Published in: on November 23, 2007 at 11:24 am  Comments (2)  
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2 Comments

  1. Appreciate your insight…the thing to keep in mind about all this stuff is it’s all going to burn someday.

    Hope you have a great weekend!

    God bless,
    -bill

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  2. Not several hundred years ago.

    “In God We Trust first appeared on the 1864 two-cent coin.”

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_God_We_Trust

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