Repaying A Gift
A few weeks before last Christmas, we had my son and daughter compile a list of the gifts they most desired. Topping my son’s list was a Playmobil castle—a huge, grey castle that looks like the kind of toy every boy dreams about. He asked for this with some hesitation, though, because he knew that it was expensive. We told him several times leading up to Christmas that we did not think we would be able to afford such a toy. Neither Aileen or I were raised in families that celebrated Christmas or birthdays with hundreds of dollars worth of presents, so the pricetag of the castle would be quite a stretch for us. In the end, we settled on a smaller castle, still Playmobil, but one that was the “bad guy” castle instead of the “good guy” castle.
When my son opened this gift on Christmas morning we could tell that he was both thrilled and disappointed. He had so badly wanted that big castle but knew it was unlikely that he would receive it. When he saw a big box on Christmas morning he thought that maybe, just maybe, we had splurged and bought it for him. But when he opened it, he saw that it was almost what he had wanted, but not quite. Still, he was happy with the gift and put a brave face on it. If he was exceedingly disappointed, he masked it well for a five-year old. We were proud of him.
When his birthday rolled around in March, the Playmobil castle was still at the top of his list. Knowing now that his desire for this castle was not just a passing fancy, we decided that we would break form and buy it for him. We shopped around a little bit, found the best price, and bought it. When the day of his birthday arrived we hid the box and had him open all his other gifts first. When he had opened a couple of gifts from us, and gifts from other family members, he seemed truly pleased. It was then that I went downstairs and returned with that huge box. His eyes went wide and he exclaimed, “You didn’t! No, you didn’t!” We put the box before him and he made short work of the wrapping paper. His eyes lit up and I think I saw a tear in his eye as he saw that long-awaited castle. I think it was made sweeter by the waiting. We built the castle for him that afternoon (I did half before falling asleep and Aileen had to finish it off. I had just returned that morning, via the red-eye, from the Shepherd’s Conference in California!) and it has given him countless hours of pleasure in the months since then. It remains his favorite toy.
One little event struck me later that afternoon. The castle had been built and my son had already been playing with it for a few hours. After I woke from a short nap I went downstairs to watch him enjoying his toy. When he saw me, he ran up to his room and returned clutching something in his little hand. He walked up to me and handed me a loonie, a one dollar coin. He explained that he knew the castle was very expensive and that we could not really afford it. He wanted to give me a dollar to help with the expense. It was a touching moment, really, and one that showed a sweet innocence, for of course his one dollar coin could hardly repay the castle. I explained to him that it was my privilege to give him the castle as a gift and that he could show me gratitude not by attempting to pay me back, something he could not do despite his best efforts, but by playing with the castle and receiving from it a great deal of joy. That seemed to satisfy him, so he put his money in his pocket and continued to play with his new toys.
I think there is a lesson in my son’s behavior, though one that did not register in my mind and in my heart until I read The Great Work of the Gospel by John Ensor. So often, I realize, I have been just like my son, attempting to repay God for His gifts. I attempt to provide good works as repayment for mercy. God gives us grace as a gift and does not expect us to repay Him for it. As with myself when looking at my son, God’s satisfaction is not in our attempts to repay Him, but in seeing our heartfelt delight as we rejoice in His free gift. The gift is cheapened when we attempt to repay it. John Ensor writes, “His reward as a gift giver is in the gladness of heart that we experience in receiving his gift as a gift.” Ensor points out another reason we cannot pay for our sins by doing good works as a tradeoff for God’s mercy. “Anything we do with a motive of adding to the work of Christ so as to win the forgiveness of God becomes the ground of self-satisfaction in our own goodness, rather than trust in God’s grace.” In receiving this gift from me, my son was unable to boast. Had he saved his money and paid me back, he could have led his friends to the playroom and said, “Here is a castle I earned.” But with the gift I gave him, all he can boast in is in having a father who loves him and who knows how to give him good gifts.
