HOW
(1 Timothy 6:6-10)
By
Shelby G. Floyd
I’m sure that all of
us have heard the old saying, “The grass is always greener on the other side of
the fence,” or the saying that is similar to that, “All that glitters is not gold.”
How much land does a man really need? You might say, “Well, I don’t really
know. How much land does a man really need?” That’s what we are going to
attempt to answer in the course of our lesson.
I do know that when
we are young we have high hopes and we have great ambitions to reach out and to
be successful and to find wealth and fame and land and
houses and prestige and prominence and position and power. But as we get older,
sometimes we realize that those things are just ephemeral; they are transitory
and they are not as valuable and as important as we thought when we were
younger.
THE STORY OF PAHAM
The Russian writer,
Tolstoy, tells the story about a peasant in
So, they continued
to work the land and one day they heard that a neighbor was going to sell her
land. She had three hundred acres and already one of his friends had bought
fifty acres and Paham, as his name was, went to his
family and said, “We have to buy some land. It’s for sale and if we don’t buy
it now, perhaps we will never have any land.” So they talked to each other and
tried to figure out how they were going to buy ten or fifteen or twenty acres
of land, so they finally decided they would sell their colt. They sold their
colt. They sold half of their beehive. One of the sons he contracted out to be
a laborer and got the wages in advance. Finally, he was able to raise enough
money to buy forty acres, because the woman that was selling the land had
agreed that she would take half of the price of the land in cash and then she
would take the rest of it one year later. So he bought forty acres and he
borrowed some seed and put out a crop of corn and the seasons were very
favorable and he prospered and he sold his crops. He was able to pay off his
debts at the end of the year and he still had some money left. He continued to
do this year in and year out and he was now a landowner.
Beyond The
But one day some
people came by and they told him that beyond the Volga there was some land that
was very rich, that the grass would grow as high as your head, the dirt was
black and that it was very productive and that if he would leave the plot of
land that he had now, the forty acres, and go beyond the Volga, he could buy
some of this land that was a lot more fertile and he could do a lot better.
So Paham, being the ambitious man that he was, decided that
they would sell their forty acres and he did so and they loaded up the family
and their carts, and their wagons and took off beyond the
The Land of the Boshkers
One day a land buyer
and seller came by and he said, “Way off in the land of the Boshkers
a person can get all the land that he wants and I have heard that it is really
cheap. For a thousand rubles you can buy thousands of acres of land.” So Paham in his imagination and his mind is excited. He sees
these thousands of acres that he could buy if only he would go to the faraway
land of the Boshkers. So he leaves his wife, children
and family and makes his trip to the land of the Boshkers
and takes a servant along with him. Finally, the land buyer and seller told him
that the way to buy this land is you’ve got to be friendly to these chieftains
that own all of these thousands of acres. So he bought some clothes, food and
gifts and when they approached the land of the Boshkers,
sure enough all of these tribe people came out from their village. They set up
a tent for him. They killed a sheep and they had mutton and they fixed a fine
meal for them and he also brought his gifts out and he gave them to the
chieftains and they wanted to know why he would come from such a far distance
and he said, “Well, I have come to buy a lot of land. I hear that you have a
lot of land for sale.” And they said, “Oh yes, we have thousands of acres. Just
lift up your eyes and look across the plains—all the land that a man would
want.” He said, “Well, how much is it?” They said, “Its a thousand rubles a
day.” He said, “A thousand rubles a day. I’ve never heard of anybody selling
land for a thousand rubles a day. How do you figure it?” They said, “We don’t
know how to figure it. We have so much land that the only way we know how to
sell it to somebody is you start at a certain point and you start early in the
morning just at sunrise and all the land that you can walk around in a day’s
time is yours for a thousand rubles.”
A Thousand Rubles A Day
And Paham says, “It’s a deal. We’ll start out the first thing
in the morning.” So he is so excited that he can’t sleep that night. He lies
there in his tent. All he is thinking about is how many miles he can walk
around in a day and all of that land will be his for a thousand rubles. So
finally he hardly slept a wink and he realizes that it’s the first light of day
and he gets up and calls his servant and they go and meet the chieftains and
they want to have a meal and he says, “No, I’m too excited. I’ve got to get
started. I don’t want anything to eat.” So he took some bread along with him.
He took a flask of water that he carried with him and a shovel. And they said,
“This is the way you do it. You start out at the sunrise and you go for a mile
or two or three and you take your shovel and you dig a hole in the ground and
you take the sod and you lay it in a pile there and that’s the marker. Then you
go on another three or four miles and every place that you feel like you need
to make a landmark, you dig down and lay the sod.” So as the sun was coming up,
they put the hat from the chieftain on the ground and they took his thousand
rubles and put it in the hat and the chief said, “This is the starting point.
It’s up on a hill. Now you’ve got to be back here tonight before the sun goes
down or you will lose all of your money, but if you can make this circumference
around all the land in a day’s time and get back here before the sun goes down,
it’s all yours for a thousand rubles.”
