| | http://www.christianitytoday.com/workplace/articles/attitude/whenlifebegins.html
""When Life Begins
By Michael Bruner
This is what the
LORD says—he who made you, who formed you in the womb, and who will
help you: Do not be afraid, O Jacob, my servant, Jeshurun, whom I have
chosen. Isaiah 44:2
The day I graduated from college, my father
gave me a card that read, "Alexander conquered the world at 25,
Aristotle civilized it at 27, and Jesus saved it at 30. What are your
plans?" We all got a good laugh, but the point was made: there is no
mystical age at which life really begins.
From the womb, we are told in Scripture, God has a
plan for each of us. We not only are men and women but also boys and
girls of destiny, and life is nothing less than the opportunity to live
that destiny into fruition. It doesn't magically begin in college when
we choose our major nor come to a grinding halt when we retire.
Destiny, a.k.a. God's Providence, is an equal-opportunity employer; the
choices we make at age seven bear on who we become at 70. So no age is
more important than another. Though the stakes may rise as we age, our
boat was pushed from the shore at our conception, and everything we do
and say from that point on (or that is done and said to us) has some
bearing on … well, on our bearings.
I like the metaphor of life as a journey at sea
because I prefer to see God's Providence more as compass than roadmap.
We aren't given every turn in the road, warned of every pothole, or
alerted to every change in scenery. But we receive a general direction,
and the choices we make at every stage—and age—along the way either
move us in that direction or away from it. It really is that simple:
anything we do either moves us toward or away from God's call on our
lives. Compasses don't forecast the weather, either. Storms will hit
because no one, at any age, is exempt from life's joys and tragedies.
A tendency in our culture, especially among those of
us under 40, is to wait to make commitments. We marry later, avoid
single lines of work, don't live all our lives in one place. We are an
itinerant generation moving from relationship to relationship, job to
job, diet to diet, in search of our lives. Tragically, we fail to see
that our trajectory was set by God long before we had a say in the
matter: where you happen to be in the journey is of no consequence,
only what you do there.
Today is the day that the Lord has made. What are you going to make of it?"" |
| | Posted 3/31/2007 9:36 PM - 1 view - 1 comments
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