THAT’S from the
First Letter of St. Paul to the
Corinthians. (7,29) It means that time is short. It
strongly reminds
us that we cannot afford to waste time which is a most
precious
resource we have in fulfilling the ultimate goal of our
life.
The complete
passage goes this way: “What I am saying,
brothers, is that the time is short. From now on those
who have wives
should live as if they had none; those who weep, as if
they did not;
those who are joyful, as if they were not; those who make
a purchase,
as if they had nothing…”
This passage should
be complemented with what St. James
also said in his letter. “You do not know what your life
will be like
tomorrow. You are just a vapor that appears for a little
while and
then vanishes away.” (4,14)
The main
message is that we should not get so confused and
lost in the drama of life as to ignore and forget the
real and
ultimate purpose of our life. Therefore we need to manage
our time
well, seeing to it that whatever we do or whatever situation
and
condition we find ourselves in, we have to be sure that
our time is
spent in such a way it would bring us to our eternal
destiny. We
cannot afford to be idle, lazy, aimless, etc.
Time management
is not only for some engineering projects.
We need time management in our personal lives as well,
and especially
in our spiritual lives, that is, in our life of love with
God and with
everybody else.
For this, we
have to be clear about the real purpose of
our life and of how each event, condition and
circumstance in our life
can be related to that ultimate goal of ours. This is an
indispensable
skill we have to develop and help everybody else to also
acquire for
themselves.
At the moment,
we can readily see so much wastage of time
or so much time misspent, misused, abused. Many people
are sunk in
idleness and laziness, or if they appear to be active,
they are active
in the wrong way, much like what St. Augustine once said
that people
can run fast but out of the track. They will never reach
the finish
line.
We have to be
wary of the many distractions that are
around these days. They indeed are powerful in their
allurement, but
we have to develop the proper antidote. What can help, of
course, is
to have some kind of daily plan or schedule that is
prepared before
the presence of God so that we reflect the proper
priorities in it.
We have to
sharpen our sense of focus and purpose. It is
without doubt that we have to contend with many
distracting things in
life. We have to learn to be quick in discerning what is
truly
essential from the many things we are exposed to.
Together with this
sense of focus is the sense of flexibility when new
things or some
unexpected or surprising things appear.
If we are truly
serious with our use of time, it might be
a good idea also to submit ourselves to some timer,
stopwatch or alarm
watch, since we tend to get so carried away by the
excitement of a
given task that we may get stuck with it, forgetting the
many other
tasks that we have to do.
Such use of the
timer would sharpen our sense of time and
our skill of budgeting our resources properly. When we do
not have
this awareness, we tend to waste or misspend our time and
our other
resources.
The most
important thing to remember that we are always
conscious that whatever we do, we do it out of love for
God and for
everybody. That should be the constant motive by which
our use of time
is measured.
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