My son’s motives were pure. He felt some measure of guilt in receiving a gift he felt we could not afford. And so he tried to repay me, but in a way that was inadequate, impossible and in denial of the very fact that what I gave him was intended to be a gift. I expected no repayment and took my joy in my son’s delight. And there is the lesson for me. God wants me to receive mercy and grace as a gift. Even my best efforts at repaying Him merit me nothing. What God desires is that I receive His gift as a gift and that I return to Him all the praise and the glory through enjoying what He has so graciously given me.




Comments (19) »
1. Don Fields
August 17, 2006
9:45 AM
Excellent post! Perfect illustration for the point. I will have to use this sometime for a sermon illustration. John Piper talks about this very thing in his sermons through Galatians. He calls it the “Gratitude Ethic”.
“It says that God has done so much for me that I will devote my life to paying back my debt even though I know I will never be able to completely. And even though most Christians who work out of this gratitude ethic would say that they are not trying to earn their salvation, nevertheless, when they start working for God because he has given them so much, it is very easy to begin to think of God’s free gift as a loan to be repaid or as advance wages to be earned. So the gratitude ethic tends to put you in the position of a debtor instead of a son. And that is slavery. None of us feels completely free while we are burdened with a debt to be repaid. Christ does not want you to relate to him as a debtor who uses the law to make installment payments on an unending loan.”
2. Susanna
August 17, 2006
9:47 AM
I love this story and being there at christmas to see Nick really be a good sport about not gettting exactly what he wanted was really cool to see. I remember his words cause his obvious determination to struggle against disapointment really touched me/everyone else too I think…he said basically with total openness/sincerity, “I’m really trying to be thankful!” Anyways, a good reminder too as you say to remember to just enjoy God’s good gifts.
3. Kyle
August 17, 2006
9:51 AM
This is a precious story. Thanks for sharing.
4. elisha
August 17, 2006
10:14 AM
What a beautiful story… and a vivid illustration. Thank you.
5. Brian Thornton
August 17, 2006
10:24 AM
“Anything we do with a motive of adding to the work of Christ so as to win the forgiveness of God becomes the ground of self-satisfaction in our own goodness, rather than trust in God’s grace.”
That is so true. This may be one of the hardest things for the Christian to grasp, as we naturally feel that we must somehow do things to pay back our heavenly Father. We are so inclined to doing things ourselves…the only problem is that we quickly fall into a mode of self-righteousness or works-righteousness.
Michael Horton and the others at the Whitehorse Inn have discussed this also. They point out that our motive for doing things should never be to gain something from God (favor, justification, praise, etc.), but that the works we do after salvation should flow from a heart of gratitude for what the Savior has done for us.
Our Pastor touched on this same thing this past Sunday…he said that we should be involved in the ‘service of gratitude’…works that flow, not from compulsion, but from a heart that is thankful for what Christ has done on our behalf.
6. Renee
August 17, 2006
10:29 AM
A sweet story. I was touched by how much more thankful your son was for the waiting. As I was not saved until later in life, I can also say the Father’s gift of grace is so much sweeter. While I sometimes regret that I ran from Him for so long, I am today extravagantly grateful.
7. diane
August 17, 2006
10:46 AM
Thank you thank you thank you for sharing this story! A perfect illustration! It brought forth tears in my eyes!
8. Dan S.
August 17, 2006
11:09 AM
Thanks Tim. My 6-year old has been asking for that exact same castle for the last year or so. Perhaps it’s time to start saving up. At least you settled for the “bad guy” castle. We have only just bought the good guys and bad guys themselves.
9. Heidi
August 17, 2006
2:15 PM
wow, that is so true about God’s gift to us - story brought a tear to my eye.
10. Mike
August 17, 2006
5:34 PM
God gives us children, I think, to provide us with illustrations and examples of what He is like. In the face of a child, we see the joy of God in spending time with us; in that same face, we see what He yearns to see in our own faces as we come to Him.
