By James L. Thornton
Leviticus 25:8 "And thou shalt number seven sabbaths of years
unto thee, seven times seven years; and the space of the seven sabbaths of
years shall be unto thee forty and nine years.
From out of the depths of the wisdom of God’s Old Testament laws we take our
text.
After seven years the land was to lie fallow (uncultivated) in order for it to
recover its fertility. After the seven years came seven times seven years,
forty-nine years, and the fiftieth year was proclaimed a year of freedom by
sounding of the ram’s horn.
Slaves went free, land alienated from its original owners reverted back to
them, debts were canceled, and a new beginning made. It is not my purpose,
however, fascinating though the subject is, to go further into the details of
these laws.
"And seven Sabbaths of years shall be unto you forty and nine years." (Leviticus 25:8).
At first sight it appears that the verse says nothing, that it is entirely
superfluous and meaningless. Has the Bible to inform us that seven times seven
is forty-nine?
And
yet there lies in this simple verse a profound moral and direct challenge to
each one of us, there lies in it the reproach from which none of us can absolve
himself, the reproach of wasted years and of lost opportunities, of tearful but
futile regrets at the "years which the locusts have eaten" (Joel 1:4), of time that flies and cannot be
recaptured.
How many of us can truly say that in their lives they have fulfilled the verse?
"And The seven Sabbaths of years shall be unto you nine and forty years," that to you seven times seven years has been
forty-nine years, that in terms of true use of time, our day has been a day,
our year a year, our cycle of seven years a true cycle, and that seven times
seven has been forty-nine, so that at the approach of the fiftieth we can truly
say, "ye can sanctify the fiftieth year?"
Those of you who have reached that fiftieth year, cast your minds back to the
days and the thoughts of eager, enthusiastic youth, when the world lay before you
like an open book. Think back on the glorious ideals which infused you in those
days, the resolutions of making something worth while of your lives, the
determination which you had that you live not for yourselves alone, but for
your people, for mankind; your resolve that you would, by your efforts, leave
your world a better place than you found it.
Or rather does not a groan break involuntarily from your lips and you feel
inclined to say, "Lord, have mercy on me, a sinner." How have you
spent your time, that precious, limited, fleeting thing which once it passes
its beyond hope of recall?
It was that thought which gave rise to one of the most penetrating and striking
statements of a famous and honored Rabbi, Sussya of Annapol.
He
said, "On the day of judgment I shall be judged, not because I was not a
Moses, for I was not a Moses, nor because I was not a R. Akiba—because I was
not a R. Akiba—but I shall be judged, and woe is me, that I was not Sussya of
Annapol."
That he was not what the potential Sussya of Annapol might have been. What a
tale of lost opportunities lies in these words, and how much more true are they
of us, than that of the Saintly Rabbi?
But
if for those of you who have reached the fiftieth year, these considerations
may give rise only to regret and disappointment, to those of you who still have
the major portion of your life in front of you, you young men and women whom I
am so well pleased to see attending service in increasing numbers, in your case
they should give rise to a resolve that seven times seven will be forty-nine
years to you, a resolve to make the best of your time.
What does one do in one’s spare time? Have you ever thought of the implications
of the meaning of the word used in English to express the use of it? the word
"pastime," or the even more
expressive American term, "To
kill time."
It
is based upon the assumption, which sorrowfully, in too many instances prove
true, that time is an enemy, an unwelcome guest who hangs heavily on your hand,
and who has to be gotten rid of either by escaping from it, and thus indulging
in a "passtime,"a "passing of time," or by killing it, and thereby "killing time."
It suggests a total inability profitably and usefully to employ one’s time,
with its natural consequence of our days being burdens and our years not years.
In the last half century the remarkable development of mechanical inventions
under the impetus of war has rendered it possible for working hours to be
shortened and reduced. People have far more time off from their occupations
than any generation before us. Some jobs provide weeks and weeks of paid
vacation which is a great thing for the working man or woman.
Yet
that brings us to the grave question of how is
man to use his leisure?
Experience
has shown that man is hopelessly unfitted and untrained for the right use of
his leisure, that if he finds himself with time to spare, that time hangs
heavily on his hands that, without knowledge of how to employ it usefully, he
must inevitably turn to ways of degeneracy and demoralization.
Far more true than that "Satan finds mischief for idle hands to do,"
is the truth that "he finds mischief for idle minds to do."
"Distraction" becomes the order of
the day, to distract one’s mind from the painful agony of time. He must resort to
an opiate (something that dulls the senses and induces relaxation), or a drug,
to take his mind away from that pain.
Satan has filled the airwaves with ads and programs designed to captivate the
mind and thereby lure one to their way of thinking and thereby "stealing" your time. Thousands of hours of "sparetime," or "pastime," is "killed,"
or used uselessly on non-enlightening
subjects ever year.
And
thus the question of the right use of leisure becomes the most urgent question
facing our generation; especially the older one’s of us and our text comes to
emphasize the fact.
Let us read and consider the words of Moses as recorded in the book of Psalms.
Moses is an old man when this admonition and prayer was uttered. He could look
back upon a long life in God’s service. He could also remember 40 wasted years
in the
Psalms 90:9b. "We spend our years as a tale that is
told.
10. The days of our years are threescore years
and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their
strength labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away.
12. So teach us to number our days, that we
may apply our hearts unto wisdom.
The scripture tells us that "Moses was content" (Exodus 2:21). Here was one of the highest educated men
in the world (Acts 7:22) that was content to dwell in
the
Only God knew what was shut up inside this "contented" man. Shut up inside him was the first
five books of our Bible. Shut up in him was the ability to hear what God said and to write
what God said, thereby becoming known as the "Great Law-giver,"
bringing to the world written laws and commandments that are still used to
govern the civilized world.
What would the world be like today if Moses had not
heeded the call from God? I’m sure that God would have raised up someone else
but in a different era.
Let us read what he had to say near the close of that long life. "So teach
us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom" (Psalms 90:12).
Let seven times seven of your years be a fruitful forty
nine years. Let seven time seven of your years really become
to you whole forty nine years. Make of your time,
instead of an unwelcome guest, an enemy, make of it a friend who gives you an
opportunity to develop your mind to the fullest extent of your potentials,
fitting you to be a worthy human being, a worthy Christian, a worthy citizen of
the world.
Then indeed, and then only, "Ye shall proclaim liberty in the land to all
its inhabitants" (Leviticus 25:10) .
There will be a proclamation of liberty of the soul and spirit in the land.
By, James L. Thornton
Write To Us, Godsgrazingfield@att.net
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I am a retired pastor currently living in the Nashville, Tn. area and we attend First Church, Bro. Ron Becton pastor. We are putting our sermons and Bible studies on the web. We have been doing this for five years and have more than 3 million visits on it. We would like to share some of our studies and writings with all the people on Everyone Apostolic. My wife, Mary Lee, has Bible Quizzing questions on almost every verse in the Bible and would like to share this also. James & Mary Lee Thornton
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