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The Price of Vice

One day when I was in line at the grocery, a man was checking out his purchases and I learned the astounding, terrible, but warranted price of vice.The man in front of me was only buying a 24-pack of canned beer and a carton of cigarettes. His bill rang up as $38.14. I was a little taken aback: to my mind, he had nothing to show for his $38.

Now, going to the grocery store for food and coming out with a $38 bill and only a few groceries-actual things to eat-is bad enough. But he ended up with nothing to eat, no calculable nutrition. I'm glad I don't have to spend hard earned money that way.

I recently stood behind a woman at the convenience store where I buy gas and she bought five cartons of cigarettes for a total bill of $122. Again my nosy head turned more than slightly. This may have been because authorities were threatening to raise the tax on cigarettes in our area, and she wanted to beat out a possible price increase. With our state having the lowest cigarette tax prices of anywhere in the U.S., I'm told, an additional tax sounds like a wonderful idea to me. For instance, because of budget cutbacks in our area, the county school system currently has no paper on which to print tests for the students, and the students have to waste valuable time (busy work) copying their tests off the chalkboard or marker board as the case may be. (That's not to say that some schools don't waste paper and money, but oh the priorities here!)

Now, perhaps you say I can afford to act superior about these taxes and vices because I don't happen to be affected by them. Suppose they were going to impose a new, special tax on coffee. Or tea (now that's a novel idea.) Suppose the coffee tax doubled the price of coffee. (I switched to decaf coffee a couple years ago, but a coffee habit is a coffee habit and I am guilty as charged.) If that money were going to pay the growers a fairer price for their coffee, I would be fine with it. If it were going to other worthy causes, I would also be fine with it. Maybe it would force me to cut back on my consumption a little, and that would probably be good for me (not work my bladder quite as hard).

As it is, I do spend a considerable amount on coffee, probably $10 a week when you count the price of my gourmet, "fairly traded" brand at the coffee shop in our building, and roughly one bag a week of the cheaper kind I make myself at home. My dad always says he went around the world on the money he didn't spend on cigarettes. What could I be doing with an extra $520 a year? Throw in my vices of donuts, red licorice and popcorn, and the total tab on my vices might run closer to $1000 a year.

That's where vices get personal, and telling someone else what they should do is never effective. If I drink coffee because I enjoy the flavor, the routine, the small "pick me up" from daily tasks, who am I to condemn the next guy who uses cigarettes or a cold beer in the same way? Therefore, I am no better than anyone else.

Still, we would be wise to keep our vices in check, and look at the total expenditure. And look at the health consequences for our bodies and the health of our families. The Bible speaks of the body as being a temple for God's spirit, to take care of and cherish (1 Corinthians 6:19). But still, I should never judge the vice of the next guy, or the woman standing in front of me at the convenience store. Now that's a lesson worth learning.

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Contributed by Melodie Davis from her weekly columnANOTHER WAY (http://www.thirdway.com/aw/).For information on using Another Way in a local newspaper, contact:ANOTHER WAY, 1251 Virginia Ave., Harrisonburg, VA 22801-2497; or call1-800-999-3534; fax at 540-434-5556; or email me at:Melodie@mennomedia.org

 


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