Ageless Excuse

It’s amazing to be how often I hear that a certain age is not really that age. “30 is the new 20” they say. Or “60 is the new 40.” What’s really confusing is that  both “40” and “50” are the new 30, and I can’t quite figure out how that could possibly be.

In a culture where people are always striving to be younger than they are, it is perhaps not surprising that our expectations for people of a given age have become obscured. Children living in their parents house well after their 18th, 21st, or even 25th birthday is now somewhat expected. If 50 year-olds are giving themselves permission to act (and look) 20 years younger than they actually are, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that 20 year-olds don’t feel the need to grow up. After all, following the math of their elders, they are just infants.

The Bible, however, is replete with warnings against this mindset. It tells us that our age shouldn’t be what defines us. Instead, it should be our love for God and our obedience to His call on our lives. As the Lord said to Jeremiah:

“Do not say, ‘I am only a youth” ;for to all to whom I send you, you shall go, and whatever I command you, you shall speak. Do not be afraid of them, for I am with you to deliver you, declares the Lord (Jeremiah 1:7b).

This is instructive for people both the young and the old. It is a great reminder that God uses people of all ages to accomplish His purposes. .The young should realize that their age is never an excuse to not do what God calls them to do. Even though they are young, the should be examples (I Tim. 4:12). The “old” shouldn’t dismiss God’s work just because He uses someone with less years to accomplish it.  In either case, the concern should be whether the person is doing what God says. And regardless of our age – we should get busy doing the same.

God doesn’t use age as an excuse not to use someone for His kingdom. As we are busy about His work, may we not be tempted to do so either.

 

 

Have you ever heard someone use their age as an excuse to not do what God has called them to do? Have you ever dismissed the work of God in someone’s life because they are young? How can we squash these excuses and get busy doing what God has called us to do?

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The Who (and not the what)

We spend a lot of time fighting against the way things are. We expend a lot of energy demanding what we deserve. We go to battle routinely, prepared to wage war against people and situations that stand in our way.

 

However, in the midst of our complaints and diatribes, we often forget that it is not the people and the situations that are really the focus of our contention. When we rail against the circumstances that we find ourselves in, when a complaining spirit is what epitomizes our persona, it is the One that allowed the situation that we are ultimately fighting.  When we are angry that life isn’t as we think it should be, it is bound to impact our relationship with the One who not only controls the wind and the waves, but also the details of our day.

As Stephen Neill wrote in The Christian Character:

Every virtue is a form of obedience to God. Every evil word or act is a form of rebellion against Him. This may not be clear at first; but, if we think patiently, we shall find that it is true. Why were you angry? You will probably find that it was because you were not willing to accept the world as God has made it; or because you were not willing to leave it to God to deal with the people that He has made.

In other words, our lack of contentment is ultimately not a disappointment in the way things are; it is an unwillingness to trust in the One who allowed it to be so.

 

Consequently, in order to be more content, we need to trust in Him more. We need to have confidence that God is still on His throne and nothing that happens on this Earth is outside of His purview. We need to fight a war with sin, not with the circumstances that He allows. And we need to strive to honor and obey Him regardless of the situations that we are in.

 

Share your thoughts….

How can we fight discontentment and therefore fight the temptation to sin?

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