Monday, February 13, 2017

it's the lease I can do








There I was, taken in by a pretty face.  I had seen the photos in the trade mags, but in real life, the beauty struck me.  The first arrival of the new Ford Probes was just being delivered, and a black one had me salivating.  The only thing between me and driving off the lot was money, but when I was offered a lease at less than a purchase price, with no money down, all objections were removed, and I drove off in my new car.  A lease, not a purchase where I would own it after the 60 payments were made, but really a rental, which if I exceeded the mileage limits per the lease terms, I would owe them money.  My greed and impatience had got the best of me, so we kept the mileage down, and when it came time for the lease to end, called Ford to confirm a selling price, it was a great used car, we knew the owners and the history, and the price was fair.  Very fair. But my surprise came when I asked about the purchasing and was told, “we don’t care if the car is in pieces in boxes, if you want to buy it, the price is the same, no matter what.”  So we bought the car, in one piece, after all, it was the lease we could do.
At least for us, leasing was a lower payment way to obtain the vehicle of our choice, but after the lease ends, we never owned it, and the process started over.  A lesson learned, as today so many lease, but never end up owning the car.  Just making payments, and then on to the next lease.  Forever driving something newer and trendy, but never building any real value.  Like renting a house is different than owning, you pays your money and takes your chances.  But rents increase, houses get sold from underneath you, and cars wear out and need repairs.  And you are responsible under the lease terms after the warranty expires, want to pay to fix my car instead?  And with higher limits on your insurance, they want their vehicle insured better than if you own it, maybe you should wait and save a little.  Right?  That never happens, so we are at the mercy of our desires, aka lusts, our impatience, and our FICO score.  I never leased again, nor will I, it was the lease that I could do, as in rent, like it said on my monthly statement.  All that money, and I never owned it until I bought it used after the lease.  Still shaking my head over that one....
I wonder if I ever really enjoyed the Probe knowing it wasn’t mine?  Seems ownership and saying it is mine rather than rented sounds better.  More stable.  Smarter.  And the searcher in Ecclesiastes brings our attention to this, not the lease aspect, but our never enjoying what we have, then passing it onto another.  If we hadn’t bought the Probe after the lease, someone would have gotten a great, low mileage used car.  Nothing is worse than watching something you adore lose its luster, and value once you drive it off the lot.  Bordered by mileage restrictions, and never owning it, I don’t know if we fully enjoyed it as much as we should have.  We try to enjoy these things, but some how once the new wears off, and the payments remain, we feel empty and betrayed.  So we rush into the process again, with another new car, but no leases for  me. 
God wants us to have nice things, but not to worship them.  We have our hearts content, but because it is not driven by his spirit, God never allows us to fully enjoy them.  And so we fill our lives with things, instead of the something of love, only found in the someone of Jesus Christ.  We seek what we think we deserve, only God’s mercy reminds us that what we have is based on his grace, and true gratitude is based on getting something we know we don’t deserve, but receive it anyway.  Do you feel that way about the newly leased car?  About your wardrobe?  Where is Jesus in the equation, are you grateful for what he did for us on the cross, or is that just part of the equation?  Is he a leased God, and when the lease comes up, or something better comes along, do you trade him in?  Are you familiar with the term commitment, and his commitment to you?  Is he just a weekly payment, or really just a payment made weakly in your commitment?  After the joy of being born again wears off, was he just an emotional outburst, or do you believe he is Lord?  We are told to give him thanks in everything, not just when we get our everything.  We may suffer the payments, the sacrifices, the change of lifestyle we make, which we get to choose to do, but in the end it will be worth it.
We never intended to lease the Probe, then buy it afterwards.  What were we thinking?  But God knew, and the best used car we ever bought came from us.  A gift from God we neglected to see through his eyes.  We were too busy looking at his gift, rather than the giver.  He knew the outcome...we just struggled with the payments.  So let God bless you with things, and know that you should praise God from whom all blessings flow.  That he provides them, and for our enjoyment.  Yet many pass on the fun, and rather worry, never enjoying what he has given.  Dump the religious aspect of Jesus today, live and receive freely the gift of salvation from him and walk in his spirit.  Enjoy the freedom found in him, and learn “in God we trust, all others pay cash.”   What good is fun if you don’t enjoy it?  What good is your witness if you don’t enjoy living in Christ?  Jesus died for our sins, it was the least he could do.  No rental salvation, he holds title to us.  Jesus promises us joy, it’s the least we can do is to enjoy it...by the way, remember the Probe was going to replace the Mustang?  Ford still builds Mustangs....
love with compassion,
Mike
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