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Podcast Short: How Do We Look at Time?

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Manage episode 443647807 series 2933397
Inhalt bereitgestellt von Craig Lounsbrough. Alle Podcast-Inhalte, einschließlich Episoden, Grafiken und Podcast-Beschreibungen, werden direkt von Craig Lounsbrough oder seinem Podcast-Plattformpartner hochgeladen und bereitgestellt. Wenn Sie glauben, dass jemand Ihr urheberrechtlich geschütztes Werk ohne Ihre Erlaubnis nutzt, können Sie dem hier beschriebenen Verfahren folgen https://de.player.fm/legal.

How Do We Look at Time?

“Time is the great intimidator, steadily stealing away precious seconds with no pause in the stealing. And such thievery leads us to believe that in time, the pilfering of these seconds will eventually exhaust all such seconds, leaving us at the ‘end’ of everything. Yet, God states that the seconds are actually the countdown to the ‘beginning’ of everything.”

How do we look at time? As a thief? As something that moves way too fast? As something that robbed our youth and is eroding our lives with every tick of the clock? Do we see it as something that there’s never enough of? Do we see it as something that moves faster the busier that we become, so there’s never any chance that we will ever be able to catch up? Or, do we see it as something that drags when we’re bored, so much so that we’d gladly forfeit the time just to get out of the boredom? If we’re tired of life, or frustrated with our circumstances, or if we just don’t care anymore, do we wish that time didn’t exist in the first place so that we’d be free of whatever it is that we want to be free of? How do we look at time?

But is it possible that time is a resource? And in the expending of that resource (that we call time) is it possible that we can invest in something that we never really thought of? Something that we never really considered? Is the trade-off expending time that we can’t get back, for something that we can? Are we investing in something that can change a life, or alter the trajectory of a marriage gone sideways, or bring healing to someone who’s wounded, or give a bit of light to someone who’s living out their life in nothing but darkness? Is time a resource (when used wisely) can shape a community, touch a nation, or change the world? And more profoundly than all of that, is it something that God has given us to use now that it can have an eternal impact that is not bound by time at all? Is time the thing that we use to bring people to a God Who’s deepest desire is to ultimately bring all of those people to a place called “eternity” where there is no time?

If we use our time to achieve things like this, the passing of time and the loss of that time in the passing is infinitely offset by the good that came out of that time. No, we can’t get time back. No, it’s not a renewable resource. When it’s gone, it’s gone. But what if the expenditure was offset by the good that came out of that time? What about that? And what if that expenditure touches a life for an eternity of time? I would think that that is time well spent, and I would think that it makes the time we have the place from which we change things for all of time.

  continue reading

184 Episoden

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Manage episode 443647807 series 2933397
Inhalt bereitgestellt von Craig Lounsbrough. Alle Podcast-Inhalte, einschließlich Episoden, Grafiken und Podcast-Beschreibungen, werden direkt von Craig Lounsbrough oder seinem Podcast-Plattformpartner hochgeladen und bereitgestellt. Wenn Sie glauben, dass jemand Ihr urheberrechtlich geschütztes Werk ohne Ihre Erlaubnis nutzt, können Sie dem hier beschriebenen Verfahren folgen https://de.player.fm/legal.

How Do We Look at Time?

“Time is the great intimidator, steadily stealing away precious seconds with no pause in the stealing. And such thievery leads us to believe that in time, the pilfering of these seconds will eventually exhaust all such seconds, leaving us at the ‘end’ of everything. Yet, God states that the seconds are actually the countdown to the ‘beginning’ of everything.”

How do we look at time? As a thief? As something that moves way too fast? As something that robbed our youth and is eroding our lives with every tick of the clock? Do we see it as something that there’s never enough of? Do we see it as something that moves faster the busier that we become, so there’s never any chance that we will ever be able to catch up? Or, do we see it as something that drags when we’re bored, so much so that we’d gladly forfeit the time just to get out of the boredom? If we’re tired of life, or frustrated with our circumstances, or if we just don’t care anymore, do we wish that time didn’t exist in the first place so that we’d be free of whatever it is that we want to be free of? How do we look at time?

But is it possible that time is a resource? And in the expending of that resource (that we call time) is it possible that we can invest in something that we never really thought of? Something that we never really considered? Is the trade-off expending time that we can’t get back, for something that we can? Are we investing in something that can change a life, or alter the trajectory of a marriage gone sideways, or bring healing to someone who’s wounded, or give a bit of light to someone who’s living out their life in nothing but darkness? Is time a resource (when used wisely) can shape a community, touch a nation, or change the world? And more profoundly than all of that, is it something that God has given us to use now that it can have an eternal impact that is not bound by time at all? Is time the thing that we use to bring people to a God Who’s deepest desire is to ultimately bring all of those people to a place called “eternity” where there is no time?

If we use our time to achieve things like this, the passing of time and the loss of that time in the passing is infinitely offset by the good that came out of that time. No, we can’t get time back. No, it’s not a renewable resource. When it’s gone, it’s gone. But what if the expenditure was offset by the good that came out of that time? What about that? And what if that expenditure touches a life for an eternity of time? I would think that that is time well spent, and I would think that it makes the time we have the place from which we change things for all of time.

  continue reading

184 Episoden

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