
Do
we really need our garage-sale profits?
By
Rev. Paul Donlevy
Almost everybody
is familiar with Jean-François Millet’s famous painting, The
Gleaners. Painted in 1857, it portrays three peasants bent over picking
up a few stalks of wheat and grains of wheat after the harvesters have
passed through the field. Although not a religious painting, it caused
me to think of a passage in Leviticus 19: 9-11: “When you reap the
harvest of your land, you shall not reap to the very edges of your
field, or gather the gleanings of your harvest. You shall not strip
your vineyard bare, or gather the fallen grapes of your vineyard; You
shall leave them for the poor . . . .”
‘Tis the season
for garage sales. Up and down our streets through this spring and
summer, garage sales will pop up like dandelions on front yards and
driveways. Folks will be cleaning out material they’ve had in their
garages, basements, attics, even in rented storage stalls, all
expecting to get rid of clutter and pick up some extra cash. Churches
will be having garage sales too.
Viewing Millet’s
Gleaners and reflecting on Leviticus 19: 9-11, I have become increasing
uncomfortable. If this passage says what I think it does, it applies to
us garage sale entrepreneurs.
Leviticus shows
that the harvest we didn’t pick up the first time is to be left for the
poor. No going back for the missed sheaves, overlooked olives or the
fallen grape. They belong to the poor.
Don’t our
“leftovers” fall into the same category? It’s all material we have no
use for and perhaps never did. These items are just taking up space, so
we might as well cash in on them. For most of us, the extra cash would
be a handy supplement but not life-changing. We have lived without it
for the last year or more and our lives have not suffered because of it.
My conscience
tells me that stuff we’ve been hoarding or selling should be used, not
for our own added comfort or amusement, but, as Leviticus teaches, for
the poor.
Sure, some of us
might truly depend on the extra cash to get us through, for example to
renew car plates or for emergency dental work, but for most of us, it’s
just plain extra cash to play with.
I believe we are
looking at a modern-day gleaner’s opportunity with our garage
sale-laden streets.
If we have lived
quite well without the goods being sold, or without the extra cash up
until now, we are like the owners of the field who have already
gathered in the harvest. Now we should leave the rest for the needy.
What does this
mean?
It means that we
should donate those goods to those who need it. It means that if we
have a garage sale, the money should be used for them, and not us. This
should also apply to our parishes. When a parish has a garage sale, is
it to provide something really necessary for people, or simply to
decorate the church or pave the parking lot? If our essential needs
have been met and we have lived quite well without it to this time,
then the funds should be used for the poor.
My clutter
embarrasses me because it’s a reminder that I have much when others do
not. The excess really belongs to the poor.
Here’s an added
thought: that tax refund I’ve been waiting for. Isn’t it the same?
Blessed garage
sale season! Many happy (tax) returns!
Donlevy
is chancellor for the Saskatoon diocese.