Time with Jesus -10 Dec 2013
Hi all,
Alert Einstein was right. Time is relative and often depends
on our relatives. Old people will not be hurried. Some of them freely admit
that they would like to “hurry up”, but time has a habit of making a mockery of
earlier abilities. In other words, top speed for pensioners is ±slow motion to those
under 40.
If we think about this for a moment we conclude that
this is normal. Time is relative to our individual thinking. As a child,
waiting from Monday to Saturday, was interminable. Although time passed at the
same “rate” we tend to measure it subjectively.
When we were 4 years old, we
had been alive for ±1460days. So 5 days represents 3.4% of your life. But at 40
years of age (±14600days), 5 days represents 0.034% of your life. It’s not rocket
science to realise that the same time interval, although exactly the same in
terms of hours, minutes and seconds, (HMS) seems to grow “shorter” as we get
older.
Why is this important? It accounts for many of the
mistakes we make as young men or women. When we are in our late teens and fall “passionately
in love with someone”, parents usually suggest, “You’ll get over it in a week
or two!” True enough in terms of HMS. But two weeks to a teenager seems a
lifetime. It did for me anyway.
I remember going to boarding school at the
beginning of a new term. I remember calculating the number of days before going
home again. Typically it would be ±80 days. Then it was a question of counting
off the days. At first it was done with enthusiasm. Then, as the days went by, school
life became great fun and “time” mattered less and less.
In the mid 1960’s, I came across Peter’s comment on time
relativity.
He wrote 8 But you must not
forget this one thing, dear friends: A day is
like a thousand years to the Lord, and a thousand years is like a day. 9 The
Lord isn't really being slow about His promise, as some people think. No, He is
being patient for your sake. He does not want anyone to be destroyed, but wants
everyone to repent. 2 Peter 3:8-9 NLT
What bothered me was that along with His other “qualities”,
God is omniscient. If so, how can He see “a thousand years is like a day”? It
contradicted all my engineering studies. It was a real “canackler”. How could
such a statement be true? As an added complication, I believed (and still do)
in the inerrancy of Scripture. So how could God see a day like a thousand years?
That’s when I started to think back on those seemingly interminable days between
the holidays in boarding school and my “time jottings”. Then it dawned on me. 1
day of our time, to God in infinity; and a thousand years of our time, to God in
infinity/ was the same. 1/∞ is ± the same as 365 X 1000 /∞ In other words, Peter
was a pretty good mathematician, although he probably didn’t know it.
Another way to look at it, is to think about Jesus’
ascension into heaven. It took place on a Thursday. Since then approximately
2000 years have passed. According to God’s “clock” that is ±2 days. So in terms
of God’s timing, we are now somewhere in the middle of Saturday. i.e. Jesus hasn’t
been away for the weekend yet! We are somewhere in the Divine Sabbath. “Tomorrow
is “The Lord’s Day” (Sunday). Presumably we can expect Him to return on the
third day. i.e. on Sunday. (The Lord’s Day) According to this mathematics, we
can expect Him at any instant.
In this sense, we are waiting for the Lord. However, we
are encouraged to wait on the Lord. What’s the difference? It’s
considerable. If we are waiting for Him, we could be anywhere at any time on
any day. He is expected. We just don’t know when. Next week; next month; next
year; we simply don’t know when it will be. Many people have tried to predict
exactly when He will return.
It seems their predictions are no better than my
mathematics. Jesus pointed this out as follows: 35 "Stay dressed for action and keep your lamps
burning, 36 and be like men who are waiting for their master to come home
from the wedding feast, so that they may open the door to him at once when he
comes and knocks. 37 Blessed are those servants whom the master finds awake
when he comes. 40 You also must be ready, for the Son of Man is coming at an hour you do not
expect." Luke 12:35-36 & 40 ESV
But the instruction to “wait on the Lord” is not exactly
the same thing. It goes beyond awaiting His arrival. It implies being actively
involved serving Him. The Psalmist states: 14 Wait on the LORD: be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart: wait, I say, on the
LORD. Psalm 27:14 KJV John Gill
comments on this Scripture as follows: - It is good to wait upon the Lord; many
are the favours and blessings such receive now, and eye has not seen what God
has prepared for them that wait for him.
Christianity is not intended to be a time of idly
standing by, looking at others and waiting for Jesus to return. Paul’s first
letter to Timothy, from the beginning of chapter 4 to about the middle of
chapter 6, gives us his comments on living a Godly life. Even a superficial
reading gives a clear idea of correct and proper behaviour.
During Bible days, Paul came across believers in Thessalonica
who expected Jesus to return at any moment. They were not wrong in believing
that to be the case. What was wrong was for them to “sit around” waiting for it
to happen! Paul corrected this perception and told them to get to back to work.
If Paul wandered round Christianity in the Western World today, he would see
much the same. No doubt he would deal with it the way he did all those years
ago. More important, Jesus would react in much the same way.
Shalom
Matt 10:8
Freely you received, Freely give |
Time with Jesus – Tuesday, 10 December 2013
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Matt 10:8
Freely you received, Freely give |
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©
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These
devotionals are the intellectual property of Jim Strickland and copyright
protected. You are welcome to copy and distribute them to anyone provided it
is for non-commercial Christian purposes
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©
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INTRODUCTION
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DAILY
LIGHT EVENING SCRIPTURES
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WAIT
ON THE LORD
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Do
you remember asking the question when you were little, “How many more sleeps ‘til
Christmas”? How about when your children asked the same question? Do you
remember counting down the days? Later in life it became something like, “How
many days until the end of term?” or “How many days until the wedding?” I
remember that so well? As a 14 year old, I travelled from Port Elizabeth to
Vereeniging on the train. The train left PE at about 19h00. The train journey
was fun. We were up and messing round for all the next day and arrived in
Vereeniging Station at about 04H30 the following day. The journey seemed to
take an eternity. But the SAR food was wonderful. The stewards would serve
meals in the Dining Car. They had learned the art of swaying with the motion
of the train and very seldom was anything spilled or broken. I’ll never
forget the cutlery. Big heavy knives, forks and spoons stamped SAR. The cups,
saucers and plates had a similar identifying pattern. I particularly remember
the small coffee cups. You don’t see this size all that often these days. I
remember an unsuccessful effort to get the entire cup into my mouth. I was
never successful. I wonder what the other passengers thought about these
schoolboys and their pranks?
