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There are
many stories that surround the fable of the genie in the bottle and three
wishes. The following is an ancient Jewish parable with the same theme: One
night a poor farmer was awakened by an angel of the Lord who said: "You've
found favor in the eyes of your Maker. He wants to do for you what he did for
your ancestor Abraham. He wants to bless you. Therefore, make any three requests
of God, and he will be pleased to give them to you. There's only one condition:
your neighbor will get a double portion of everything that is given to
you." The farmer was so startled by all this that he woke up his wife and
told her all about it. She insisted they put it to the test. So they prayed,
"Oh, blessed God, if we could just have a herd of a thousand cattle, that
would enable us to break out of the poverty in which we've lived for
generations. That would be wonderful." No sooner had they said these words
than they heard the sound of animal noises outside. Lo and behold, all around
the house were a thousand magnificent cattle! During the next two days, the
farmer's feet hardly touched the ground. He divided his time between praising
God for his great generosity and making practical provisions for his newly found
affluence. On the third afternoon he was up on a hill behind his house, trying
to decide where to build a new barn when, for the first time, he looked across
at his neighbor's field, and there on the green hillside stood two thousand
magnificent cattle. For the first time since the angel of the Lord had appeared,
his joy evaporated and a scowl of envy took its place. He went home that evening
in a foul mood, refused to eat supper, and went to bed in an absolute rage. He
couldn't fall asleep, because every time he closed his eyes, all he could see
were his neighbor's two thousand head of cattle. Deep in the night, however, he
remembered that the angel had said he could make three wishes. With that he
shifted his focus away from his neighbor and back to his own situation, and the
old joy quickly returned. Digging into his own heart to find out what else he
really wanted, he began to realize that in addition to some kind of material
security, he had always wanted descendants to carry on his name into history. So
he prayed a second time saying, "Gracious God, if it please thee, give me a
child that I may have descendants." It wasn't long before his wife came to
him with the news that she was bearing in her body a life not her own.
The moral of
this story? If you want to be miserable, then compare what you have with what
other people have. There will always be somebody with more than you, and they
will always be (in your opinion, anyway) less deserving. Jesus told a similar
story in Matthew 20:1-16 about a vineyard owner and a few workers who grew
resentful of those who had received equal pay for less work. Rather than being
grateful for the good pay they had been promised and had received, they were
unhappy and critical of the vineyard owner for not giving them more. No wonder
God instructs us: Do not covet your neighbor's house. Do not covet your neighbor's wife, male or female servant, ox or donkey, or anything else your neighbor owns. (Exodus 20:17 NLV). |
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