Wokingham Today

Where is your treasure kept?

-

FOR many, the Antiques Road Show is compulsive viewing.

We watch thousands of people in a beautiful historical setting, armed with carrier bags and boxes containing their personal or family treasures.

The picture, piece of porcelain or jewellery, the old first edition book, the elderly toy or article of furniture is then shown to one of a number of experts, who discuss and value it with the famous words: “I think if you took this to auction, it would be worth probably somewhere in the region of …”

But then there is sometimes another surprise as the owner calmly says: “I’ll never sell it.”

Jesus had a word to say about treasure. Find his words in Matthew, 6:19-21 and again in Luke 12:33-34. He talks about not putting too much importance on material goods: “where moths and rust destroy and robbers break in and steal”.

That might sound a bit strange, but in the

Middle East in Jesus’ time, a person’s wealth often consisted of fine clothes, or corn and grain stored in great barns, or of hoards of gold stored in flimsy clay jars. So there was always the risk of these things being lost, stolen, destroyed.

Things are not that much different today; we might not hoard corn but many of us still go out and buy clothes, which fortunatel­y for us, are less prone to damage by moths than in earlier times.

Retail therapy – going shopping as a cure for feeling sad and miserable – is beginning to go out of fashion in these cash-strapped days. So perhaps Jesus’ next words are a useful lesson:

“Store up for yourselves treasures in heaven …” What might that mean? Enjoy free “treasures” – such as a sudden gloriously sunny day; a flush of early summer flowers; a walk in the park with a good friend; your football team finally winning a match; children’s pictures from school; rememberin­g fun in the snow. Find riches too in a helping hand given and received; a kind word spoken; a joke shared; a family meal.

“For,” said Jesus, “your heart will always be where your treasure is.”

Rosi MorganBarr­y from Wokingham Methodist Church, writing on behalf of

Churches Together in Wokingham

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom