There are few things in life we end up remembering
vividly from our past. These words "Life is a banquet" have stuck with me
for over 20 years.
At one of the sales companies I worked for not too long
after graduating from college, they showed a motivational film starring Bob
Richards, the Olympic Champion. I remember Bob sharing about a man he once
heard speaking at a sales convention. The man spoke lying down on a
stretcher. I remember Bob imitating how this crippled man spoke. It seemed
that it took great effort for this man to just be able to open his mouth.
He spent his entire life on a bed.
He told these able-bodied sales people, "Life is a
banquet, partake of it!" He then proceeded to tell them that everything he
had ever wanted to do in life, he was able to accomplish including writing
books. I don't remember anything else about the whole film, but those
words, "Life is a banquet, partake of it."
At the present time, I speak to many people from all
over the world, many who know the Lord and many who don't. Most that I know
are financially in better condition than I am and generally have more or
newer material goods than I do. Yet so many are not happy.
Have you ever noticed how quickly a joyous mood can be
robbed by one unkind word, or act, or sometimes even a thought about
something disturbing from the past or a concern about something in the
future? A single word, one image in our mind and wham, depression, anger,
fear, hate, or resentment move in and rob us of our peace and joy. How
easily the peaceful sea of our mind becomes a raging storm.
How we in America bring ourselves into these hurricanes
of thought is even more incredible. Let me use my life as an example to
illustrate the point I am trying to make. Most of you will be able to
relate to what I am saying.
I wake up lying on a king size bed with all the blankets
needed to make myself absolutely comfortable. What is absolutely incredible
is that I can control my environment to the exact temperature I want. A
turn of a dial and I can have 68 degrees Fahrenheit or 80 degrees. The most
royal Queen in the world a few decades past could not have had this
pleasure. I, as a poor man in America have everyday living conditions which
royalty in centuries past would envy. I go to the bathroom and I don't have
to step outside in the cold and sit on a stinky, bug-ridden seat in an
outhouse. The pull of a lever causes many inconveniences to just flow away.
While on my throne, I have newsletters, books, magazines to read to my
heart's content. What is so wonderful about that, you may ask? There was a
time when a person of my social stature was not worthy of receiving an
education. There was a time when one could only read what the church said
one could read. The largest church in the world still has censors telling
their people what is acceptable reading. This church killed many people who
wrote things unacceptable to it and burned many who decided to read some of
this stuff. I am so grateful to be able to read what I want and to be able
to write most of what I care to write. It is a privilege we too often take
for granted.
Not only can I read what I want to, I can get just about
anything I want to read for free! Almost every city in America has free
public libraries. Christian, we must study some early history to truly
appreciate this wonderful blessing! A flick of a switch and I have light to
read by. Another flick and I can increase its brightness. Christian, go
back a thousand years, ask the richest King in the world what he would give
for the gifts I just described. He would, no doubt give up most of his
kingdom for these things. But I haven't even begun to list the things we so
easily take for granted. The poorest of us is able to go to the
refrigerator and take out an orange, or a strawberry or a glass of milk.
What is so remarkable about that you might ask? This incredible box called
the fridge opens the door to all kinds of foods available any time you want
them. Not long ago room temperature and hot were your choices. Today one
can drink a cold glass of milk in 100 degree temperature. And speaking of
oranges, most kings of the past never saw an orange let alone ate one. A
banana grown several thousand miles away can be shipped to your doorstep at
a price a poor person can afford. People, these are the kind of things only
the richest of people in the world used to be able to do. Many of the
things we are able to do or get everyday are things the richest, wisest,
and most powerful of people in ages past could never partake of. "Life is a
banquet, indeed!"
A turn of the faucet and all the water at the
temperature that suits me. A double-edged razor and foam that makes my
shave a breeze. Think about how your shave would feel with a flint or bone
knife! One of my greatest joys is Selsun Blue shampoo. No, I don't have
stock in the company. I have hair that has to be washed everyday to look
decent and I also have a skin condition which makes my scalp flake and get
irritated. This stuff really works for me. I am truly grateful for this
product. I am really grateful for the toilet paper roll by my throne. Hey,
guys, I am not kidding! Some of you are laughing right now, but I am
serious. I remember in my early years in Germany using newspaper. My Scott
brand toilet paper is a real treat.
My roof doesn't leak. I don't have to ward off dangerous
animals all day (Except those wolves eying my beautiful daughter). I have
plenty of clothes to cover my nakedness. People, do you know how wonderful
a glass pane in the window is? Imagine the conditions without glass.
Now the things I just mentioned are so insignificant in
most of our lives, we generally don't think about them. Should I talk about
our cars, trains, airplanes, computers, or telephones, then perhaps some of
us might get into the range of gratefulness.
I spend much of my time lately studying past
civilizations and men and women of religious and political power. Looking
at how they lived, I see that a typical American has so much more going for
them than any King or Queen, or Pope in centuries gone by. Think about a
grand banquet prepared for a king 2000 years in the past. What would be on
that table that would make you envious today? Nothing! Look at the shelves
at the grocery store full of things brought in from all over the world and
you don't have to give up half your kingdom for most of them.
Did you know that in Martin Luther's Germany, a peasant
could not go into most forests to kill a rabbit? The Princes, whom Martin
Luther supported, owned them all. You, as a citizen of Germany would not be
allowed to go to the near stream and catch a fish. It belonged to a Prince.
I live on a lake and can eat the fish that I catch and the mayor in town
can't take it away from me.
As a poor person (according to our government), I sit at
my desk and am able to fax a letter almost anywhere in the world. The
telephone can reach the entire world! What would the great military men of
ages past have given for such a tool? There was a time not too long ago
when messages had to be written and sent by horse or boat often taking
months to arrive. Often the message never made it. Prior to that time
period, only a friend happening to go in the direction you wanted the
message to go to could relay your message.
So what is the point in all of this? Well, remember, I
mentioned earlier how a simple word, little act, past memory, etc. can so
quickly rob our joy? Picture your mind full of thousands of things for
which you are truly grateful. Try walking through the day aware of all your
blessings, friends, relatives, freedom, material things.
Look around you and discover the wonderful gifts that
you have taken for granted or never appreciated in the first place. See
their value. See how blessed you are by comparing yourself to past
civilizations which never had the privileges you have. Fill your heart with
true gratefulness and when that depressing little word or action comes, it
can be quickly drowned out by the wealth all around you. Your mind will be
so consumed by the blessedness of the life you have that the sting of these
other things will become so insignificant, they will be immediately
swallowed up by your joy.
Listen, the other day the UPS driver had me sign for a
package with a pen that I really liked. For some unknown reason this pen
just felt great in my hand. It also looked great. He gave it to me. He said
his wife worked for the company that gave those pens away as advertising.
Later, he gave me another one. When I use those pens, I am thankful. They
were free, but they are still precious to me. Do you have any idea how
precious a piece of writing paper is? Go back a few hundred years and see
how many sheep had to be killed to write a book. Most of us couldn't have
afforded the luxury of writing. It was too expensive. If you weren't of the
right family or sex, you couldn't even attend school.
"Life is a banquet." For most people in the world today,
when comparing ourselves with times past, this is a true statement. Only
the darkness of our mind can turn it into misery. Ungratefulness and
unthankfulness are two fellows that can spoil the party. Cast them out.
They do not belong in the Kingdom of His Son. Joy, Joy.
Go back to
Index.
Gary Amiralt
Tentmaker
118 Walnut
Hermann,MO 65041
http://www.tentmaker.org