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Time.
Like sand, it slips through our fingers.
We sense its speed when we are startled by of our own reflection in a storefront window.
Who the heck is that old lady?
We can’t deny it’s power when we notice the ever-widening gap between our teenage son’s socks and his pant leg.
We mourn the loss of time when the baby we rocked parades across the graduation stage.
Yet no matter how hard we try, we can’t hit the pause button.Time keeps chugging forward, seeming to gain momentum as we grow older.
In a futile effort to fight back, we set aside time.Like a kid at the beach—we dig feverishly in the sand—only to have the demands of life come flooding right back in.
You see, we can’t make time.
Time isn’t something we can find either.
Time can’t be bought or manufactured.
There are only two things we can do with our time: WASTE IT or REDEEM IT.
My kids are obsessed with the arcade and they jump up and down when they hit the jackpot and a hundred tickets stream out the slot. To me, these tickets are flimsy pieces of paper that I throw in the garbage.They have no value in and of themselves unless you present them to the attendant at the counter.
The same is true of our time. Our time is worthless unless it’s presented to the One with the authority to redeem it.
Paul warned the believers in Ephesus: “Walk carefully, not as fools but as wise, REDEEMING the time, because the days are evil.” (Eph 5:15-16)
So, how do we REDEEM our time?
MAKE IT COUNT - Offer each day to God. Every morning pray: I give this day to you. Your will be done, not mine.
ASK GOD WHAT HE WANTS YOU TO DO - Sit with a notebook and ask God one question: What is one thing you want me to do today? Not ten things, not a five-year plan, not a bible verse or word for the year. JUST ONE THING. It doesn’t usually sound grand. It oftentimes feels random. On many occasions, I fear I made it up. But when I step out in faith and do whatever it is—God shows up in a powerful way.
FIND THE LOOSE HOURS - Scurry and find the loose hours—like stray tickets— laying around and cash them in. What if you gave up the hour you spent scrolling through Facebook and spent it in prayer? What if you started a weekly small group for women? What stray hours can you redeem?
In Psalm 90, Moses prayed: “Teach us to NUMBER our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.”
I used to think this verse was imploring us to count our days. My math equation looked like this:
365 days a year x 80 years (the average life span) = 27,375
Yet as I studied more, I realized it doesn’t say we are to COUNT our days but to NUMBER them.
My husband and I helped my parents move out of state several years ago. My mom was extremely organized. Every box was not just COUNTED but NUMBERED 1-60. The most important boxes—the ones that really mattered—were written on a pad of paper and packed last.
God isn’t up in Heaven with a giant jar of marbles and each day we rise—kerplunk!
God doesn’t COUNT our days—he NUMBERS them. The first day you offer to him and try to do his will, he leans over his nightstand and scribbles in his Book of Remembrance, Day One.