Like a child who delights in a gift, so God desires that we delight in all that He has given us; like a parent whose heart is warmed by his child’s joy, so God’s own heart is warmed as we rejoice in His provision.
“Behold, children are a gift of the LORD, the fruit of the womb is a reward.”
God delights in us as we delight in our children. How utterly amazing is His goodness!
11. bethany
August 17, 2006
6:34 PM
when sharing the gospel, i often use a story like that one to explain grace to others… (evangelism explosion anyone?) but it was touching to read~ thank you for your consistency in updating!
12. Gypsie
August 17, 2006
9:44 PM
Is this a good place to leave a comment for my Thirsty Theologian friend? I never know how to respond to your comments. Anyways. You’re right! I can make the blog look different. Took me w while to figure it out, but thanks. :) Question: I gluttony wrong? If so, is bulimia wrong? What about being ‘overwieght?’ Where do you draw the line?
God bless,
Elizabeth Gypsie
13. david
August 17, 2006
10:47 PM
Hi Gypsie,
My comments work the same as these, so you’d best go there to ask your question or we’ll both get banned for hijacking Challies’s comment thread.
Yes, I noticed you figured out the Blogger template. I almost went blind!
14. Ron Harvey
August 17, 2006
11:16 PM
Tom, Your son is destined to pastor a mega church … he likes things “BIG!”
15. steveprost
August 17, 2006
11:36 PM
As the first comment by Don Fields touches on, this is a point at the essence of Piper’s ministry and writings that so often deal with the issue of motivation for our good works, which should be joy (Desiring God), especially joy that our work shall be rewarded exponentially (not as a wage) in the future (Future Grace) and shall essentially consist in God Himself gloriously reflected in his benefits.
Gratitude is extremely important to Piper (derivatively from an Edwardsian view of Scripture), but he is correct that gratitude is not a biblical motive for further works, but an intrinsically good praise-inducing attitude. While the logic of our duty and the ability to DO good “sacrificial” works are grounded in a view of God’s past mercies to us, our MOTIVE is the intrinsic further joy to be pursued in our heavenly God, chiefly Christ Himself.
I hope if the Lord tarries, time will prove Piper to have been instrumentally influential in shifting what has to now been the primary stated Reformed motive for Christian living. Gratitude, the chief motive for praising God now. Joy, the chief motive for continuing on in faith.
16. Philippa
August 18, 2006
5:04 AM
This story about your little boy brought tears to my eyes.
It never ceases to amaze me how so many evangelicals, while professing to believe in justification by faith, can be so burdened by guilt and perfectionism, which often leads to soul-crushing legalism (towards themselves and others).
This is a beautiful, profound post that brings us right back to the heart of our faith.
Thank you, Tim. This really blessed me. :)
17. Brendt
August 18, 2006
10:17 AM
I had no small measure of laughter at “You didn’t! No, you didn’t!” and no small measure of comfort/encouragement from the application.
Excellent post !!!
18. GWilly
August 18, 2006
10:58 AM
I also was encouraged by the illustration. It brings grace closer to home than the ” get a speeding ticket-go to the judge-the judge is your dad-he takes off his robe and pays your fine” story.
When I was 9 or ten, the item at the top of my Christmas list was a camera, just one those cheap Kodak 110s from the 70s. My mom was non-committal on whether or not I would get one. When a small box, hard in the center, soft on the sides, appeared under the tree, my heart was ready to bust with excitement. On Christmas morning, I beamed “I know what this one is, so I will save it for last.” Still no comment from my folks. Can you imagine my horror when instead of my long-expected camera, I opened Brut Soap-on-a-Rope. I cried a river. There was no consolation. How glad I am that our perfect Father gives perfect gifts to us.
19. Christina
August 19, 2006
2:13 PM
Thank you for a wonderful story! I’ve been reading John Piper lately and like others who have commented it reminds me of his writing. BTW, my son recieved that castle from his grandma when he was 6 and he still plays with it all the time. He is almost 10!