I Hate Baloney
"For even when we were  with you, we gave you this rule: 'If a man will not work, he shall not eat.'"1
You may have read about the  man, a construction worker who took a sandwich out of his lunch bag, looked at  it and threw it on the ground, yelling, "Baloney again! I hate  baloney." A coworker said, "If you hate baloney so much, just ask  your wife to make you something else." The man replied, "That's the  problem. My wife didn't make the sandwich. I did." 
    
  Whether this story is true or not, doesn't really matter. It's a great parable. 
  
  As Michael Josephson in Character Counts said, "Lots of people continually  make their own baloney sandwiches and then act as victims when it's time to eat  them. It's like the man who killed his parents and had the audacity to demand  mercy because he was an orphan." 
  
  Or like the overweight man who kept eating hamburgers and blamed and wanted to  sue MacDonald's, and three other hamburger chains for contributing to his  obesity. And like the lady who sued a store because she fell over an unruly  child and hurt herself—and the unruly kid in question was her own child! The  tragedy was she won the case and was awarded something like $700,000! We've  gone sue crazy in this part of the world where I live and much, if not most, of  it is because of gross irresponsibility and pure greed—wanting the rewards of  hard work at someone else's expense. 
  
  I realize it can be extremely difficult (and sometimes impossible) in tough  economical times to get work, but if work—any kind of work—is available and I  don’t want to work, nobody, including the government, is responsible for paying  me or feeding me … neither are my parents…nor is society. As Paul implied, if I  CAN get any kind of a job but don't want to work or do so-called menial work, then  I don't deserve to eat. Let me add, I've done some pretty menial work in my  time—working as many as three jobs at once in the summer break and part-time  through the school year to put myself through college. Years later for several years, I was working a second part-time job to supplement my ministry income. 
   
  Suggested prayer: "Dear  God, if in any way I'm acting irresponsibly and trying to get others to do for  me what I can and need to do for myself, help me to confess up and accept  personal responsibility. And if I'm supporting an irresponsible child or  person, help me to wake up and motivate him/her to grow up. Thank You for  hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus's name, amen."
  
1. 2 Thessalonians 3:10 (NIV).
    
  <:))))>< 
All articles on this website are written by 
            Richard (Dick) Innes unless otherwise stated.