“Utility is when you have one telephone, luxury is when you have two,
opulence is when you have three – and paradise is when you have none.” Doug
Larson
I’m not sure when
Doug Larson wrote that. I am sure that when he did he never pictured our day
when nearly everyone has their own personal phone that they carry with them in their
pocket or purse. 90% of Americans own a cell phone. The average age when you
now receive your first cell phone has dropped to 12 or 13. 67% of cell owners check
their phone for messages, alerts, or calls — even when they don’t notice their
phone ringing or vibrating. 44% have slept with their phone next to their bed
because they wanted to make sure they didn’t miss any calls, text messages, or
other updates during the night. And 29% of cell phone owners describe their
cell phone as “something they can’t imagine living without.”
Recently, I’ve entered a brand new
phase in my phone history. For the first time in my life, there is no landline
in our home. Jane and I found that the vast majority of those who called our
landline were telemarketers or robo-calls around election time. They were calls
that we decided that we didn’t need. While it’s not a huge savings to be
landline free, it adds up.
I think we’re
through the withdrawals, though I may still have to join a 12-step group. The
morning after we pulled the plug, I was wondering if we’d made a mistake. I was
attempting to call home about a timely matter, but couldn’t connect with anyone
via their cell phones. I was ready to drive back home, when Jane got my message
and returned my call.
When I was a child,
our home had two separate phone lines – one for the house and then a business
line that was rarely used. They were both rotary phones (some of you may need
to Google that). This was eons before call waiting or automatic redial. As I
kid, I found having two lines handy for winning radio contests (“The winner
will be caller number 8”). It increased my odds dramatically.
My favorite phone though
was a party line. When my grandparents finally got a phone, I think my Dad may
have even paid for it, it was a party line that they shared with someone else. I
absolutely loved calling my Grandmother! I can still hear her voice echoing down
the corridors of my memory though she’s been gone for over three decades. I
don’t remember MaMa ever saying an unkind word to anyone. When I’d call, though
it was difficult for her to walk to the phone, I was the most important person
in the world. God used her to touch my life so many times.
January 29th was the one year anniversary of the loss of my brother, Mike. I miss talking to
him on the phone. I can still hear his big voice and laugh. Mike was a night
owl. Sometimes when I’d be driving home late or when we were driving through
the night toward a vacation destination, I’d call Mike. I might have been
starting to nod off; talking to Mike would jolt me back into alertness. He
never minded the call. I can’t remember him ever telling me it was a bad time
to call.
One of those drive
through the nights brings back one of my favorite memories of Dad Cummins. Dad loved
to use the phone. Because we were driving from Wisconsin to Alabama, and going
to arrive in the middle of the night at his home, he had a hard time sleeping.
Periodically, he’d call to check on our status. Dad Cummins faithfully used his
phone as a ministry tool, probably better that anyone else I know. He was often
on the road during his later years and had a list of folk that he’d call, many
of them elderly and shut-ins. He’d call to touch base, just to encourage and
minister to them. It was his “phone ministry.” He was truly one of a kind!
Probably, my
children have taught me the most about using a phone wisely. If I was irritated
or upset with them, I might leave them a voice mail on their cell, expressing
my displeasure. I learned very quickly that it would weigh very heavily on them
and ruin their day. The Lord used them to break me of that. To hear the hurt in
their voice as we problem-solved it later, was too much for me to bear. I don’t
want to hurt anyone, especially those that I love so much.
This past week, I
was reading Colossians in my time with the Lord. I love Colossians 4:6. Most of
us should memorize it. Maybe it should be taped on the keypad of our phones.
I’m not big on tattoos, yet this would be a great verse to have tattooed on the
back of your hand or someplace else where you’d continually see it, where it
would be a constant reminder of how to have godly speech: “Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how you ought to
answer each person.”
Think how many
verbal wounds you wouldn’t leave on others, if you followed the prescription.
Think how many fights you wouldn’t have with your spouse or how many harsh
things you wouldn’t say to your children if that verse was a bridle on your
tongue.
Yet, think of how
encouraging your words would be, if they were consistently gracious. Salt adds
taste, yet it’s to be sprinkled, not poured. Personally, I find that when my
words come “pouring” out, they have more potential of being sinful. If you’re
like me, there are very few times when I regret things that I didn’t say.
There are folk that
I love to talk to. Some of them are here at Grace. They’re consistently encouraging
and affirming. Rarely, do they criticize or complain. If they do, they weigh
their words. It tends to be constructive and edifying. My conversations with
them seem to end too quickly. They refresh my soul.
I want to be like
that, don’t you? I want God to so use my words that when I’m done talking,
people leave refreshed, encouraged, perhaps even challenged. I want to be used
of God to lighten loads, not increase burdens.
That means that I
need to unplug my old flesh and let the Spirit control what comes out of my
mouth. He wants to do that, yet I must first choose to surrender the control to
Him. Colossians 4:6 gives a whole new wonderful meaning to salty speech,
doesn’t it?
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