Waiting
for things back then didn’t seem to be half as difficult for us as it does
now. We know that the perception of the passing of time is relative. As
someone pointed out many years ago, ten seconds sitting on the hot plate
seems much longer than ten minutes spent talking with a pretty girl. But time
definitely has a relative concept. As a schoolboy, a month seemed like a
lifetime. For Phyllida and me, the years slip by at breakneck speed and seem
to fly past more quickly with each successive year. It’s a bit like the old
song from Fiddler on the Roof, Sunrise,
sunset / Sunrise, sunset / Swiftly fly the years - One season following
another / Laden with happiness and tears. These lyrics were
sung by the women with a poignancy we can almost feel.
And why not? Our life here is
so short. As the Psalmist, probably David, wrote, 11 My life passes as swiftly as the
evening shadows. I am withering away like grass. Psalm 102:11 NLT One “sneeze” in eternity and we
are gone. But not the Lord. He is timeless, infinite and changeless. He can
“afford” to wait. He is never in a hurry. He is the Alpha and the Omega. He
is at the beginning and the end. Both instants are the same for Him. Peter
tells us, 8 But you must not forget
this one thing, dear friends: A day is
like a thousand years to the Lord, and a
thousand years is like a day. 2 Peter 3:8
NLT The point is, He will act when everything is ready; in His own
good “time”. We have no other choice but to wait for Him. Waiting gives us an
opportunity to exercise patience. Grab it now!
Jim &
Phyllida
Strickland
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1
"On my bed night after night I sought him Whom my soul loves; I sought him but did not find him.
Song of Solomon 3:1 NASB
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Waiting for
the Master. I wonder what it means.
Is it lying
on the bed and pondering our dreams?
Is it like
a lover, longing for her mate,
Thinking of
the glory they had on their last date?
Is it like
a traveller, waiting for the train,
Hoping that
it’s punctual and isn’t late again?
Is it like
an athlete when the training’s done.
“On your
marks, Get ready. Where is that starter’s gun?”
Is it like
a woman waiting to give birth,
But that
nine month interval’s the longest time on earth.
Is it like
a family whose men folk went to war,
Fearing for
they safety. Will they come home once more?
Is it like
a faithful pet at his master’s tomb?
Hoping that
he’ll see him. Will he be coming soon?
Is it like
a mother sitting by the bed
Of her
infant daughter. Her face all stained and red
Is it going
to happen? “Lord, let her survive.
Lord I will
do anything to take her home alive!”
Is it like
a murderer in the condemned cell.
Thinking in
an hour or two he’ll be consigned to hell?
Yes, it
could be all of them. It also could be none.
It could be
the certainty that when the time is done
Jesus will
embrace them and they will hear Him say
“My good
and faithful servant, you’re here with Me to stay!”
All of us
have been there in a scenario.
Muttering
and grumbling, “The time is going slow”.
“When is He
arriving? It’s getting very late.
I would
have done the washing if I’d known I’d have to wait!”
We all have
a problem understanding time.
We talk of
punctuality. But Jesus Christ Divine
Is not in
our dimension the way we understand.
There’s no
“time” in eternity. So anything we’ve planned
May not be
in the sequence which we anticipated.
The last is
first. The first is last, This cannot be equated
With Father
God’s priority. And He will only act
When all of
His requirements are an established fact.
So if we’re
sitting waiting and champing at the bit.
A little
word from Jesus. “I think it’s time you quit!”
Jim Strickland
Written
10th
December 2012
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1 Return, O Israel, to the LORD your God, for your sins
have brought you down. 2 Bring your
confessions, and return to the LORD. Say to Him, "Forgive all our sins
and graciously receive us, so that we may offer You our praises.
Hosea 14:1-2 NLT
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13 And remember, when you are being tempted, do not say,
"God is tempting me." God is never tempted to do wrong, and
He never tempts anyone else. 14 Temptation
comes from our own desires, which entice us and drag us away. 15
These desires give birth to sinful actions. And when sin is allowed to grow,
it gives birth to death. 16 So don't
be misled, my dear brothers and sisters. 17 Whatever is good and perfect comes down to us from God
our Father, who created all the lights in the heavens. He never changes or
casts a shifting shadow.
James 1:13-17 NLT
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14 Wait patiently for the LORD. Be brave and courageous.
Yes, wait patiently for the LORD.
Psalms 27:14 NLT
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26 It is good to wait quietly for the salvation of the
LORD.
Lamentations 3:26 TNIV
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7 Won't God give his chosen people justice when they cry
out to him for help day and night? Is he slow to help them?
Luke 18:7 GW
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For the choir director; according to Jeduthun; a psalm by David. 1
My soul waits calmly for God alone. My salvation
comes from him. 2 He alone is my rock and my saviour-my
stronghold. I cannot be severely shaken. 3 How long will all of
you attack a person? How long will you try to murder him, as though he were a
leaning wall or a sagging fence? 4 They plan to force him out of
his high position. They are happy to lie. They bless with their mouths, but
in their hearts they curse. Selah 5 Wait
calmly for God alone, my soul, because my hope comes from him.
Psalms 62:1-5 GW
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