Share the HEART of health on GivingTuesday

 

We always need a   #GivingTuesday. 

There are always people with needs. Just a few years ago it was a viral pandemic that threatened people’s incomes. This year it’s inflation. And that creates an opportunity for us all to help.

Observed on the Tuesday following Thanksgiving (in the U.S.)   #GivingTuesday kicks off the charitable season, of holiday and end-of-year giving.

a global generosity movement unleashing the power of people and organizations to transform their communities and the world.

givingtuesday.org

“GivingTuesday was created in 2012 as a simple idea: a day that encourages people to do good. Over the past seven years, it has grown into a global movement that inspires hundreds of millions of people to give, collaborate, and celebrate generosity.”

sharing the HEART of giving

My goal for this blog is to inform and inspire us all to explore the HEART of health in our lives, and the lives of our families and communities. But beyond that, my mission for this blog is

to share the HEART of health with people all over the world,

Watercress Words mission

especially those who face hardship due to poverty, isolation, discrimination, political turmoil, hunger, homelessness, human rights violations, and natural disasters.

drawing of a laptop with GIVE on the screen
graphic from LIGHTSTOCK.COM, affiliate site for stock photos and graphics

So for Giving Tuesday, I’m asking you to give to one or more of the groups I have featured on this blog and personally have or do support. The links below take you to stories about their mission and links to their sites where you can

And the good Samaritan is…

Jesus told the story of the good Samaritan to answer the question,

“Who is my neighbor?”

The term “good Samaritan” means a person who goes out of their way to help someone, especially a stranger, often at  personal sacrifice.

A Shining Spirit- Kayla Mueller

Soon after I started this blog a news story caught my attention and my heart.

A young woman volunteer, Kayla Jean Mueller, was abducted following a visit to a hospital run by Doctors Without Borders

Sharing the HEART of health in Panama

I have volunteered on several teams with CompassionLink, an organization that serves to provide

HEALTH RESTORED-HOPE SUSTAINED.

Love conquers fear-a memoir by the Napalm Girl, Kim Phuc Phan Thi

updated April 23, 2024 Even if you are not old enough to remember the war the United States fought in VietNam in the 1960s and 1970s, you likely have seen the Pulitzer Prize-winning photo of the “Napalm girl” running down a dirt road, fleeing an attack that burned most of her body. Taken to a…

Where will you give?

Besides these places, I know you have needs in your community, maybe your own neighborhood. So look for places like a local food bank, women’s shelter, a homeless outreach, coat distribution, faith-based ministry, school, and many others can can use time, talent, and finances.

Dr. Aletha

Why we need the wisest gifts this Christmas

The four Gospels- Matthew, Mark, Luke, John- relate the life of Jesus, but only Matthew and Luke tell the story of his birth and their versions differ. Luke tells about the trip to Bethlehem and the shepherds’ visit. Matthew misses the Bethlehem journey and the shepherds, but from him we meet the wise men- the Magi.

updated December 16, 2024

I didn’t believe it had been four years since I first published this post. And what I wrote is true this year for different reasons.

It’s been a difficult year, not because of a viral pandemic that sickened and killed many people. But people have been harmed by financial strain, weather disasters, wars, and political upheaval.

More than ever, we need to give each other wise gifts.

The Nativity of Christ

Whether you go to a Christian church or not, you likely are familiar with the Christmas story in the Bible as it is depicted in the Nativity. Nativity is a fancy way to say “birth,” but is especially used to refer to the birth of Jesus Christ.

A young couple named Mary and Joseph traveled to Bethlehem for the Roman census.

Mary, pregnant, unexpectedly delivered a baby boy there, in a barn, the only available accommodation on short notice

Local shepherds, directed by angels, came to visit the baby.

And “three wise men”, following a star, came to visit bearing expensive gifts.

3 men dressed as magi, bearing gifts

Except that’s not exactly how the Bible tells it. The four Gospels- Matthew, Mark, Luke, John- relate the life of Jesus, but only Matthew and Luke tell the nativity story and their versions are different.

Luke tells about the trip to Bethlehem and the shepherds’ visit. Matthew misses the shepherds, but from him we learn about the Wise Men.

Most Bible versions call them wise men, a translation of the Greek word Magi, used in the New International Version. The Message Bible calls them “a band of scholars” which might be the most accurate as none of the versions indicate there were only three.

Nor did they visit the barn. Matthew indicates they came to the house, to visit the “child”. So perhaps this was as much as two years later.

The Gifts of the Magi

But however many there were and whenever they arrived, they brought three gifts-gold, frankincense, and myrrh.

The magi, as you know, were wise men—wonderfully wise men— who brought gifts to the newborn Christ-child. They were the first to give Christmas gifts. Being wise, their gifts were doubtless wise ones.

O. Henry

Medicinal Gifts

In a previous post I told you about William Sydney Porter, the author of a story named The Gift of the Magi. Don’t worry, I’m not going to tell the story here, I don’t want to spoil it if you’ve never read it.

I assume William, the real name of O. Henry, must have known this Bible story. Why else would a druggist, ranch hand, magazine editor, and convicted felon write a story about Magi?

As a druggist (although of uncertain credentials) I suspect he knew of the medicinal properties attributed to gold, frankincense, and myrrh. We think of gold’s value in terms of money, but 2000 years ago, people probably valued healing substances more than money.

Doctors once treated rheumatoid arthritis with medicines developed from gold, now mostly replaced with more effective and less toxic drugs. Traditional Chinese medicine uses frankincense and myrrh for their reported anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer effects.

As I write this, scientists are working around the clock studying medicines and vaccines to slow, cure, and prevent the ravages of SARS-CoV-2, a pathogen the world has never encountered before and the likes of one we never want to deal with again. By the time you read this over 50 million people worldwide will have become infected with this novel virus which will have killed 1.5 million of them.

Update note: According to John Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center,as of March 10, 2023,

  • Total cases -676,609,955
  • Total deaths-6,881,955

The world needs healing this year. People have suffered through several pandemics since the time of Christ’s birth. Imagine how frightening the plagues were when science couldn’t explain the source of disease, much less how to prevent it. Even as recently as the influenza pandemic of 1918, how it spread was not understood, and medicines to treat it didn’t exist.

Spiritual Gifts

Christian scholars also attribute spiritual significance to the Magi gifts. Among the many references I reviewed, this one sums up the general consensus.

“gold can be taken to symbolise royalty and kingship; frankincense divinity and holiness; and myrrh suffering and death.”

Although we have no record to indicate O. Henry thought of the gifts in spiritual terms, he conveyed an unexpected and ironic picture of what “wise gifts” are.

Perhaps the wisest gifts we can give this year of loss, friction, unrest, blaming, pain, sickness, and death are understanding, patience, listening, caring, generosity, forgiveness, friendship, and love.

It’s worth reading, or re-reading the story; watching or listening to it. Do it before you start Christmas shopping; you may change some of your choices. And we should all thank William, aka O.Henry, for leaving us the gift of

sharing the HEART of Christmas

Please share this post as a gift to friends. Thanks.

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Dr. Aletha

Many people find using their phones a convenient way to read and meditate on the Bible. And it’s easy to do so with the Dwell Bible App.

With Dwell you can listen to and read the Bible and special devotional offerings for Advent, Lent, and throughout the year.

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What a Pharmacist Taught Us About Christmas

William Sydney Porter was a writer whose tales explored the meaning of life through irony. Born in 1862, he faced personal tragedies and accusations of embezzlement, leading to prison. There, he honed his writing skills, producing over 600 stories before succumbing to addiction and illness in 1910. But before he died he left the world…

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