How Valuable?
Value is often in the eye
of the beholder.
A
writer reflected an occasion when he learned the
truthfulness of this lesson…
“Several years ago I used to heat our house with
wood. In addition to cutting wood I used to get the
wood scraps from a store called ‘The Wooden Bird.’
They make beautiful hand-carved bird and animal decoys
out of wood. Each decoy costs between 50 and 250
dollars, and they are really nice decorative pieces to
place on fireplace mantles. Every couple of weeks I
would stop in and pick up their leftover wood scraps
to burn in my wood burner.
“Right before Thanksgiving one year, I stopped in to
pick up a load of scraps. As usual, a man wheeled out
two bins to the loading doors and helped me load them
in the truck. Usually the donated wood consisted of
scraps of pine, but this time it was a bunch of the
wooden decoys. I asked him if he was sure that he was
giving me the right wood. The man insisted that I had
the right stuff and waved goodbye.
I noticed the decoys had a few cracks in them so I
figured they were throwing them away because of their
imperfections. I took my load of wood and promised
that I would bring his carts back soon. I went home
and unloaded the decoys in a big pile in the basement.
The wood burner was low so I grabbed a handful of
decoys and threw them in the furnace. The dry pine
burned nice and hot so I threw in a few more to ward
of the cold.
“Later that evening after reloading the furnace with
more decoys, I took the carts
back to the Wooden Bird before the long weekend. When
I pulled up in my truck, two men ran out of the
building and demanded that I bring back the decoys. I
asked why, and with urgency in his voice, the manager
told me that I had taken their entire inventory of
Christmas decoys – worth tens of thousands of dollars
–
by mistake!
He
went on and on about calling the police and driving
around for the last three hours in a panic looking for
me. I pointed at the man who gave them to me, and the
man, seeking to avoid the accusing spotlight, quickly
walked back into the building. The manager asked if I
still had the decoys. He explained that they were
extremely valuable. Rather stunned I told them that I
had burned a few of them but would bring the rest
back. I went home and carefully loaded the remaining
decoys – several hundred of them – into the bins and
brought them back to the Wooden Bird.
The
“decoy burner” made this observation: “Value is
often in the eye of the beholder. The decoys had no
value to me other than a little heat. But to the
Wooden Bird, the decoys were worth tens of thousands
of dollars.” *
Consider: "The kingdom of heaven is like
treasure hidden in a field, which a man found and hid;
and for joy over it he goes and sells all that he has
and buys that field” (Matthew 13:44).
The
exact value of the treasure is not given, but the man
considered it so valuable that he sold all that he had
in order to obtain it.
The value of the Kingdom (the church) is seen in the
price that was paid for it! Jesus, the Son of
God, purchased it with His own blood (Acts 20:28).
His blood, shed on the cross, purchased the redemption
from sin of those who accept His invitation to be a
part of His kingdom (see Ephesians 1:7).
And, it is worth any sacrifice on our part to be a
part of His kingdom! Yet, all that we must do is
accept His invitation on His terms: We are
instructed to place our
faith
and trust in Christ (Acts 16:30-31), turn from our
sins in
repentance
(Acts 17:30-31),
confess
Him before men (Romans 10:9-10), and be
baptized
(immersed) in His name for the forgiveness of sins
(Acts 2:38).
Won’t YOU accept the
King’s invitation to become a part of His eternal
kingdom?
David A.
Sargent, Minister
Church of Christ at Creekwood
1901 Schillinger Rd. S.
Mobile, Alabama 36695
* Adapted from an
illustration contributed to SermonCentral.com by John Braland
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