“He is richest who is content with the least, for content is the wealth of nature.”
– Socrates
Wired magazine ran an article on the five best toys ever. Wired is one of the most innovative, bleeding-edge publications youβll read about all things technological. Which is why at first the list surprised me, but then I realized their angle and couldnβt help but appreciate their wisdom.
5 Best Toys Ever – Dr James Emery White
Hereβs the list:
1. Stick
2. Box
3. String
4. Cardboard Tube
5. Dirt
Anybody want to argue with them? I doubt it.
Itβs an important reminder that the best things in life β and often in ministry, leadership, business and family β are the simple things.
The dilemma is how our culture seems to refuse to give simplicity a place.
But think about when it insists on intruding and the wake it leaves behind.
For example, a snowstorm brings your town to a standstill. You went out and stocked up on bread and milk and a few other things you didnβt really need, and settled in. The power goes out, so you light the candles and gather by the fireplace for warmth. Board games that had been gathering dust for years are pulled out. You play them and have more fun than you can remember. You then go outside and actually play, throw a snowball, make a snow-angel, build a snowman.
Itβs golden.
You talk, years later, about that magic night. Youβd give almost anything to go back and relive it, and wish there was a way to recreate it in the here and now.
In a complex, βalways onβ world, perhaps what we need to remember is that we need to intentionally unplug every now and then.
Even if just to remember that the best toys in the world β like the best times β are the most simple.
And in truth, the most available.
That is my holiday wish for you. May you enjoy the simplicity and holiness that resides in the stillness between Christmas and the new year.
And maybe some fun with a leftover box or two.