A man ought to get wisdom when he’s young, not when he’s too old for it to matter. We spend a lifetime learning, then we get old, and most of our livin’ is done and it don’t seem like there’s any use for what we’ve learned. It’s like skinnin’ a frog: takes a lot of time and work, but when it’s done what’ve you got? There’s no use for a frog hide.”
“It is not for you to know times or seasons which the Father has put in His own authority.”
–Acts 1:7 (NKJV)
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“O the sighing of the pines
Up here among the timberline
Makes me wish I’d done things different
But wishing don’t make it so.”
–Ian Tyson
As the years roll on by, what does one do? Do they waste away the hours twiddling their thumbs while sitting in the rocking chair moaning. . . moaning about the things they wish they had done, or about the things they did? Do they look in a new direction for sure the body can handle the pressure and the exertion it once did? What is the answer? In coming to some sort of a conclusion let us look at what Peter has to say,
“Nevertheless, do not let this one fact escape you, beloved, that with the Lord one day is as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day.”
–2 Peter 3:8 (Amplified)
In my way of thinking, Satan made a mistake (of course he did) when he took the Lord and offered Him all the peoples of the world if He would bow to him. Jesus looked out upon the scene. He didn’t think of grandeur, He didn’t think of power (remember, He was a man when tempted in the wilderness). When he looked out, “He saw the kingdoms of the world in a moment of time–not in their glory but in their unrighteousness.” (George Matheson) Seeing the kingdoms only helped Him in His resolve to carry out His purpose.
Can we not have a new glimpse of life in the later years? I remember being told by many folks older than me back when I was in my prime that time passes faster as you get older. Hmmm, I didn’t believe them, and I know that it doesn’t, or–does it? How many hours were wasted in the past? How many weeks and months were wasted on activities that didn’t help the Kingdom of God? Those hours can never be retrieved. Matheson writes, “In age I have the sense of wasted years and little time to retrieve them. I am deterred from amendment by despair. How can the short time at my command outweigh the long years I have squandered!”
Oh me, oh my–the days of my life are shorter. The end is closer than the start. Do not let me despair. Ahh, but the Lord has the answer with the verse above. It is as if the Lord is saying to me, to us, that He doesn’t measure our path by length of time. “One day in My courts can retrace the steps of a thousand days outside My courts.” (Matheson)
In the eleventh hour of life what is the Holy Spirit speaking to you? He is saying that “one hour with Me will redeem a thousand erring years.” (Matheson) In other words, life for the day–life is living. Life in the power and guidance of the Holy Spirit. Let Him direct your steps, and more important let Him direct your mind and heart. Make today count–make it worth a thousand years.