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Realizing the presence, promise, and power of the Kingdom of God.
COLUMNS

Not Our Own

T.M. Moore
T.M. Moore

Time for the Kingdom (2)

The day is Yours, the night also is Yours;
You have prepared the light and the sun.
You have set all the borders of the earth;
You have made summer and winter. Psalm 74.16, 17

Never knew what they had
We are living in the last days, the fullness of times when God is advancing a new administration of things on earth. His economy—the Kingdom economy—establishes a new framework in which God is bringing to every area of life and all creation power to restore what was lost in humankind’s fall into sin. He has called and redeemed a people for Himself. He has bestowed on them the high privilege of knowing the secrets of His Kingdom, and He calls them to seek and advance that economy for His glory and their benefit.

For many of us, thinking about time as a gift from God, given moment by moment anew, will be something of a revelation. But it’s just another of the secrets of the Kingdom to which we who believe are privy. We all have the same amount of time, but we may be only beginning to realize just how precious these fleeting moments are.

Susie and I sometimes enjoy watching “Antiques Road Show” on our local PBS station. I’m always amazed at the knowledge of the appraisers, their understanding of the provenance and peculiar details and beauty of the item they’re considering. 

I may look at a cabinet, for example, and think it’s interesting or even beautiful, but I’m sure I wouldn’t know why, or whether my judgment was reliable beyond an expression of my own taste. I’m not in on the secrets of furniture appraising.

But what I particularly enjoy about this program is watching the faces of people who learn, through the detailed explanations given by their appraiser, that this old piece of junk they’ve stacked books on for years is really a precious and quite valuable artifact. They never knew what they had because they didn’t understand what it was. 

However, the resolve of every one of them, from that moment on, is to treat this discovered treasure with the respect it deserves.

What is time?
The time of our lives is like that. We take our time for granted, which is not to say that we don’t value it. We do, and we try to use it well for all the things we consider to be most important. 

But I suspect that most of us don’t think of time as a precious gift from God, bestowed by our Creator, one moment at a time, for a particular use and purpose in line with His advancing Kingdom economy. For most of us, time is just something out there, something everybody has, that we use up as the moments pass for whatever matters most to us at the moment, in the confident belief that we’ll always have more time to do more of the same.

But now we’re beginning to learn the Kingdom secret of time, and our view of time is changing.

What is time, really? Can you go down to the local grocery and purchase a box of it? Can you swap some of your time with a friend so that you get better time, or, at least, time you consider to be more valuable? 

And what about the time you had yesterday? Where is it? And the time for tomorrow? Why are we so certain it will be here when we need it? 

Time is not only a gift of God; it is also a creation of God as well. God does not exist within time; He is eternal and does not experience anything like the succession of moments we know as time. God made time and He gives time to His creatures, one moment at a time, every day of our lives. 

Time exists somehow within God (Acts 17.27, 28) and is dependent, like everything else, upon His upholding Word (Heb. 1.3). Time is not ours, but God’s, and He reserves the right to determine what constitutes the best use of His most precious gift. 

The secret of a Kingdom view of time is that the way we use our time can lift us above time and have eternal consequences. How’s that for a secret?

Measuring time
We measure time, from the human perspective, in various ways—seconds, minutes, days, weeks, months, years, and so forth. But these are not true quantitative measurements of some material quantity, like a half gallon jug measures a certain amount of milk. Our measures of time are more on the order of estimates (as we think of the future), experiences (with respect to the present), and records (as we think about the time that is gone by). 

All time comes from the Word of God (Jn. 1.1-3), is sustained by the Word of God (Heb. 1.3), and returns—like the talents in Jesus’ parable—to its Creator and true Owner (Rom. 11.34-36). There is as yet no future time, and the time we’ve used up is gone forever; we cannot return to it. Every moment of your time comes fresh from the Word of God and returns immediately to Him for His review.

The only time we ever have is the present moment, and each of those is supplied for us, as an act of free grace, by the eternal God and His Word. And He has a point for why He does that.

Our King has a precious purpose in mind for the time He gives us—that we might know Him, enjoy His blessings, express His glory, and demonstrate His love. For the most part, however, the human race squanders the time God gives them for merely personal and pragmatic ends.

So what about us, we who profess to have made the Kingdom turn and think of ourselves as followers and servants of King Jesus? Our time is not our own, just as we who know Jesus Christ are not our own (1 Cor. 6.19, 20). What we hardly think of as more than passing moments for temporal endeavors, God creates and bestows as investments of eternal glory, to be used and enjoyed as creatures destined to live with Him forever. 

All time is God’s time. The better we understand this the more we will invest our time for the purposes of God’s Kingdom.

For reflection
1. Many people waste a good bit of the time allotted them each week. In your own experience, what are some of the more common “time-wasters” that you’ll need to confront?

2. “All time comes from the Word of God (Jn. 1.1-3), is sustained by the Word of God (Heb. 1.3), and returns—like the talents in Jesus’ parable—to its Creator and true Owner (Rom. 11.34-36).” Do you think most Christians understand the significance of this statement? Why or why not?

3. What is God’s purpose for the time of our lives? How might we begin to know that purpose more clearly?

Next steps—Transformation: Here’s a challenge for you. Review the way you spent the time allotted to you yesterday. What percentage of that time was consciously spent and consciously invested for Jesus our King and His glory? What can you do to begin improving that percentage? Ask a church leader or pastor for some suggestions.

T. M. Moore

Give thanks
If you have found this meditation helpful, take a moment and give thanks to God. Then share what you learned with a friend. This is how the grace of God spreads (2 Cor. 4.15).

Other columns of interest this week: This week in our Read Moore we begin selections from our book, Understanding the Times. This book will be a valuable companion to our study of “The Kingdom Economy.” In our Crosfigell column we’re following Brendan, a 6th century Irish saint, as he pursues the Kingdom economy in his extraordinary adventures. Our daily Scriptoriumcolumn takes up the Gospel of John this week in our continuing series, “Jesus throughout the Scriptures.”

Thank you.
Many of you are faithful and generous in praying for and supporting ReVision and The Fellowship of Ailbe. Thank you. I encourage all our readers to seek the Lord about becoming a supporter of The Fellowship of Ailbe. It’s easy to give to The Fellowship of Ailbe, and all gifts are, of course, tax-deductible. You can click here to donate online through credit card or PayPal or Anedot, or send your gift to The Fellowship of Ailbe, P. O. Box 8213, Essex, VT 05451.

Except as indicated, Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

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