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Satchel Paige,
the baseball philosopher is credited with the saying, ”How
old would you be if you didn’t know how old you was.” There
are some fairly young people who would give an age much beyond
their actual years and there are some elderly people who would
say that they were in their mid-twenties. We recall one delightful
lady in her late seventies who was asked by her teen-age grand
daughter if old people thought differently than young people
and the spry old girl replied, ”No, they don’t, I know, because
I have asked them.” Frankly, we still like to think of ourselves
as being a Corvette but we must confess that we have a smaller
gas tank than we once had. There is a clever poem about growing
old that says in part, that ”our get up and go has got up
and went.” Certainly our stamina may not be the same in later
years as it once was but our thinking does not need to slow
down. Age to a large degree is a state of mind and as Satchel
Paige infers, we are only as old as we think we are.
Our father-in-law
has just celebrated his ninety-ninth birthday and while his
body may confess to being in its one hundredth year, his mind
is still fresh and sharp. He believes that the return of Christ
is just around the corner and he is longing for the time when
the deaf shall hear and the lame shall leap like the unharmed
deer. If we keep our minds centered upon God and His word
as one of our hymns says, ”0 let our minds rest wholly on
Thy Word,” then we can keep young in our thinking. Jeremiah
tells us that the compassions of God fail not because they
are new every morning. Our father-in-law does his Bible readings
early every morning and as the Psalmist he delights in God’s
statutes and he does not forget God’s word. How sad it is
to see old people in rest homes who are spiritually bankrupt
just waiting to die. Their lives are behind them and they
have no future because they have not invested in the only
thing of lasting value, the promises of God.
It really does
not make much difference how old we are, what is important
is what we have done for God in the years He has given us.
If the answer is ”nothing” then if we are old it just means
that we have wasted that many more years than a younger person.
Paul tells us to ”walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as
wise, redeeming the time.”
Our time is really
all we have to give to God and yet with all the time saving
devices at our disposal, most people think that they have
no time for God. We really are ”too busy” if we have no time
for God. At the judgment seat will Jesus Christ have ”time
for us?” His coming really is just around the corner for all
of us. Paul tells us, ”But this I say, brethren, the time
is short:” and Jesus Christ says to us in the Revelation ”keep
those things which are written therein (in our Bibles): for
the time is at hand.”
Our father-in-law
has lived over 36,000 days. Most of us have lived a great
many less than this, but the big question is not how many,
but how well we have lived them. Truly this is the day which
the LORD hath made;” The big question is, are we rejoicing
and being glad this day in the Lord?
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