February 19, 2001
___1977 was a monumental year, my sophomore year at L.D. Bell High School. I took driver's education, learned the finer points of city driving from my brother and received the keys to a white one-owner heirloom passed down from my father--a 1966 white Ford mustang. While my mother's prayer life improved, because she had two teenage boys driving, my father and I spent late 1977 and early 1978 refurbishing our white beauty. ___We gave our car a major facelift, two non-mechanics plunging headlong into the trials and tribulations of replacing a leaky radiator. Task accomplished, we clothed the interior with new carpet, painted panels and added an Armoral shine that made the seats glisten in the sun. ___A fender-bender, courtesy of adolescent indecision on Bedford-Euless Road, caused a would be follower to be a sure-to-be tail-gater. I greeted my new-found friend, called the police, and exchanged the necessary insurance information to expedite repairs. The small collision injured no one but bruised my pride. The fender-bender forced me to add a fresh coat of paint to the white Mustang. My first car, now achieving the excellence I so desired, became my pride and joy, a treasure to cherish like fine china; a beauty to show off like dolls on display in the window of the local store. ___ Everywhere I traveled, that old white shining-like-new Ford Mustang caught the eye of many a car-lover. Once while putting gas in my car at the station, a man offered me $1,500 for my car. In the words of a popular movie, was I foolish enough to say, "Show me the money! Show me the money"? Nope. I simply declined, claiming my father's hard work, good memories and good gas mileage in the age of gas wars and gas rations. Besides, what would I drive if I sold my only mode of motor transportation? Worse yet, why hand over a family heirloom for a few pennies? Why give up a valued treasure? ___ Then I hit my senior year. I went brain dead. I am not quite sure what caused this malfunction of mind. Was it falling in love with the girl of my dreams? Was it hitting my head in a high school basketball game? Was it "senioritis," that do-nothing, think-nothing, I-can't-wait-to-get-out-high-school-and-get-out-on-my-own attitude rising up ready to conquer the world? ___I discussed with my father, of all things, getting a new car. I do not remember how our conversations went, except I said, "I'll take a new Mustang, if it's OK." Agreement reached, I surrendered my 1966 white mustang to the auction block and into the hands of a would be Mustang-lover who purchased it. My father drove me down to Helm-Lary Ford, and I picked out a sparkling new, rust-colored, 1979 (my graduation year) Ford Mustang. Glory to God and happy trails! After all, my teenage years neared an end, why not celebrate with something new? ___Three years later, my 1979 Mustang was for sale, only a shadow of the old white Mustang I wish, to this day, I still owned. I learned a valuable lesson, "There is desirable treasure and oil in the dwelling of the wise, but a foolish man squanders it" (Proverbs 21:20). Only the brain dead give up their inheritance. Fools sale valued possessions. And a foolish son longs for what he does not possess, while failing to hold and gratefully cherish what he does possess. ___Jesus talked about laying up treasure in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy (Matthew 6:19-20). Paul added: "See, then, that you walk, should I say, drive, carefully, not as fools but as wise, redeeming the time because the days are evil" (Ephesians 5:15-16). And a man said, "I'll buy your Mustang." And a fool said, "Show me the money." And now I've learned a greater lesson: The brain dead reject Christ's inheritance. Fools barter the kingdom of God. A foolish son craves stuff, while missing out on the Stuff-of-Life. ___And the wise? They lay up treasure in heaven. They redeem the time. They cherish close to the heart life's greatest treasure, Jesus Christ. And a wise man said, "Show me the Savior!" ___ John Duncan is pastor of Lakeside Baptist Church in Granbury, Texas, and the writer of numerous articles in various journals and magazines. Baptist Standard
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