Tuesday, June 26, 2012

How Time Flies ... For Some

A recurring theme in the conversations I have with friends and colleagues is how quickly time seems to fly by. Summer is here already. For those of us who live in climates with significant seasonal change, summer is a time when we wish the clock might slow down so that we can enjoy the warmth and longer daylight hours. But, only yesterday we were gathering for Thanksgiving dinner. Or so it seems. We look at events six months or a year forward on our calendars, knowing that they will be here before we know it.

I sometimes forget that the sense of time passing quickly is a result of being blessed with a sense of purpose, meaningful work and many, many options for how I invest my time each day. I also tend to forget that, for many people in the world, the problem is not that time moves too quickly; it’s that it moves too slowly. I recently heard an interview on public radio with a young woman who grew up the child of very poor parents in a developing country. When she was six years old, her parents sold her to a wealthy family, where she worked as a servant. During the interview, she described her early morning to late at night routine of chores … the same routine every day. No time for school, play or relaxing on Sunday. I imagine she must have felt like time stood still – nothing to look forward to and no hope for a change in routine.

There are countless others for whom days must not pass quickly enough. People in prison waiting for the day of their release; the person suffering from an illness or recovering from an accident who must endure weeks or months of lying in a hospital bed; the frail elderly person who spends her day in a nursing home; young people in our cities who can’t find safe places to learn and have fun during the summer months; the underemployed person whose work brings no joy, or the unemployed person waiting for the phone to ring with the offer of a job. 

The desire to serve people in these circumstances and help them experience hope and healing is the reason inspired leaders come to Wheat Ridge Ministries for assistance as they envision and develop new human care ventures. It is a great privilege for us to engage in the seeding process with our friends and donors, so that young mothers in Ghana, cancer patients throughout the United States, ex-offenders in Nebraska, grandchildren of Alzheimer's victims in Wisconsin, homeless people in Florida, students in inner city Milwaukee and many, many others who are served by creative new ministries can experience the healing touch of Christ.

Thank God for the gift of life and the time we are given on this earth to share God’s love with others. Whether time seems to be moving quickly or slowly for you today, may Christ’s loving presence be apparent along the way!


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