Truth for Dark DaysMuestra
The Brevity of Life
Life passes us by a lot more quickly than we imagine. I vividly remember the birth of my first child—and then, it seemed he was a teenager only a few weeks later. Suddenly, we wake up older and we realize that any given moment may be the only moment we have left to live for Jesus Christ because life is very brief.
As we age, our physical and mental abilities fade, old friends pass away, familiar customs which have been routine disintegrate, and our long-held ambitions lose their potential. These realities, though, shouldn’t drive us into despair but stimulate us. There is an opportunity in every day! As Derek Kidner writes, “Death has not yet reached out to us: let it rattle its chains at us and stir us into action.”[1] With the minutes that remain in our lives, we can lift up our eyes and look on the fields, because, as Jesus said, they’re already “white for harvest.” (John 4:35)
The Bible doesn’t encourage us to wait until we graduate or get married or settle down or sort ourselves out or retire to serve Christ. Rather, it encourages us to live in the awareness of what James, the brother of Jesus, says: that we shouldn’t say, “Tomorrow, we’ll go here or go there and get gain and do this and all these things,” but instead respond, “If the Lord wills, we will do this or that” (see James 4:13, 15). We do so because, as James also reminds us, our lives are but “a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes.” (James 4:14)
Before the strength in our hands fails us and our teeth, eyes, and ears grow weak, will we choose to live for Jesus Christ? If we wait until tomorrow, tomorrow may be too late. As C. T. Studd once put it, there is
Only one life,
’Twill soon be past.
Only what’s done
For Christ will last.
[1] Derek Kidner, The Message of Ecclesiastes, The Bible Speaks Today (Leicester, UK: Inter-Varsity, 1976), 104.
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While Christ’s death saves us from sin’s penalty and power, there’s no denying that we still live in a fallen world marked by sin’s presence. When facing tragedy and sorrow amid dark, uncertain days, where do we turn for comfort? In this Bible plan, Alistair Begg leads us through a series of readings that remind us of the hope that lies in the sovereignty and goodness of our heavenly Father.
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