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							Stuff.
 If you’re like me, you have a lot of it.
 
 It seems as if every nook and cranny is an 
							invitation for me to stow papers and trinkets; even 
							clothes sometimes. When those spaces get too full, I 
							often find myself browsing a thrift store looking 
							for a piece of furniture to store or display the 
							stuff I have.
 
 This past winter when I was having a moment, one of 
							those when nothing I put on worked, I caught myself 
							standing in the middle of a giant pile of clothes. 
							It looked as if my closest had vomited every article 
							of clothing I owned onto my bedroom floor.
 
 That is when it hit me… No, really, the shelf that 
							held my dress shirts broke and hit me in the head…
 
 I had too many clothes.
 
 For Lent, I decided to go through my closest and 
							dresser and get rid of one article of clothing per 
							day. I wanted to simplify my life.
 
 So I had a hard talk with each item.
 
 From my very first bow tie to the sweatshirt I had 
							to have in college, each one went through the 
							examination. I remembered when and where I bought 
							the item or who gave it to me. Some items I needed 
							to get rid of simply because, well, the hole under 
							the armpit was larger than the neckline.
 
 Ultimately, I asked the same two questions, “Do I 
							really need this? Do I still have a use for it?”
 
 Fifty articles of clothing were eventually purged 
							from my closest and donated to the Clothing Closet 
							that our church is hosting this weekend.
 
 If I am honest with you, this was kind of a 
							difficult task. Many of the dress shirts brought 
							back memories. Many of my sweatshirts flooded my 
							mind with memories of those long weekend getaways 
							with friends. That holy pair of jeans (that ended up 
							in the garbage and not at the Clothing Closet) 
							reminded me of one of the best days of fishing I 
							ever had.
 
 But here is the deal, friends, the impulse to save, 
							to make do, to find a use for things, can get out of 
							hand. And the irony of saving things is that we 
							accumulate so much stuff that we forget what’s there 
							and end up buying duplicates.
 
 Like three Chicago Cubs sweatshirts; five fleece 
							button down up shirts; thirteen pairs of jeans (I am 
							not proud of this); and 30+ neckties. I am still 
							working on letting go of my many pairs of shoes. 
							Especially those baseball shoes I have had for ten 
							years…and I’ve only worn a dozen times…but one day I 
							will coach again…and one day I might just need 
							them…you know, to preach in?!?!
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							What sparked this issue for me is the realization of 
							how much stuff I have and how much I depend on that 
							stuff. I have a lot of books. While I read most of 
							them, there is also a part of me that uses these 
							books to impress people who see them.  
							Here’s the deal, our possessions may be precious to 
							us; they may even have a lot of power over us. And 
							they may even have a lot of meaning (like that black 
							flannel shirt I have that once belonged to my late 
							uncle. Though it is two sizes too big, I will NEVER 
							get rid of it…). 
 But my favorite Cubs coffee mug, all those books, 
							all those bow ties, all those (insert those items 
							you have a tendency to collect) aren’t the ruach of 
							God, the breath of God.
 
 God gifted us with all we need and then asked us to 
							take care of it. Part of this call means to be good 
							stewards: use only what we need and share because 
							with God, there is enough for everyone.
 
 Our stuff is meant to bring us joy and life.
 
 If it doesn’t, if it gets in the way, perhaps it is 
							time to share it with someone else.
 
 There is freedom in letting go.
 
 Or as Quaker theologian Richard Foster has boldly 
							said, “The goal of work is not to gain wealth and 
							possessions, but to serve the common good and bring 
							glory to God.”
 
 To bring glory to God means to make God’s presence 
							known.
 
 Stuff can get in the way of this.
 
 But stuff can also add to it.
 
 
 I guess the choice is ours!
 
							
							[Adam Quine, pastor at First Presbyterian 
							Church in Lincoln]
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