Pastor Kiwelu came to the...
Illustration
Pastor Kiwelu came to the United States on a pastoral exchange. At his home in Tanzania there were few material things. Even paper and pencils were a treasured commodity. He had seen a few electronic things when tourists or American pastors had come to Tanzania, but only occasionally. As a part of hosting Pastor Kiwelu in America, Jim felt it would be good for him to show him around a big electronics store. Perhaps his guest might even find something in the store that he would find useful and could take back to Tanzania with him. As they walked together into the superstore, Pastor Kiwelu's eyes grew wide. On a huge twenty-foot screen made up of nine smaller television screens, a video of skateboarders flying through the air in all sorts of directions greeted him. Loud music blared from several speaker systems. Walls of television screens next to walls of computers next to walls of stereo systems filled the store with sights and sounds. It wasn't long before Pastor Kiwelu couldn't take any more. His eyes burned, his head hurt, and his mind could no longer think straight. He had to leave. Oddly though, by the end of his stay, Pastor Kiwelu was changed by spending time in the United States. He saw many things he wanted -- many gadgets that called to him. He would ask people to buy things for him and get frustrated that they had things that he couldn't get to take back with him. Fortunately, he was a wise man, he could see what was happening to him and recognized how easy it was to covet the material things of others and to lose the simple and meaningful perspective that his life had brought with him to America. For him, being in the United States had been a great experience, but he was also ready to go home when the time came.
-- Daubert
-- Daubert
