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”Make no useless
acquaintances, learn no useless skills or subjects.” This
statement is attributed to Rothchild.
In this age of
high technology there is so much we can learn about almost
anything and everything. There are experts in fields and specialists
on subjects that should be of no interest to us.
We once knew a
man who could tell you which team won every world series since
they began and he had all the lifetime batting averages memorized
of all those in baseball’s hall of fame. One man, while in
prison, memorized the county seat of every county in every
state in the union. These are good examples of learning useless
subjects.
The same is true
of our acquaintances. We tend to become like those with whom
we associate. We need to pick carefully our friends and acquaintances.
What do our friends like to talk about? What do they like
to do? Is this compatible with our walk in the Truth? The
kind of friends we pick tells God a great deal about us.
How we spend our
days is, of course, how we spend our lives. If we spend our
time learning useless subjects, developing useless skills
and associating with useless acquaintances, our life will
be useless so far as God is concerned.
The wise man Solomon
said that ”making many books there is no end;” He said this
before the printing press was invented and if Solomon could
visit a large library today he would certainly underline his
true statement.
We need to become
selective in the books we read, in the skills we develop and
in the friends we cultivate. We will never know everything
about anything. What is important for us to know? Paul told
young Timothy that ”the holy scriptures are able to make thee
wise unto salvation.” Is there anything more important for
us to understand than God’s plan with the earth, and with
us’?
The Sunday newspaper
for most large cities weighs several pounds, and you would
not get it all read before the next Sunday, if you read it
all day long for a week. There are, of course, the six daily
papers that arrive in between.
We should not want
to spend our valuable time filling our minds with the volumes
of stuff that bombard us every day by way of our newspapers
and magazines as well all that comes to us by way of the radio
and television.
We are wise to
realize that so many things that the world considers important
have no real lasting value yet these unimportant things consume
their time and their life. It is so true that how we spend
our days is how we spend our lives. We need to resolve to
follow Solomon’s wise advice when he said, ”Whatsoever thy
hand findeth to do, do it with thy might; for there is no
work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in the grave whither
thou goest.” Let us be sure that what our hand finds to do
is something worth doing. We need to make sure that the world’s
trivia does not consume us causing us to spend our time learning
useless skills or subjects.
The Psalmist tells
us that ”The Lord taketh no pleasure in the legs of a man.”
We might add, nor is He impressed by our handicap in golf
or our bowling average or our stamp collection or trading
cards.
This being true,
let us he careful how we spend our days for that is how we
spend our lives. Paul gave us good advice when he said, ”See
then that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise,
redeeming the, time, because the days are evil. Wherefore
be ye not unwise, but understanding what the will of the Lord
is.”
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