There’s nothing I enjoy more than being on the ice, figure skating. The freedom of movement, the cold air, gliding to music, I find invigorating.
While skating, I am immersed in the moment, the rest of the day put on hold.
Yet I didn’t always experience this pure enjoyment.
For many years I took lessons in ice dancing. A group of us adults would take tests, working to move up the ranks of the sport. In my drive to excel, I sometimes deprived myself of enjoying the day’s practice—by focusing on my paucity of progress, or comparing myself to someone else.
During these times, a wise man at the rink often would say, “Enjoy the journey.”
Likewise, we should enjoy our journey of faith each day, without mental distractions.
God gives us 24-hour day-tight compartments to live in.
My thinking of tomorrow is limited, not knowing what it holds.
God is limit-less.
When we accept the limitations of living one day at a time, life takes on a beautiful simplicity. We’re free to live in an awareness of His presence and can experience His partnership in all we do.
Yet how easily we rob ourselves of this oneness by encasing our thinking in the past or the future—as either a pleasant or fearful thing.
For some, the past is:
A sanctuary: Always thinking of the good ‘ol days; the past always looking better.
A jailer: A prison that enslaves, causing condemnation, regret, and mental bondage; feeling like victims of past suffering.
For some, the future is:
A daydream: “I will be happy when I have ‘such and such’, or achieve ‘such and such’.”
A fear of the unknown: Living with anxieties about what is ahead and can’t be controlled today.
These ways of thinking constrain us, causing us to miss fully living in the now.
In contrast, living in the now—in the presence of God—eliminates worry and increases faith.
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; In all your ways acknowledge Him, And He shall direct your paths.” (Proverbs 3:5-6)
God knows what we need, and today is enough to take care of.
London’s Waterloo Station houses a huge 4-faced clock hanging in the center of the main concourse. It’s known as one of the city’s most famous rendezvous places.
Imagine this large clock—with no hands!
“What time is it?”
“NOW!”
Like a clock with no hands, the word of God and the presence of God is our past, present, and future.
Our eternal now.
Our lives are in His hands, therefore our hearts can be at peace and take joy in His presence—every moment of our now.
Copyright © 2018 Cheryl Elton
Tony Hroncich says
A clock with no hands, what time is it ~ now! Ha, ha, ha. I Love It! Very well put Cheryl.
Thanks for the encouragement to live in the eternal now!