Dale Carnegie said, “One of the most tragic things I know about human nature is that all of us tend to put off living. We are all dreaming of some magical rose garden over the horizon — instead of enjoying the roses blooming outside our windows today.”
When Paul said, “Now is the day of salvation,” his words were not addressed to the lost. He was writing to believers (“fellow workers,” he called them in verse 1), reminding them of their mission, of the price Jesus had paid for their sins, of the new life that was theirs in Christ.
And he urged them not to wait a moment longer to begin living life to the fullest. “Be reconciled to God,” he said to his fellow workers. “Now is the time of God’s favor, now is the day of salvation.”
The same can be said for you and me.
Stop waiting for your “life” to begin, for everything to fall into place.
Your life is now.
Today is the day of God’s favor.
Today is the day that God’s wants to bless you.
Today is the day that God wants to use you.
What kind of roses are blooming outside your window today, and how you will begin to enjoy them?
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In the movie Ground Hog Day, Bill Murray plays a self-absorbed, cynical weatherman who gets stuck with going to Puxatawnie Pennsylvania on February 2 for the big Ground Hog Day celebration, a task he dreads. Worst of all, he wakes up the next day only to find that it’s not the next day — it’s February 2 again. He has to relive the day again and again and again.
For the last few years I have made it a point to read these words from C.S. Lewis on Janaury 1. (This the first reading in a volume of his writings called The Business of Heaven.) In Mere Christianity, he wrote…
An ancient proverb says, “The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second best time is today.” Looking back on the past twenty years of life, it’s easy to see all the trees that should have been planted: we should have invested more, studied more, taken more picnics with the kids, appreciated others more, watched TV less, worried less, laughed more, enjoyed life more, and on and on.
