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Behold This Is The Time
Ephesians 5:15-5:17
\\ I’m sure you’ve noticed that each year almost all the major news magazines put out an issue with special pictorial sections recalling people and events that made news during the previous year.
And, of course, this year the events and heroes of war in Irag and the election dominated the news reviews of 2004.
And now the far east earthquake.
Many of the magazines also include articles by experts predicting what they expect to see happening in the years ahead.
Some even go so far as to make predictions covering 10, 20, or more years in the future.
In the past, a few of these predictions have proven amazingly accurate, while others couldn’t have been more wrong.
For example, back in 1967, experts predicted that by 2000 technology would have taken over so much of the work we do that the average American work week would be only 22 hours long, and that we would work only 27 weeks a year.
As a result, one of our biggest problems would be in deciding what to do with all our leisure time.
I don’t know about you, but that prediction certainly missed the mark in my life.
In fact, most of us are very busy people.
We’re always in a hurry.
We walk fast, talk fast, and eat fast.
And after we eat, we stand up and say, "Excuse me.
I’ve gotta run."
So here we are, at the first Sunday of 2005.
I wonder how we’ll do this year?
Will we be as busy?
Will we make any better use of our time?
In 364 days, when the year is over, will we be looking back with joy, or with regret?
Will we be looking at the future with anticipation, or with dread?
I believe Ephesians 5:15-17 can be of help to us as we look forward to the rest of 2005 if we’ll listen to it.
It says, "Be very careful, then, how you live - not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil.
Therefore do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will is."
I think that in this passage the Apostle Paul presents some important lessons that we need to consider.
\\ 1. OUR TIME ON THIS EARTH IS LIMITED
First of all, we must be very careful how we live because our time on this earth is limited.
The Psalmist wrote, "Show me, O Lord, my life’s end and the number of my days; let me know how fleeting is my life" (Psalm 39:4).
And then in Psalm 90:10, "The length of our days is 70 years - or 80, if we have the strength...they quickly pass, and we fly away."
Now, I realize that for some of you younger folk, 70 or 80 years sounds like a long time.
I can remember when I thought anyone over 40 was ancient, but, not any more.
It is all rather relative, isn’t it?
For example, to teenagers who think they are in love talking in the car for an hour or two seems like a blink of an eye.
But for mom and dad worrying about what’s going on out in that car, an hour or two seems like a long long time.
Psalm’s tells us to “number our days, so that we will develop a heart of wisdom.”
\\ A few years ago People Magazine published an article entitled "Dead Ahead" telling about a new clock that keeps track of how much time you have left to live.
It calculates an average life span of 75 years for men and 80 years for women.
So you program your sex and age into the clock, and from then on it will tell you how much time you have left.
It sold for $99.95.
I didn’t buy one.
But it is an intriguing idea.
In fact, that’s what the Psalmist said to do - to number our days.
So if I live to be 75 years old, I have about 11108 days left to live.
That’s all, just 11108 days left to live.
But wait a minute.
I don’t have a guarantee of even one day more to live.
We saw that in the death of Reggie White this week at 43.
In fact the Bible tells us not to count on tomorrow because tomorrow may not come for you or for me.
All we have is right now.
So our time on this earth is valuable because it is very limited.
So, next Paul tells us to …
2.
MAKE THE MOST OF EVERY OPPORTUNITY
Paul tells us that we must make "the most of every opportunity."
and he gives a reason, "because the days are evil."
Jesus said that Satan is a thief and a robber, and one of the things he tries to rob from us is our time because time is a very precious possession.
Just think of the time wasted in sinning.
Think of the time wasted in bars, or gambling casinos, or in shallow sexual affairs, or on internet pornography.
Think of the time wasted in gossiping or spreading rumors.
Or think about all the time wasted worrying about the consequences of the sins we have committed.
Satan is a thief and a robber!
But it is not just sin that makes demands on our time.
Sometimes even good things can make demands.
Jesus went to the home of Mary and Martha and Lazarus.
He sat down to teach, and Mary was sitting at His feet just soaking in every word.
Meanwhile, Martha was out in the kitchen preparing dinner.
The story teaches that Martha gets upset because Mary is not in the kitchen, too.
So she complains to Jesus, "Lord, don’t you care that my sister has left me to do the work by myself?
Tell her to help me!" "Martha, Martha," Jesus answered, "You are worried and upset about many things, but only one thing is needed.
Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her" (Luke 10: 40-42).
Now was Martha committing a sin by fixing a meal in the kitchen?
No, of course not!
But here’s the problem.
She was so preoccupied with what she was doing that she didn’t realize that God was in her living room teaching the very words of life.
That’s the same mistake that you and I make every day.
We get so caught up in the here and now that we fail to deal with the eternal, the things that will last.
Richard Swenson, a medical doctor, wrote a book in which he discusses one of the major maladies of our time - anxiety and stress.
He calls it "overload," and says that people are just plain overloaded.
1.
We’re overloaded with commitments.
We’ve committed ourselves to go here and there, to take part in this activity and that social function.
As a result we soon begin meeting ourselves coming and going because we have overloaded ourselves in the area of commitments.
\\ 2.
We’re also overloaded with possessions.
He says our closets are full, and our garages are overflowing.
We get all of these things that we "simply must have."
And now we’re afraid that someone will steal them.
We store them up and hide them away until we don’t even remember all that we have.
We are overloaded in the area of possessions.
3.
We have an overload in the area of work.
We get up early, fight traffic, and experience poor working conditions because we have to if we’re going to pay for all those possessions that we’ve accumulated.
4.
We have an information overload.
He said that as a doctor he has to read 220 articles a month just to keep up with all the changes in his profession.
And now with the internet there’s an information superhighway.
But the problem is that we can’t possibly absorb it all.
So we feel an overload in this area, too.
I could go on and on, but you get the picture.
There are so many demands on our time, so many good things that need to be done.
But there are just 8,760 hours in this year, and we’ve already used 35 of them.
We do want to make the most of every opportunity, so what are we to do?
\\ 3. UNDERSTAND WHAT THE LORD’S WILL IS
What are we to do? Paul says, "...do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will is."
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