5 Biblical Truths About Time and Productivityഉദാഹരണം
We’re in a plan exploring 5 biblical truths about time and productivity. Yesterday, we saw Truth #1: That our longing for timelessness is good and God-given. Today’s passage from Genesis reveals Truth #2: That while we still long for timelessness, sin has ensured we will all die with unfinished work.
When sin entered the world, death was ushered in alongside it. Human beings, who were created to be immortal, became mortal. Work, which was created to be good, became difficult. Time, which was created to be infinite, became finite.
In short, sin has ensured that nobody will ever finish the work they envision completing in their lifetime. Karl Rahner, a prominent twentieth-century theologian, said it this way: “In the torment of the insufficiency of everything attainable, we learn that ultimately in this world there is no finished symphony.”
Haunting, depressing, and so so true. We will all die with unfinished symphonies. Our to-do lists will never be completed. There will always be a gap between what we can imagine accomplishing in this life and what we can actually get done.
Quite an encouraging devotional, huh? But don’t quit this plan just yet! I promise great hope is right around the corner, but we have to start here because our grieving over the finiteness of time is the clue that gets us to that hope. How so? C.S. Lewis answered that question when he famously said, “If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world.”
So, if we long to accomplish more than what sin will allow us to in one lifetime, it’s logical to assume that we were made for a different, timeless story. And that is precisely what the Christian narrative is all about—that while it may appear that we will all die with unfinished symphonies, ultimately this is just an illusion as “God is able to bring eternal results from our time-bound efforts” (to yet again quote Jen Wilkin). That is the hope we will turn to tomorrow!
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Why is time management so hard? I’d argue that our perennial productivity problems are rooted in something deeper than the wrong to-do list apps or daily planners. They’re rooted in misconceptions of what we believe about work, time, and the role we have to play in God’s mission in the world. What does Scripture have to say about these things? In this plan, we’ll explore five answers to that question.
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