“By the time of Augustine, the Church had settled down in Roman society. The Christian’s worst enemies could no longer be placed outside him; they were inside, his sins and his doubts; and the climax of a man’s life would not be martyrdom, but conversion from the perils of his own past.” Peter Brown, Augustine of Hippo; a biography. Faber & Faber, 1967. p. 159
Our pastor, Brodie Taphorn, preached this past Sunday on "You have too much to do" part of the sermon series "What to do when. . .insights from ordinary people of the Old Testament." The scripture launch was Exodus 18:18-23, but he supplied background from surrounding verses, and the second reading was from Ecclesiastes 3:1-8. Jethro gives advice to his son-in-law Moses on how to manage the huge load of responsibility--delegate as we say today. Brodie addressed the busyness of the modern culture, how most Christians respond, and suggestions from the text.
After the sermon and during the "meet and greet" I told Brodie I was probably the only person he knew who says, "I'm never busy." I almost never have to much to do. So I offered to write him a note about it, but I'm still working on it. And I think St. Augustine has some of the answers on how we use time.
For me, my non-theological take is that in the English language we use all the same verbs with time that we use with money; invest it, use it, spend it, save it, plan for it, waste it, hoard it, borrow it, lose it, and in the end, you "cash it in" because there is no use for it outside our created world. As Augustine says time is also a creation of God. Me? I tend toward the hoard and save, so I usually have a lot in the bank, but I'm not so good at the spending part, particularly using my time for the Kingdom.
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