The sign in the natural museum above the scale read, How much are you worth in gold? Standing on the scale multiplies your weight with the present days gold price.
Quite a clever gimmick. Many of us have heard the old saying used of a good person that they are worth their weight in gold. Well, according to the price of gold and my weight I am worth about R38 630 592 ($3 511 872) give or take a few hamburgers. Not too bad I think, but then not so great either, if thats all.
Just in case youve calculated your worth in gold and are feeling rich, how much are you worth in actual physical elements? In other words, if the human body is broken down into oxygen, nitrogen and so on and sold, how much would you be worth? Well at todays prices it would be less than R2 000 (about $200). Most of the money would come from the potassium and sodium. Not a pleasant thought.
Something deep down inside of us shouts out that surely we must be worth more than that and yet there are many people who may be feeling totally worthless, let alone worth R2 000.
Survival theme
Theres a beautiful story about human worth that comes out of the ugliness of war. During the second Anglo-Boer War (South African War) of 1899-1902, the English were struggling to defeat the Boers who had adopted guerrilla warfare tactics. One effective way to demoralise the Boers was for the English to round up all the women and children living on farms and put them into concentration camps and then burn the farms to the ground. The conditions in the concentration camps were dismal and thousands of women and children died.
It is said that the women in each camp had a survival theme taken from the Bible. This was to give them hope and encouragement. The theme for Bethulie concentration camp in the south of the Orange Free State was Matthew 10: 29-31. Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them will fall to the ground apart from the will of your Father. And even the very hairs of your head are all numbered. So dont be afraid; you are worth more than many sparrows. This inspired the women and they made a promise that should South Africa ever mint its own coins that they would strive to have their symbol of the lowly sparrow (also known as a mossie in South Africa) embossed on the coin of the lowest value.
After the war Mrs. Marais, who was an inspirational woman in Bethulie concentration camp, spoke to Mrs. Steyn the wife of the president of the Boer Republic of the Orange Free State and asked her to help them get the emblem of the sparrow onto the lowest coin, to thank God that they had survived the war and to remind the men and women of South Africa of their true worth in Gods eyes. Mrs. Steyn took up the challenge and in 1923, after many years of trying, and with the help of General Jan Smuts, then Premier of South Africa, the quarter penny came out with the emblem of two sparrows on the reverse side of the coin, perched and looking at each other. As far as is known, this made South Africa the only country in the world to symbolise a Bible verse on one of its coins.
In 1961, after South Africa had converted to the decimal system, a new lowly half cent coin was minted with the same original design of the two sparrows looking at each other. In 1965 a new 1c coin was minted that also had the two sparrows on it. The design was slightly different to the first, with one bird sitting higher up on another branch and the birds looking away from each other. This same design was also used on half cent coins minted after 1972. With the launch of new coins in 1991, a design based on the original one of 1923 was used, once again with the two sparrows looking at each other on the 1c coin.
Money is worth less and less it seems and in the last few years the lowly 1c coin has ceased to be minted. The symbol of the lowly sparrows of Mathew 10 is no more.
A pearl of great value
However, let us never forget that our worth as human beings is far greater than all the sparrows and gold coins in the world. That in Gods eyes we are unique, each and every one of us. If God knows how many hairs we have on our head, surely he knows our needs, desires, joys and sufferings.
In Matthew 13:46 Jesus describes the Kingdom of Heaven as a merchant looking for fine pearls who, when he found one of great value, sold everything he had and bought it. You are that fine pearl of great value. Worth much more than a lowly 1c coin. God who created everything and owns everything was willing to sell all that he had to purchase you. He paid the greatest price he could, he gave us his all. He gave us his Son. Paul reaffirms this in 1 Corinthians 6:20 and says that we were bought at a great price. Never forget your worth in Gods eyes. You are worth everything to Him. You are special, you are wonderfully made and you are dearly loved.
Footnote:
Bethulie is a small farming town in the Free State Province of South Africa. The town formed around a Christian mission station set up in 1829. The name Bethulie means chosen by God.