Do you use either of these two words? Peculiar? Treasures? Do you ever use them together: peculiar treasures? 

I rarely say, or write, peculiar.

I rarely state, or type, treasures.

I rarely mention, or journal, peculiar treasures. 

But in my book Things We’ve Handed Down: Twelve Letters I Leave for You, I used those two words as the title of the introduction: “Peculiar Treasures.” Since all the book’s chapter titles—plus the introduction’s title and the conclusion’s title—come from the titles of books which have impacted and influenced my life, I started the book with this one. It fits. Peculiar Treasures: A Biblical Who’s Who, a book by Frederick Buechner, fits. Right there, as the book’s introduction, the book title fits.

Not because my book is peculiar or a treasure or a peculiar treasure. 

Because you are.

Because I am. 

We are each unique. All created in God’s image, but all unique. 

Peculiar? I guess.

Treasures? Absolutely! 

Read my book, Things We’ve Handed Down.

Read Buechner’s book, Peculiar Treasures.

In his book, Buechner wrote about biblical characters. He describes them in his creative way. The introduction reveals how writing the book invigorated him: “What struck me more than anything else as I reacquainted myself with this remarkable rag-bag of people was both their extraordinary aliveness and their power to make me feel somehow more alive myself for having known them” (Peculiar Treasures: A Biblical Who’s Who, Harper & Row, 1979).  

It did that to me, too. That is why I selected his book’s title as the title of my introduction. His book introduced me to biblical characters I had read about, studied about, preached about, wrote about. And it fit the direction of all the chapters of Things We’ve Handed Down. All the peculiar things, all the treasures, all the peculiar treasures that have been handed down to us and that we can hand down to others. 

So, let us read and learn. And let us live as God’s peculiar treasures.