While driving through the countryside I came upon a house
where someone had transformed various objects into planters. There was an old
boot with a bright yellow flower growing up from it. There was a claw-footed
bathtub and the rusting body of an old truck with different plants growing in
them. The thing that caught my eye the most was an old console TV that had a
fish tank where the TV tube used to be.
How often do we use an object for something other than its
intended purpose? I am always grabbing a large screwdriver when I need to pry
something open. The back of a wrench often doubles as a hammer. My teeth show
the damage from using them to strip far too many wires.
We do this to people as well. We use people to get ahead in
life. We use them to take the blame for something we have done. We use them as
places to direct our anger or hatred. We use them for sexual pleasure. We use
them for forced labor. We use them.
People were not created to be used. People were created to
be loved and to live with God forever in heaven. We commit a grave sin when we
use people as objects. God gave us the Ten Commandments so we could know how to
live in a right relationship with him and each other. Jesus condensed these
commandments down to just two: Love your God with your entire being and love
your neighbor as yourself.
Loving your neighbor starts with seeing your neighbor as a
person. Take the time to get to know those around you. You cannot get to know
someone and love them if you don’t listen to them.
On a recent journey I rode in many taxis throughout the
week. I met many interesting people, each with a story to tell. There was Cho
the Okinawan. He started driving cabs when the need for Japanese tour bus
drivers waned. There was Timmy from Vietnam who came here as a refugee fleeing
persecution. There was Chu from South Korea who had three daughters and was
greatly worried about what is currently happening in the north. My last driver
was Peter, whose given name was Duk. He was a Catholic, also from Vietnam. He
had two sons and a daughter.
Each taxi ride began with a person typically viewed as
nothing more than a servant. Each ended with a smile and a handshake and a
person happy to be treated like a person. I came away with new friends and a
wealth of new experiences. I would have never met these treasures if I had sat
in the back and simply used them as lowly taxi drivers.
This world is in a sad state of affairs because the devil
has convinced us that what the other has to say is of little importance. We
have lost the skill of listening and replaced it with the art of screaming. He
who yells the loudest is the winner. We seldom extend the hand of friendship
but are quick to pump a fist in anger.
On the doorpost of the home of every observant Jew hangs a mezuzah
containing the great commandment from Deuteronomy. The great commandment does
not begin “Love your God with all of your heart, all of your soul, all of your
strength…” The great commandment starts
with the words, “Hear O Israel,” Love begins with the ears before it reaches
the heart.
People are not boots we use for vases. They are not
screwdrivers used for prying. They are not just the things driving our taxis,
cleaning our hotel rooms, or ringing our orders in at the fast food joint. They
are people created in the image and likeness of God and they were made to be
loved. When objects are loved and people are used a great tragedy occurs.
Reverse that and great treasures are found.
Love your neighbor as God has loved you.
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