My
devotional from Our Daily Bread (also linked to your right) this morning is the perfect final post for the year so I am going to share it here -
As we look forward to the New Year with plans and resolutions, the
voices of godly men from the past encourage us to think about something
we prefer to ignore—our own death.
Thomas à Kempis (1379–1471) wrote, “Happy is he that always hath the
hour of his death before his eyes and daily prepareth himself to die.”
And Francois Fénelon (1651–1715) wrote, “We cannot too greatly deplore
the blindness of men who do not want to think of death, and who turn
away from an inevitable thing which we could be happy to think of often.
Death only troubles carnal people.”
These men were not referring to a depressing preoccupation with
dying, but a dynamic approach to living (emphasis mine). We, like the psalmist David,
should pray: “Lord, make me to know my end,
and what is the measure of my days, that I may know how frail I am. . . .
Certainly every man at his best state is but vapor” (Ps. 39:4-5). David
speaks of people who work in vain, heaping up wealth with no idea of
who will get it (v.6). He concludes by affirming that his hope is in
God, who alone can keep him from a life of spiritual rebellion and
disaster (vv.7-8).
As we place our hope in God, the brevity of our life on earth is worth considering—every day.
May we seek to understand this dynamic approach to living as we bid farewell to 2012 and welcome 2013. Happy New Year!
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