It seems we give thought to everything in this country. We get up in the morning and we begin to think about our day; what we must do; where we must go. Our day from the minute we open our eyes zeros in on our responsibilities, our goals, our desires, and our dreams. We begin thinking immediately. We analyze the hours ahead, plan the course of our lives minute by minute, and thus we begin. We start out well. We begin with a clear vision, and a ready spirit to begin the process of living another day. We see the beginning very clearly.
We start off, and the path we walk, from long familiarity, is one of comfort and security, so well-worn, that scarcely do we notice where we walk. We know the end because we’ve arrived there so many times before, so off we go to begin the life we’ve built for ourselves. We go through the morning routine; the rush and exhilaration of getting ourselves and our families around and out the door. The routine is comforting, satisfying, and the sense of accomplishment is the first in a long line of little highs we feel as we’ve made it through the first leg of our beginning journey.
We travel our route. If it’s to work, we take the same route, turning left at the corner up ahead. We might stop for coffee, cigarettes, gas, perhaps pick up a coworker. We see the same things along the way. The radio is on, the music plays, our thoughts drift – as we navigate along the path – toward the things and people who will require our attention. We plan our future encounters, map out our strategies, pass the time of travel with our minds activated, engaged, already well along the path of our day.
So many of our days pass this way, no change, just rhythm and motion, our lives as the ocean waves rolling in and out, ebbing and flowing. We pass routine for thought, feeling, as if our lives are graded on a curve as a student’s paper, and we pass so easily. We travel quite content, and the only time we pay attention is when something captures our attention – like static on the radio – and for a brief moment something in our world is out of tune.
We arrive at our destination, fall into our responsibilities, and the busyness of our schedules, implement the plans, and have the encounters, and – when as they so often do – pass as we expect we feel the little highs of accomplishment along the way, and thus are the days of our lives.
We live our lives thinking (though not really) and doing (though we don’t do nearly what we can or should) passing off the mundane, and activity ridden, the worthless and inane, as living, when in fact we’re just existing. We live our lives in pretense, fantasy, illusion, and denial. We live along side of each other, walk among each other, bump into each other, scarcely take note of each other, and pay little attention to each other.
We live our lives in respect to self-worth, self-importance, self, self, self, thinking we have value by the very fact that we’re alive, and that what we do is somehow important. We look at our money, our position, our status, our accomplishments, and use them to winnow – to separate and divide – to unite and bring together – our lives in relation to the lives of others. We do all these things because we need – have to feel – that we are important, that we are of worth, that we matter, and that what we do matters.
We live, vainly, attempting to place value upon ourselves, our accomplishments, and each other, and we do a poor job of it. We live our lives in a maze of fun house mirrors reflecting wealth, power, and position as if they are the keys to contentment and happiness, and yet with all the getting, and the keeping of such things, their true worth is often revealed in the broken, mangled, ill-used lives of so many who try to possess them.
It would be impossible for me to feel any sense of worth, to have any sense of value, if I were to look to the world – and people around me – to give it to me for all such value is short-lived and fleeting, and the value you give to yourself will not take you nearly as far as you wish to go.
All the above is not to say that there is no value – nor people of value – for there is great value, but the worth and value of your life cannot be defined by anyone or anything in this world. To understand your worth, your value, you must look through the lens of truth, and only by doing so will you discover that your worth, your value isn’t a product of who you are, or what you do, but through who you are connected to. . . and by whom that connection is made possible, the Lord Jesus Christ.
Great post! Blessings!
Thank you. Blessings to you as well.
Wow. I will have to read this over again to glean all that you’ve written about.
I’m even now working on a post dealing with value vs. perceived value.
From a totally different angle.
Your post has much I had not considered.
Thanks Wayne for the time you take to teach us like you do.
Deborah, I appreciate your kind words, Such a nice compliment. I can’t take any credit for it though. It’s the Lord who teaches me, and I’m blessed that He does so. 🙂