pastarticles.htm
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Some
Things Never Change
(Minute Meditation - October 2005)
The
following was published in The Christadelphian
magazine in 1888:
It is not what we earn,
but what we save, that makes us rich.
It is not what we eat,
but what we digest, that makes us strong.
It is not what we intend,
but what we do, that makes us useful.
It is not what we read,
but what we remember and make our own in reading, that makes us learned.
With all the changes
that have taken place in this world of ours in the last 117 years, it
is remarkable how true all these sayings still are today.
People can earn a lot
of money and yet be broke. Others can earn much less and yet, by wise
saving and investing, become wealthy. The problem of not digesting what
we eat still helps the drug industry become rich selling all kinds of
medicines to help us absorb our food so that it can nourish our bodies.
Back then there were no fast foods but no doubt some folks ate their slow
food as quickly as some eat fast food today.
It is not what we read
but what we remember and make our own that helps us. The expression about
things ‘going in one ear and out the other’ also can apply
to our reading -- sometimes we are not really absorbing what we read.
All too often we allow our minds to wander as our eyes scan the words;
our brain is not engaged, like a car in neutral with the motor running.
Just as a car can move only when we put it in gear, we learn only when
we train ourselves to absorb and remember what we are reading.
Today there is much
more garbage in print than ever before in history, but even back in 1888
one still had to be choosy as to what to read. In 1888, there was no temptation
to watch too much television, look at lurid web sites or go to the wrong
kinds of movies, but books, magazines and newspapers were available. The
computer slogan of GIGO (Garbage In, Garbage Out) did not exist, but even
then it was possible to fill the mind with the wrong things. Paul’s
advice to think about things that are true, honest, just and pure is advice
to feed our minds the right things, true in his day as well as ours. There
really aren’t any new temptations, but certainly modern science
has made all the old ones even more accessible than ever before.
Good intentions are
the first step to faithful service, but when they are not acted upon,
they are like empty dreams. It has been said that ‘the road to hell
is paved with good intentions.’ Although a fiery place of torment
is a false idea of hell, not taught in the Bible, we also fool ourselves
if we think that it is good enough to spend our time daydreaming of wonderful
deeds that we would like to do. It is only what we accomplish that makes
us useful. James gives us the example of a brother who is hungry and cold
being given the hearty advice to be warmed and filled; unless we actually
provide food, clothing and a warm place, the words are empty and worthless.
We want to be useful in the Lord’s service, and to do that, we have
to be doers of the word and not hearers only. In the parable of the judgment
seat, those who tended to the needs of their hungry, thirsty, naked and
sick brethren were not only commended as if they had been caring for the
Lord himself, but were rewarded with life eternal. We need to intend to
serve our Lord and then to act on it.
So the wrong ways are
not new and have been with us even longer than back in the days of 1888.
We pray with Solomon as he prayed in his day for his people that our Heavenly
Father will “hear thou in heaven, and forgive the sin of thy
servants, and of thy people Israel, that thou teach them the good way
wherein they should walk.” We need to take what we learn about
that good way and act on it, so that when our Lord returns he may say
to us, “Come ye blessed of the Father, inherit the kingdom prepared
for you from the foundation of the world.”
Robert J. Lloyd
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