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bigmike
Time is Precious—Take Advantage of Today
… making the most of every opportunity… Ephesians 5:16b
If you had a bank that credited your account each morning with $86,400, pesos, or whatever your  currency, and your bank carried over no balance from day to day, but rather allowed you to keep  whatever cash you could spend, and each evening canceled out whatever amount you had failed to use  during the day, what would you do? Naturally, you would draw out every last dollar, centavo, or  whatever. Of course! Actually, you do have such a bank—its name is “time.” Every morning it credits  your account with 86,400 seconds. Every night it rules out as lost whatever of this you have failed  to invest.
The bank of time carries over no balance from one day to the next. It allows no overdrafts. If you  fail to use the day’s deposit, the loss is yours. There’s no going back, no drawing against  tomorrow. Is it any wonder the Greek philosopher Theophrastus cried, “Time is the most valuable  thing a man can spend.” Yet, so often the day is past and we have failed miserably to use it very  well.
There are many inequities in life—no two people are born with equal opportunities for success.  However, every person is equal when it comes to having only 60 minutes in every hour—no more, no  less. Most of the time the problem is not that we don’t have enough time. Chances are we fail to  wisely use the time we have.
Many years ago, the Apostle Paul wrote to a group of believers in the ancient city of Ephesus. He  gave them some sound advice when he wrote, “ … making the most of every opportunity, because the  days are evil” (Ephesians 5:16). Actually, he is saying, “Take advantage of the time you have  because the days are evil and time is short.” Friend, life at its longest is short, so if you are  serious about utilizing time to the best advantage, you had better make up your mind that you are  going to do something, and do it now.
The first guideline in using time wisely is to remember that today is the most important day of  your life. If you live in the past, there is no hope for the future; if you live in the future,  there’s no hope for today. Tomorrow may never come, the past is a matter of record, but today lies  in your grasp. If you would use today wisely, remember that time doesn’t slip through your hands an  hour at a time. It trickles through your fingers a few seconds at a time. So, make up your mind  that every second is important. A few minutes here, a few minutes there—adds up to hours. If you’re  going to take advantage of those few minutes here and there, you have to work at it.
The inventor Thomas Alva Edison took advantage of those few precious moments he had in between  selling papers on a railroad car. He set up a laboratory in the baggage car. In between peddling  newspapers and sandwiches, he conducted his experiments.
William Feather gave some sound advice when he wrote, “Too many of us wait to do the perfect thing  with the result we do nothing.” The way to get ahead is to start right now. While many of us are  waiting until things are “just right” before we move ahead, others are stumbling forward. If you  start now, you will know a lot next year that you don’t know now, and that you will still not know  next year if you wait.
Resource reading: Psalm 90:1-17
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