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Imagine trying to fit everything you love into one suitcase.
I’d pack my adoption hoodie, my grandma’s Bible, our baby albums, and my MacBook.
Now, imagine your house is on fire and you only have thirty seconds to fill up the same suitcase.
The truth is, I wouldn’t lug any "thing".
I would pile my five kids in that rolling luggage and get the heck out of there.
Over 2.2 million Ukrainian women and children have fled the country. Forsaking their houses, their husbands, and their homeland—these brave women have had to whittle their lives down to a single suitcase.
A video is circulating on social media of a Ukrainian man saying goodbye to his daughter and wife. I couldn’t stop watching it, each time my eyes welled with tears. I can’t fathom kissing my family goodbye with no guarantee of ever seeing them again.
For the last 75 years, the United States has lived in a bubble. We think this comfortable life is normal, but it’s not. A glance back in history will reveal chaos is normal. Upheaval is normal. Instability is normal. And there is something about this war that feels close to home. We weep as we watch YouTube videos of Ukrainians fleeing, and we toss at night with the fear of an oncoming war on our soil.
I pray this war will give you something rather than take something away
Perspective.
Do you know what matters when you’re fleeing for your life?
Nothing.
Material Things Don’t Matter
The car you leased doesn’t matter, your giant house with the massive mortgage doesn’t matter, your new camper doesn’t matter, your closet stuffed with clothes you never wear doesn’t matter—even your 401K and cushy job don’t matter.
As Americans, we spent the first 2/3 of our lives acquiring stuff that we don’t need only to spend the last 1/3 getting rid of it.
Hearses don’t come equipped with a hitch to lug a U-haul. Not a single thing we own will make it past the pearly gates.
Life is short.
“I wish I had more time. I let little things get between us. I spent weeks not talking to my mom because of petty arguments. I was always too busy—to visit, to call, to care,” my friend Amanda said while wiping her nose with her sleeve.
"One minute my mom was healthy, and the next week she was gone."
The Bible speaks of the fleetingness of life, “You do not know what will happen tomorrow. For what is your life? It is a vapor that appears for a moment and then vanishes away.”(James 4:14)
There is a day most of us are too busy to think about: “The Last Day”.
The last day you will see your spouse.
The last day you will see your parents.
The last day you will see your kids.
The last day you will see your best friend.
None of us will know when this day will be and none of us will have a warning.
People matter. Things don’t.
Eternity is long.
The only transferable resource we can carry with us into heaven are people. We have a brief window of time to make an eternal impact on those around us.
I once saw a pastor preach on eternity using a visual illustration that will forever be engrained in my memory. He dragged a long rope up to the front. The end of the rope was wrapped in red duct tape. He held up the duct-taped three inch section for the congregation to see.
“This rope represents our lives. Just as it seems to go on and on, we too are eternal beings. Yet we spend most of our energy worrying about this tiny three inch section known as our lives on this earth. Doesn’t that seem like a monumental waste of time?”
Don't squander your existence making red duct tape your focal point.
"Everything that is not eternal is worthless in eternity." - C.S. Lewis