SHEPHERD
TO SHEEP
LIVING LIFE
BACKWARDS
(Psa 90:10) The days of our lives are seventy
years; And if by reason of strength they are eighty years, Yet their boast is
only labor and sorrow; For it is soon cut off, and we fly away. (Psa 90:12) So
teach us to number our days, That we may gain a heart of wisdom.
My dad used
to film us kids doing things and then he would play it backward and we would
laugh our heads off. Running around the
bases in Little League or the best was diving off a diving board. That might be hilarious on video but in real
life it’s the best way to live according to Moses.
Psalm 90 is
a special psalm written by Moses. He
first declares the eternality of God: (Psa 90:2) Before the mountains were brought
forth, Or ever You had formed the earth and the world, Even from everlasting to
everlasting, You are God. He then
goes on to speak of the shortness of man’s life and how it would be best to
tell yourself you only have so long to live and to live it wisely.
That is so
true isn’t it? As we get older we find
that time now flies by whereas when we were kids we were basically clock
watchers watching time go by. Now we know time is so valuable. We can’t pause it and once it is spent it is
gone forever. We talk so much about
preserving the precious resources of the earth but the greatest asset we have in
this life is time and the right use of it.
That’s why you have to live life backwards!
Living life
backwards means you look forward to the end of your short life and live life
with wisdom toward that end: (Eph 5:15-16) See then that you walk
circumspectly, not as fools but as wise,
16 redeeming the time, because the days are evil. It makes you live life with purpose and helps
you to set goals toward reaching your future.
It causes you to look up and ask the Lord what He has planned for you
and then ask for guidance toward that end.
Then you can live confidently knowing that everything is working toward
a purposeful finish: (Phil 3:14) I press
toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.
So I wonder
where did Moses forge this attitude? His
life was lived in thirds. He spent the
first third thinking he was somebody.
The next third he learned he was a nobody. Then the last third of his life he discovered
he was just anybody God could use.
Perhaps it was in this last phase of leading Israel out of Egypt and
into the Promised Land that he saw the preciousness of life and then wrote
about it to encourage people of any age.
I like to
see life as an hourglass of sand falling grain by grain. If you give yourself an hour to do something you
think you have so much time. But toward
the end you know you have to sharpen your focus because it’s almost over. It’s almost over saints. Let’s live for Jesus!
Louie
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