Fasting Day 23 of 40 | Fourth Monday of Lent
“At the end of forty days they returned from exploring the land.” Numbers 13:25
After God’s people surveyed the Promised Land, the book of Numbers recounts the even distribution of land. Larger tribes got more parcels and smaller tribe received less so each person had enough.
In 1862, the Homestead Act allowed Americans to settle on 160-acre quarters of land divided into forty-acre quarters for deeds. Soon after, Leo Tolstoy wrote How much land does a man need? in 1886.
Therein Tolstoy writes, “Pahóm chose out a farm of forty acres…so he became a landowner, plowing and sowing his own land, making hay on his own land, cutting his own trees, and feeding his cattle on his own pasture. When he went out to plow his fields, or to look at his growing corn, or at his grass-meadows, his heart would fill with joy… Pahóm was pleased with it all, but when he got used to it he began to think that even here he had not enough land.”
Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910) in How much land does a man need? (Maclean: Trinity Forum, 2007), pp. 14, 17.
Pahóm’s quest for more contributed to his demise.
Read the short story to see how the Devil used the insatiability of greed and the desire for more land to destroy him. Be warned.
Download it here. It’s only 4 pages long. Share it with your children. Read it to your grandchildren! And find contentment in your humble homestead.
God, teach me to find contentment in having enough. Amen.
Take inventory. Do you have less than you need, enough to live, or surplus? What could you give to make sure greed does not destroy you?
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