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Condensation is
commonplace in today’s modern world. From condensed milk to
powdered eggs and potatoes we find that many familiar items
are reduced, condensed, or dehydrated so that they take only
a fraction of their former space. Records are reduced to micro
film, even the dead are cremated to a handful of ashes.
In reading the
lives of the kings of Israel and Judah we find that a life
of some 30 to 70 years is eventually reduced to just one sentence.
”And he did that which v as right in the sight of the Lord,
according to all that David his father did.’ Or, ’And he did
evil in the sight of the Lord, and walked in the way of Jeroboam,
and in his sin wherewith he made Israel to sin.” In between
these two extremes we find ”And he did that which was right
in the sight of the Lord, but not with a perfect heart” and
”He did that which was evil in the sight of the Lord, but
not as the kings of Israel that were before him.’
Has it occurred
to us that our life is also going to be condensed to just
one sentence. What will that sentence be? Think of all the
things we have done, all our hopes, plans, all our activities,
all the things we have learned, places we have gone, people
we knew, goods we acquired, money we earned and spent, jobs
we’ve held, homes we’ve owned, cars we’ve driven, children
we’ve raised, degrees we’ve received, awards we’ve won. meals
we’ve cooked, a whole life of activity, condensed to just
one sentence. Let’s stop where we are right now and contemplate
that sentence. If it were to be written today, what would
that one short sentence say? We need to remember Paul’s words
of warning ”For not he that commendeth himself is approved,
but whom the Lord commendeth.” We know what we would like
to say if we could write that one sentence condensing our
whole life into just a few words, but we are not the one that
will pronounce it. Jesus will reduce our whole life into just
a dozen or so words. What will he say about us’? Although
he will state the verdict, we are the ones that will give
him the material from which he will condense a life to a word.
When milk is condensed, the non-essentials are removed and
only the solid nutrients are left. When gold is refined in
the fire, the dross is burnt up, the gold remains. When the
wheat is winnowed, it is the chaff that blows away. When God
condenses our life, all the extraneous non-essentials will
be gone. What will be left? Only what we did for Jesus will
remain.
Take a life of
66 years, 22 years of sleeping will be taken off, while another
22 years of laboring for the bread that perishes can in the
main be discounted. We’ll have spent almost 6 years eating,
a good 4 or 5 years commuting to and from work, perhaps 3
solid years of just reading the daily newspaper. We may have
consumed 3 years in school and how many years we frittered
away on trifles light as air, only God knows.
Now let’s take
just a week instead of a lifetime and condense it down to
just one sentence. We spent 168 hours last week. None spent
more and none less, but how did we spend them? Would Jesus
be able to say that we did that which was right with a perfect
heart, right but not with a perfect heart, or evil, last week?
Only the things we did for God will count. How much of the
last 168 hours counted?
If Christ does
not come this week, we will have a brand new 168 hours to
spend and if he does not come this year, we’ll have 8,736
hours to fill with the things of God or the things of this
life. Next week and next year can be different from last week
and last year. It all depends on how we choose to fill those
hours. May Jesus say of us at his coming that we did that
which was right in the sight of the Lord.
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