Sermons:
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Making a List, Checking it Twice, Malachi 3:1-4
(see below)
Rev. Randy Quinn
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Sinners
Anonymous
Luke 3:1-18,
by Richard Gehring
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What's Your Favorite Saint?
Luke 3:1-6,
by Rev. Timothy DeFrange
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The Message and the Messenger, Luke 3:1-6, Malachi 3:1-4,
by Rev. J. Clemens
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God is Just--Thank God! Malachi 3:1-4, by
Rev. Thomas Hall
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Fair Warning, Malachi 3:1-4, Rev. Heather Howland Bobbitt
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Making a List, Checking it Twice
based on Malachi 3:1-4
Rev. Randy Quinn
We’ve started receiving Christmas Cards at our house, have you?
I don’t know how many you get each year and I don’t know how many you send each
year, but our list has gotten shorter over the years. Before Ronda and I were
married, I was sending over 100 Christmas cards each year; together our list was
enormous and needed to be cut down!
But every year we face the same dilemma. Who gets one and who
doesn’t? What names do we drop from our list and who will we add this year? Of
the ones who get a card, who gets a personal note and who doesn’t? Who gets a
family picture, who gets pictures of the kids, and which cards go without any
photos?
It’s a hard decision to make. And what makes it harder is that
we face the same decision every year. While we do not allow money to be the
primary factor in deciding who is on our list or not, it’s also true that as the
price of cards and the cost of postage has risen over the years we have become
more and more selective – but we still sent about 85 cards this year.
Over the years, we have developed a set of criteria for our
list, but it isn’t an exact science by any means. Maybe you’ve tried to apply
some of the same criteria to your Christmas Card lists, too.
- If we hear from someone some time during the year, we usually keep their
name on the list.
- On the other end of the spectrum, if we see people regularly – once a week
or more often – we normally don’t send a card to them. They get personal
greetings instead – or maybe even a gift.
- Brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles and grandchildren get cards. Nieces and
nephews don’t.
- School teachers and bus drivers get cards. Principles don’t.
- People from the church we’re currently serving generally don’t get them –
but we answer with cards to people from churches where we used to serve.
And there are always exceptions! Anyone who looked at our list
would wonder if we had any set criteria. In fact, if you listened in to a
conversation we had this week about a couple of the names, you’d wonder how
justifiable our decisions have been.
But it’s our list. We decide who is on it and who is not.
You can offer all the advice you want about how to ‘scrub’ the
list to make it shorter, but our own emotional commitment to some people is
going to make a more significant impact on what the list looks like than
anything else.
We go through a similar exercise when it comes to gifts. Who
gets a gift? How expensive will the gift be? If I send one to my sister, do I
need to send one to my brother, too? Do they need to be of comparable value?
What about nieces and nephews?
The hardest years for me have been when I’ve done my shopping
early. On more than one occasion I was done before the first of December. And
then all month long I wondered if I got enough. What if it wasn’t the right
gift? I would second guess myself and end up getting still more gifts.
How do you know when you’re done unless you finish on Christmas
Eve and don’t have anymore time to shop?
One way to know is to make a list. I start my list early, but I
start my list of people and presents so I know when I’ve completed my shopping.
Sometimes that list has to be adjusted. We have two extra
children this year, so we changed our list. I had planned to take our grandson
shopping for a gift for his mother and ended up with a present for his mother,
his grandparents, his cousin, his step dad and his dad – in other words, Keith
changed my list, too.
Like a Christmas Card list, gift lists need to be reviewed
regularly. Sometimes we need to add to them; sometimes we need to delete from
them.
That purging process is difficult. The process of ‘making a
list, checking it twice,’ is a full time job for Santa because it’s not easy to
do. It isn’t easy to refine our list and make it perfect – especially if our
criterion is based on whom deserves a gift!
In Malachi, we are warned about the selection process that God
uses. Everyone receives an invitation to the great party at the end [continue]
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