By William
MacDonald
It is good
to remind ourselves often that life is like a coin. We can spend it any way we
want. But we can spend it only once. Therefore it is of great importance that
we frequently stop to reflect on what should go in to the making of a life. I
have tried to list some of the considerations that seem to be crucial in this
regard.
Have I
successfully differentiated between my daily work and my calling? For most
people, their secular employment should be a means to put food on the table, a
roof over their head, and to give money to the work of the Lord. The job is
honorable and necessary, but is not the main thing. The Lord Jesus was a
carpenter, but that was not His calling. The great aim of his life was to seek and
to save that which was lost. Paul was a tentmaker by trade, but he was called
to be an apostle of Jesus Christ. God never intended that anyone should be born
a man and die a grocer.
When a
large oil company approached a missionary to be their representative, they
could not understand his diffidence. Three times they raised their offer, and
three times he refused. "What's wrong?" they asked, "Isn't the
salary. enough?" He replied, "Your price is
all right but the job is too small. God has called me to be a missionary."
I should
ask myself, "Is the main thrust of my life of consequence in the light of
eternity?” Henry Bosch wrote, "The believer is exhorted to turn away from
the hundred—and—one illusive ambitions that captivate worldly people, ranging
from the desire for fame to the longing for temporary pleasure and earthly
wealth. Instead, he is admonished to dedicate himself to Christ and strive for
eternal treasures." He is a fool if all his plans end at the grave.
Dr. Barnhouse said, "Our life should be lived in the light
of eternity. A hundred years from now, where will you and I be? Surely we
should learn to live, not for the obscurity of these misty moments, but for the
luminous and all revealing light which shall shine through all our motives and our
being far more clearly than any x—ray shines through the flesh of our
bodies."
Jenny Lind,
the famous Swedish opera singer, was converted in
Another way
of putting it is this: Will the results of my work go on after I'm gone?
Someone said that every person owes it to himself to provide himself with some
honorable work while his body is lying in the grave. When I pass off the scene,
either through death or the rapture, will it be said of me, "It was if he
had not lived at all?"
I should
ask myself. "Is my work making such claims on my time and strength that
the Lord's interests are crowded out?" There may come a time in my
profession when I have to say, "Thus far shall your proud waves come and
no farther," when I must refuse a promotion and a raise in pay in order to
fill my role in the local assembly.
From time
to time I should check myself on this: Am I motivated by covetousness in business
- the incessant desire for more, for a higher standard of living? Many are no
longer satisfied just to keep up with the Joneses: they want to lead the pack.
It is a trap that makes us "satisfied to be minor officials in transient
enterprises." We are content to be experts in underwater
basket weaving while above us burns the vision of the Christ upon the
Cross. Every Christian couple should sit down and decide on a standard of
living that they'd be satisfied with in order to put everything above that in
the work of the Lord. That is what is known as living by faith.
Sometimes
we are sidetracked by fame. I ask myself, "Am I motivated by the honors of
the world? Speaking at graduation exercises at
A former
athlete said, "The biggest thrill of my life was when I first scored the
decisive goal in a big match and heard the roar of the cheering crowds. But in
the quiet of my room that night, a sense of the futility of it swept over me.
After all, what was it worth? Was there nothing better to live for than to
score goals?"
Another
consideration is this: Does my work involve me in anything that is legally or
ethically questionable? A Christian can serve in any honorable occupation - but
it must be honorable. Advertising the superiority of a product when no such
superiority exists doesn't qualify. The Lord abominates false weights and
measures. Adam Clark's boss told him to stretch the silk when he was measuring
it out for a customer.
I should
also consider whether my work is in any way harmful to the moral, physical, or
spiritual welfare of others. For example, how can I, as a Christian, sell or
serve hard liquor when I know that it is worse to make a drunkard than to be
one? How can I sell tobacco when I know that it is a carcinogen? I would be
selling cancer by the carton. How can I sell lottery tickets when I would be
catering to the covetousness of the human heart?
Finally, I
ask myself, "Do I feel frustrated by the futility of the way I am spending
my life?" When Dr.
I always
have to chuckle when I think of what C. T. Studd's
friends said to him when God called him to the mission field. "You're mad,
leaving your cricket and going to be a missionary. Couldn't you wait until
you've finished your cricketing days? Couldn't you make more of an impact for
God as a cricketer? Why go as a missionary to a place where they have never
even heard of cricket?" But Studd was leaving
futility in order to find meaning. He was leaving fantasy in order to find
reality.
As servants
of Jesus Christ, we have no right to spend our lives straightening pictures in
a burning house or rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. "When the
world about you is in great danger, works that in themselves are not sinful can
be quite wrong" (Corrie Ten Boom).
I close
with a searching question asked by Michael Griffith; "What will we have to
show for our life? Will it be measured by life's little rewards and successes,
some certificates of education, some silver cups indicative of athletic
prowess, a few medals, some newspaper cuttings, promotion within our profession,
some status in the local community, a presentation clock on retirement, an
obituary notice, and a well attended funeral? Is that all that our life will
have meant?"
To prevent
that from being all, I do well to face up to the foregoing considerations that
go into the making of a life that counts.