Which Direction Shall I Go?
So he says, “Which
direction shall I go?” He decides that he will go to the east. As the sun was
coming up, he takes off toward the east. And he goes about two or three miles.
He looks back and he can barely see the people on the hill looking at him as he
goes. He thought he had gone three miles, he goes another three, looks back,
takes his shovel out, digs a hole in the ground, piles the sod there for a
marker. He is six miles toward the sun and its getting way up in the morning
and he thought, “Oh, I’ve gone far enough. I don’t want to go too far and miss
it all. So finally, late in the morning, he turns back north. He walks and he
walks and he walks and, of course, he had gone the longer distance while it was
cool in the morning. Finally, he has gone a long way and its way up in the
afternoon, like two or
So he makes his turn
and he starts back toward the west. He walks and he’s getting hotter. The sun
is up and he’s getting tired and thirsty and finally his feet are getting tired
and he takes his shoes off and starts walking barefooted. He has to stop and
take a drink. He eats his food and he’s beginning to have doubts whether he’s
going to make it back because the first side was too long and now he’s headed
back and he thought he was going to miss it all, “I’ve got to make this side on
the west shorter than I did as I walked to the east.” So he cuts it short and
finally he heads back south to the hillock where he had started. The sun is
beginning to go down. His feet are bleeding. He’s about out of breath. He is
beginning to think he is not going to make it, “It’s still a long way off. It’s
several miles and the sun is beginning to go down. The shadows are
lengthening,” he says to himself. The people are cheering him on, but he is
beginning to have doubts that he is going to make it. That’s even causing him
to lose his breath, because he’s so worried about it.
Well Done, the Land Is Yours
Finally, as he
approaches the hillock where he started out it looks like the sun has gone down
and he is almost ready to give up, but then he realizes that he is down hill
and what looks like the sun having already set to him doesn’t mean that is the
case where the people are standing, so they’re cheering him on and finally he
rushes up and falls down at the hat and grabs it. And the chieftain says, “Well
done, the land is yours.”
How Much Land Does A man Need? About Six Feet!
But his servant comes
running up to him and shakes. Blood is coming out of Paham’s
mouth and he sees that Paham is dead. He takes the
shovel and he starts at his head and he digs a plot of ground six feet long.
How much land does a man really need? The moral of this story is he only needs
six feet. They buried him right there. He reached out for too much. He was too
greedy. All we need is six feet of land.
THE
STORY OF SQUIRE BOONE
A few weeks ago,
Sarah and I went down to Corydon, the first state capital of Indiana, spent the
night there and the next day we drove down to Squire Boone Village about eight
or ten miles south of Corydon. I had bought a little book there in the hotel
about Squire Boone and I have always loved to read about
The
The Boone’s were born up in
Kantuckee
So Daniel and five other people from the
Squire Boone Goes to Meet Daniel
So Daniel Boone and his company divided
up. Four of them went one way and Daniel and another guy went a different direction.
They thought that both of them would explore the land. So they began to let
their guard down and one night the Indians captured Daniel and his friend. They
took all of their pelts and furs and everything they had been able to collect
for a year and kept them in captivity. The way they got out of it was that they
acted like they weren’t afraid of them; they acted like they weren’t trying to
escape, when all the time it was just simply a ruse. They were playing possum.
So one night the Indians were getting sleepy and they made up their minds that
this was the night they were going to run away. Sure
enough, the Indians fell asleep and they took off and they had gone a long way
trying to get away from them and all of a sudden they saw these two men on horses
and they think they are going to get captured by Indians again, but as it
turned out it was Squire Boone and a friend and they had brought them all of
these provisions. So Daniel decided he wasn’t going to go back after they
brought him provisions. He stayed in what they called back then “the dark and
bloody
Squire Boone Had Thousands of Acres
But in the course of time he came on up
into
Squire Boone in
But finally Squire Boone decided he
would go up into
Squire Boone Buried In a Cave
Basically, he spent most of his time,
which was maybe fifteen or twenty years just south of
How
I
have said all of this because Squire Boone was reaching out for more land, and
we’re glad the pioneers had that type of spirit, and they were always reaching
out to go into more territory. When it was all said and done, how much land did
Squire Boone really need? All he really needed was six feet in that cave just
south of
THE
STORY OF ABRHAM
Now let’s go to the
Bible and see if we can see how much a land a man really needs. Do you remember
the story of Abraham and his nephew,
There Was Strife in
the Family
Finally, there was strife,
an argument between the herdsmen of Abraham’s cattle and the herdsmen of
God’s Promise to
Abraham
God
told Abraham, “You look to the north and you see the east and west and I am
going to give it all to you. Your descendants will be as numerous as the stars
in heaven and as the sand on the seashore.” He promised Abraham a great
blessing. “Furthermore, Abraham, in your seed I will bless all the nations of
the earth.” (Genesis 12:1-3.)
