The ants are back! We
have kept them at bay inside the house, but outside, that is a different
matter. A single dropped crumb on the
patio and the next morning a stream of ants appear, hundreds of them in a
neatly organized operation to dismantle the discarded food and store it in bits
and bites for later use.
How do they do this?
Do the wandering scout-ants have cell phones? When they make a discovery do they place a
call back to home base and say, “Send the troops. We have food!” Who organizes the operation? Who tells these worker ants to answer the
call, and who plots the shortest and least obstructed route to the
treasure?
If they were humans, the searchers who discovered the food
supply would immediately stake a claim, lay title to it and horde it so that they
could be wealthier than all the other ants.
They would let the weaker ants in the colony starve. And, they would probably spend most of their
time in “ant court” defending the right to their possessions. “Ant lawyers” would probably claim the greatest
portion of the wealth. Maybe they would find an Oppenheimer ant to invent a bomb
so they could destroy other ant colonies.
Why can’t we learn from these little creatures? According to the United Nations “the world is
in the midst of a global food crisis ... the largest in recent history.” 345 million people are facing severe hunger.
32 countries are in conflict including wars, civil wars, drug wars, ethnic violence,
and organized crime.
I have to admit this convicts and alarms me. I need to be more like the little critters
that invade my patio. I need to sound
the alarm, send out the signal, marshal others and join them in distributing
food and resources to those who need it.
But how do we do this? How do we
know that our gifts get to the people and places where they are needed? There is so much graft and corruption in the
world that charitable gifts are often routed into the pockets of the
greedy.
I guess the best thing is to be alert to local opportunities
that can be trusted, churches and local charities that are accountable. Check
out the records and reputation of national and international charities. We should always be generous to neighbors and
those we encounter who are in need. The point, I guess, is to choose some way
to help. If all of us gave more
generously we could make a difference, like the ant.
Proverbs says, “Go to the ant … consider its ways and be
wise! It has no commander, no overseer
or ruler, yet it stores its provisions in summer and gathers its food at
harvest” (Prov. 6:6-8). John the
forerunner, described what we should do if we really want to respond in faith
to the Messiah. He said, “Anyone who has
two shirts should share with the one who has none, and anyone who has food
should do the same” (Luke 3:11).
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