home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- I M P O S I T I O N S
- By Moishe Rosen
-
- . If you're old enough to remember the Saturday Evening Post as a
- weekly publication, you probably remember the young men who solicited
- door-to-door for magazine subscriptions. One of my friends had three
- copies of the Saturday Evening Post delivered to his home every week.
-
- His mother, a tenderhearted soul, had not wanted to discourage the
- first young man who came to her door, so she had bought a subscription
- from him. A couple of months later, another young man came along with
- an even better story and an irresistibly cheaper subscription offer.
- Finally his sister had encountered a third salesman, who so charmed
- her that she decided she ought to have her very own subscription. No
- one in that house really read the Saturday Evening Post, but they all
- had bought the magazine from high-pressure salespeople because they
- wanted to be nice.
-
- . I have always been sales resistant. I don't know if it stems from
- being a child of the Great Depression, from my Jewish culture, or from
- being born in Missouri, the "Show Me" state. Whatever the reason, I
- learned at an early age to resist all high pressure and all
- impositions except from those who had the right to impose on me --
- parents, teachers and the rabbi -- and occasionally the next-door
- neighbor. (He had the right to ask my brother and me to be quiet when
- we got noisy.)
-
- . I learned to respond immediately to those who had the right to
- ask anything of me with "Yes, sir" or "Yes, ma'am" and then to carry
- out their request with dispatch. Still, coming from a poor home, I
- learned to investigate the value and necessity of each purchase, and
- being Jewish I also learned to ask, "Is this the right thing for me as
- a Jew?" I also followed the maxim "If you allow it, people will walk
- all over you." I figured that everyone had to protect himself against
- all impositions.
-
- . Then I became a believer in Jesus, who seemed to teach that we
- ought to let anyone impose on us any time. He said if anyone wanted
- our coats, we should offer our cloaks also. But that didn't bother
- me, since I didn't have a cloak, whatever that was. Jesus also said
- if anyone asked us to walk a mile, we should walk two miles, and if a
- person slapped us we should turn the other cheek, and we should
- forgive those who used or abused us.
-
- . As a new Christian, I pondered those statements. Frankly, at
- that point I asked myself how this whole thing made sense. After all,
- if we let everyone use us or our services and take what we had, soon
- we wouldn't have any time, energy or resources for God, ourselves or
- anyone else.
-
- How could we ever accomplish anything or have anything
- if we always let others impose on us and take what we had? Finally I
- came to the only conclusion faith would allow: the Scriptural
- injunctions were intensely practical and practicable, and I just had
- to sort out what it all meant. If God said, "Give," I ought to give.
- The questions were when, how much and to whom -- decisions that
- entailed a high degree of responsibility on the part of the giver.
-
- . As I struggled with these questions, I came to several
- conclusions: While most believers would give lip service to the adage,
- "It's more blessed to give than to receive," few suffer from a habit
- of overgiving. Through selfishness or a false sense of prudence, most
- of us tend to undergive, and this hampers our spiritual and social
- lives.
-
- Giving less of oneself or one's resources usually stems from
- one of two flaws -- greed, or lack of confidence in God's provision.
- Most people readily recognize greed as a destructive spiritual force,
- but the second flaw, lack of trust, is more subtle. It hides under
- various disguises like insuring family security and being judicious
- and economically astute.
-
- . As followers of Y'shua and his teachings, we ought to be giving
- people. While we are not under Old Testament Law, the Hebrew
- Scriptures provide some very definite guidelines about giving and
- receiving.
-
- In Bible times the rich were to look after the needs of
- the poor. God commanded the Israelites to leave the borders of their
- fields "unharvested." They were not to go back and retrieve what they
- had missed during the first gleaning. For the poor, gathering those
- remnants of a rich man's harvest was hardly a road to prosperity. A
- person had to work very hard to glean just enough to fend off
- starvation.
