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About Mitali Perkins

Mitali Perkins is the author of Ambassador Families: Equipping Your Kids to Engage Popular Culture (Brazos Press). She studied Political Science at Stanford University and Public Policy at U.C. Berkeley, and has written for Christianity Today, Discipleship Journal, Campus Life, With, Prism, War Cry, U.S. Catholic, and other periodicals. Mitali also writes fiction for young readers, including Monsoon Summer (Random House), The Not-So-Star-Spangled Life of Sunita Sen (Little Brown), Rickshaw Girl (Charlesbridge), and the First Daughter books (Dutton). She lives in Massachusetts with her husband and twin sons.

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Mitali Perkins

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Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Buy Nothing Friday

The poet William Wordsworth put it well: "The world is too much with us; late and soon. Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers." This Thanksgiving Weekend, during what is usually the biggest shopping holiday of the year, people in as many as 65 countries will take part in the 15th annual Buy Nothing Day, a global fast from shopping. Why not join the bandwagon of resistance against one of the most insidious temptations in our culture? The lure to buy and own more stuff is so much a part of the way we operate that it's hard to see how it keeps us away from our true selves, one another, and our God.

Don't get me wrong, I don't want to hurt retailers and those who work for them, but it's only been a few decades since blue laws kept us from buying and selling one day each week. Economists have yet to prove that one day off each week, let alone one day a year, can damage a healthy economy or ruin a good business. It's hard to say that to a small business owner who counts on Black Friday for a significant part of his revenue, but maybe Buy Nothing Day requires a riskier sister phenomenon called Sell Nothing Day, during which all of us trying to "get and spend" take a break and focus on gratitude. Thoughts?
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Most Recent User Comments
agjacob
11/23/2007 11:17 AM
Reading I Timothy 6:6-10 this morning on "Black Friday" as well as seeing this article by Mrs. Perkins reminded me of how important it is to be "countercultural" in a stuff-saturated America. Sometimes it is sad to see even " Christian" bookstores peddling reams and reams of material, a lot of which merely repeats the obvious. Sure, some Christian media products are actually useful, but the degree of congruence in the marketing methods of the 'Christian" media and non-Christian media gives one cause for pause. In seeking to engage the world we end up becoming like that which we ought to be transforming through the power of the Holy Spirit.

Ms Perkins has hit the right buttons... it's NOT only on Black Friday that we should buy 'nothing' unless its needed but keep in mind what Paul wrote to Timothy: " But if we have food and clothing, we will be content with that." (I Tim 6:8)