Every buyer is also a seller. If I buy apples from you, then you’re selling your apples and “buying” my money, while I am “selling” my money to buy your apples. For every time you make a purchase, you must give up something to make the transaction. If you have nothing to sell, there’s nothing you can buy.
Ahab mistakenly thought he was only a buyer. He wanted to turn Naboth’s vineyard into a garden, and he offered to pay cash or trade a better vineyard if Naboth would sell (1 Kings 21:2). Naboth answered that his family inheritance could not be sold. Ahab’s wife Jezebel then told her husband that she would get the land for him. She cruelly had Naboth stoned on false charges. She then said to Ahab, “You know the vineyard Naboth wouldn’t sell you? Well, you can have it now! He’s dead!” (1 Kings 21:15).
A happy Ahab immediately claimed the vineyard. What a bargain! He had been willing to overpay for the land, but now he was getting it for free. Almost.
Ahab was so focused on the buyer’s side of the ledger that he didn’t notice he had vastly overpaid. Elijah told Ahab that Naboth’s vineyard had cost his soul. He had sold himself to evil, for he had robbed and murdered an innocent man so he could grow vegetables. Hope you enjoy those tomatoes, Ahab, because “dogs will lick your blood at the very place where they licked the blood of Naboth!” (1 Kings 21:19).
Every time we take, we give something back. Visit trashy websites, and you leave a part of your soul behind. Cheat others, and the money you save is outspent by the cost to your character. You belong to God, who bought you with the blood of His Son. Don’t sell yourself short.
NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: Judges 14:1-20
More:
Read 1 Corinthians 6:12-20 to learn your true value and how you should spend it.
Next:
Think of an item you recently purchased. What did it cost you financially? What did it cost you spiritually? as it worth it? Why or why not?
tom felten on March 11, 2013 at 10:12 am
Good application, Mike! The long-term damage made by choices that give us some sort of short-term gratification or pleasure can be devastating. May we be wise as we “buy” and “sell” today—seeking to honor God and glorify Him with our “transactions” (1 Corinthians 10:31).
mike wittmer on March 15, 2013 at 4:07 pm
Thanks, Tom. As I think on this some more, I conclude that nothing is ever really “free.” Every thing I receive costs me something–and money is often the least of it.