-
- God, through Moses, could have commanded the farmers to
- harvest their entire fields and give a certain portion of the profits
- to the poor. Instead, he ordered a system whereby the poor still had
- to labor for what they received. Here we have an unspoken social
- contract, and a concept that is reiterated in the New Testament, where
- Paul admonishes, "if any would not work, neither should he eat" (2
- Thess. 3:10).
-
- . God's provisions are like that. He gave the miracles of the
- manna and the quail in the wilderness, but the Israelites had to stoop
- and gather what he provided. They could not expect food to appear in
- their eating bowls at mealtime, nor leave empty pots outside their
- tents to be filled from heaven. They could not point their faces
- skyward, with open mouths, like nestlings waiting for the mother
- bird's predigested food.
-
- . You will not find the popular slogan "God helps those who help
- themselves" in Solomon's book of wisdom, nor is it even theologically
- correct. Those who say that really mean "I am justified in seizing
- what I want for myself. God will help me if I take the initiative,
- even if it means getting grabby." This mindset encourages greed
- rather than trust in God.
-
- . Maybe we should rephrase that adage to say, "God helps those who
- trust in his providence and are willing to participate with him in
- receiving his help." I see this in the miracles of Scripture.
-
- Through Elijah, God filled the widow's jars with oil, but first she
- had to gather those vessels herself. At Cana Jesus turned the water
- into wine, but the stewards at the wedding first had to fill the jugs
- with water. God could have filled the jugs with wine the same way he
- filled the widow's jars with oil, but he wanted the stewards to
- participate. Again, Jesus could have produced instant loaves from
- heaven to feed the multitudes, but he chose instead to multiply the
- scant resources of a little boy's lunch.
-
- . God's provision usually involves the receiver's conscious self.
- God wants us to be properly grateful, but he does not trample on our
- dignity. We know that he gives to us materially and spiritually
- because he loves us, and his love makes us people of value.
-
- . In trying to maintain the dignity of the poor and needy, modern
- society often refers to them as welfare "clients." Such language
- deters us from understanding and acting on their need because it plays
- down their plight. The jobless, the hungry and the homeless are
- desperate.
-
- There is never anything dignified about desperation, nor
- should there be if it deters a potential helper from offering the
- necessary aid. Desperation calls for immediate action. We tend to
- respond more quickly to those in desperate straits, whereas we
- deliberate longer about those who insist on maintaining their dignity.
-
- . False dignity is harmful, but real dignity enables a meaningful
- relationship. Nevertheless, the concept fails if it camouflages a
- person's plight and leads to disregard of his or her needs. We know
- that God wants us to give materially to people according to their
- needs, but we must also remember that participation in solving their
- problems is part of their need. That is proper dignity properly met.
-
- We should give of ourselves and our substance in such a way that the
- receiver feels a sense of participation in solving his need problem.
-
- . One rabbi pointed out that the highest form of charity involves
- giving a person the chance to earn what he needs. Thus he is not
- shackled by a sense of worthlessness or feelings of obligation to a
- benefactor he cannot easily repay. A frustrated sense of obligation
- could lead the needy recipient even to despise the benefactor, who
- becomes a constant reminder of that person's weakness.
-
- . In all of our giving we ought to embrace the true concept of
- "charity," which is love in action. If we love the person who would
- impose on us, we find it no burden or imposition to give. The key to
- giving without feeling imposed upon is love -- God's love -- the
- unselfish AGAPE love that he lavishes on us through Christ. He loves
- us because of who we are.
-
- If we find our motivation for giving in him
- rather than in ourselves, and our manner of giving according to the
- way he gives, we will fulfill the law of love. Then no one will be
- able to impose on us.
-
- . Jesus said, "Freely ye have received, freely give." What we have
- received through God's love we ought to take joy in sharing with
- others. This includes our time, our material possessions and our
- knowledge of him because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts
- by his Holy Spirit.
-
-
- Reprinted from the "Jews for Jesus Newsletter," volume 3:5749
-
- Computers for Christ - Chicago
-