As time went on,
“I Will Not Destroy
It For Ten’s Sake”
Abraham began to
plead with the Lord not to destroy
And the angels left
Abraham and they headed toward
Sodomy
But the people of
Fire and Brimstone
Finally, the angel
said to
How
The angel took
THE
STORY OF AHAB
In the book of 1
Kings 21 we have the story of Ahab and Jezebel. Ahab was the king of
Jezebel and Naboth’s
Vineyard
Well, Ahab was a
spineless jellyfish of a man. He went home and lay across his bed and started
whimpering and crying like a little baby. His wife Jezebel came in and said,
“What are you crying about?” He said, “I want Naboth’s vineyard and he won’t
sell it to me, he won’t trade it. I’ll
be unhappy the rest of my life because I can’t have Naboth’s vineyard.” She
said, “Do you rule over the
Naboth Is Dead
So they had this
great feast and they put Naboth up on high and these wicked fellows came in and
lied and said Naboth had blasphemed God and cursed the king and they took him
out and stoned him to death. As soon as Naboth was dead, Jezebel sent a message
to Ahab and said, “Naboth is dead. Go and take your vineyard.”
Ahab and Jezebel
Went To the Dogs
But the prophet came
to Ahab and said, “Let me tell you something. You have committed wickedness in
the sight of the Lord. The place where the dogs licked Naboth’s blood, Ahab,
they’re going to lick even your blood.” A little bit later they approached
Jezebel and the prophet said to Jezebel, “Jezebel, the dogs are going to eat
you.” That’s what we call going to the dogs.
But sure enough,
Ahab went out into battle one day, he even disguised himself, but a man shot an
arrow and it injured him in the joints of his coat of arms and he was sick all
day long. He commanded them to stand him up in the chariot. He stood up in the
chariot. He was losing blood all day long in his chariot and finally that
evening he died and they took him back to the area where Naboth had shed his
blood and they washed the blood out of his chariot and the dogs came over and
licked his blood right in the place where they had licked the blood of Naboth.
A little bit later
Jehu, a prophet, approached the town and old Jezebel stuck her head out of the
upper story window, she was all painted up with her lipstick and all of her
rouge, and when he looked up and saw who it was, he said, “Throw her out,” and
the eunuchs that waited on her grabbed her and threw her out the window and she
landed on the hard cobblestone down below. She died. Jehu and his friends went
on inside to have a meal and finally he said, “She is the daughter of a king.
Go out and bury her. We ought to give her a decent burial because she is the
daughter of king.” They went out and you know what they found? All they could
find was a skull and her palms and her feet. How much land did Ahab and Jezebel
really need? They didn’t need much for Jezebel, did they? I don’t think they
even needed six feet for her.
THE
STORY OF THE RICH FARMER
How much land does a
man really need? In Luke 12, Jesus told the story about the man that came to
him and said, “Speak to my brother that he may divide the inheritance with me.”
The Lord looked at the man and said,
Luke 12:13-21
Then one from the crowd said to Him,
"Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me." But He
said to him, "Man, who made me a judge or an arbitrator over you?"
And He said to them, "Take heed and beware of covetousness, for one's life
does not consist in the abundance of the things he possesses." Then He
spoke a parable to them, saying: "The ground of a certain rich man yielded
plentifully. And he thought within himself, saying, 'What shall I do, since I
have no room to store my crops?' So he said, 'I will do this: I will pull down
my barns and build greater, and there I will store all my crops and my goods.
And I will say to my soul, "Soul, you have many goods laid up for many
years; take your ease; eat, drink, and be merry." ' But
God said to him, 'Fool! This night your soul will be required of you; then
whose will those things be which you have provided?' So is he who lays up
treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God."
NKJV
UNCLE O. B. PERKINS
My uncle O.B.
Perkins, who preached for over sixty five years, was living in a one-room motel
room and I felt sorry for him. He said,
“I don’t need very much and I’m not going to need it very long.”
MY MOM
My Mom gets a lot of
telephone calls and she got a call from
EXHORTATION
How much land does a man really need? He only needs six feet and I
don’t think any of you are dying to get in it!
This same lesson was presented to a congregation on the west side of
1 Timothy 6:6-10
But godliness with contentment is great gain. For we brought nothing into the world, and we can take nothing out
of it. But if we have food and clothing, we will be content with that.
People who want to get rich fall into temptation and a trap and into many
foolish and harmful desires that plunge men into ruin and destruction. For the
love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money,
have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.
NIV
How much land do we really need? How much
wealth do we really need? How big of a house do we really need? How much power
and prestige do we really need? Not as much as we think. What we really need is
to be rich in the Lord and I hope that you’ll confess your faith in Christ,
repent of your sins and be baptized into Jesus Christ while there is
opportunity. *
*Shelby G. Floyd
delivered this sermon