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Love and the Electric Tea Kettle

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My poor old tea kettle had finally kicked the bucket. I walked into the kitchen one morning and found water covering the stove top. It had whistled its last whistle. But I knew one thing for sure. I didn't want a new electric one to replace it.

With all kinds of electrical gadgets, TVs and now even computers adorning kitchens, I was determined to keep at least one thing that embodied for me a slower, gentler, less complicated era—a simple, stove-top tea kettle. Besides, we didn't have room on the counter anyway.

There was just one problem. My husband really wanted one.

After a trip to visit his sister, he came home raving about electric kettles.

"They cut the boiling time in half and don't heat up the whole kitchen!"

Since we live in Florida, he thought this was a real plus in their favor.

But I couldn't be persuaded. I'd rather die of heat exhaustion before I cluttered up my counter.

However, since I hadn't found the exact kettle I wanted yet, I began using a small pan. What a mess. It poured everywhere except in the cup, left hard-water stains on the interior and seemed to take forever to boil. The longer the situation went on, the more frustrated I became. Why couldn't I find the kettle I wanted?

Then brought the answer into focus:

"Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others." (ESV)

I knew I needed to want the kettle that my husband wanted. Isn't that how love is supposed to work? And isn't that how it worked when we first got married? We actually enjoyed wanting what the other one wanted, not because we really wanted it ourselves, but because we loved them and they wanted it.

I realized this was an opportunity to give my husband the gift he had so often given me — the gift of wanting what the other wants.

So early the next Saturday, I said, "You know what? I think we do need an electric tea kettle. You want to go help me pick one out?"

I wish you could have seen my husband's face as he nearly jumped out of bed. He couldn't get ready fast enough!

But it turns out God had been waiting for this very change of heart to give me something much more than just a tea kettle.

We soon found one we liked and it was even on sale. But I would have been willing to pay much more for the special light it brought to my husband's eyes that day. As he squeezed my hand and led me excitedly through the store toward the kitchen appliances, that light clearly said,

"This is my wife and I love her. She cares deeply about every detail of my life — even tea kettles."

Yes, I would have paid dearly for the priceless gift that seeing those thoughts gave me.

And surprise, surprise—there was room on the counter after all, without looking cluttered.

Imagine that.

Now I'm the one raving about how fast the water boils and also, about the filter which keeps all the hard water "gunk" out of the cup. Had I known about the totally clear tea I could have been drinking all along, I would have gotten an electric one years ago.

But I'm raving even more about the God who loves us too much to stop working in our hearts.

Sometimes, we just don't know what we're missing by wanting what we want. We think that what we want is the best choice and that it will make everything good and right and better. But often our choices are actually settling for so much less. I'm very grateful God didn't allow me to settle for what I thought I wanted.

Now as I pour another steaming cup of tea and set the kettle back in place, I know I always want to make room on the counter of my life for what God wants to put there—a wonderful blessing that I may be resisting.

"For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways …" (ESV)

Copyright © 2013 by Debbie Burgett. Used by permission.

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About The Author

Debbie
Burgett

Debbie Burgett is a missionary with New Tribes Mission and a contributing editor for the mission's magazine, NTM@work. She is a graduate of Florida Bible College with a B.A. in Biblical Studies, Early Elementary Education, with a minor in Theology. Debbie is married to her sweet husband, Rand, and homeschooled their five children for 16 years. You can read both her thought-provoking missionary articles and transparent personal stories at www.ntm.org/rand_burgett.

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