
I donโt want to get too technical with the fine points of economics, but it isnโt strictly true, despite what you may have heard, that time is money. It is not, however, that particular bit of misinformation I want to get at here. Rather it is this cousin of that nugget- knowledge is power. It too, despite being accepted wisdom, is unwise horse feathers. Truth be told, time is power and knowledge is used to wrap fish.
We live in the information age, in the comfortable suburbs right off the intersection of Vanity Fair and the information superhighway. There are wonders of efficiency that the computer has brought us, astonishing ideas at our fingertips through the web. And as scared as some of us may be, AI is just waiting to answer our questions, do our bidding or conquer the world, ya grok?
What Iโm wondering though, is where that information goes when weโre done with it. We are in an overload situation. For decades now technology has been busy about the business of bringing us more information. When the airwaves couldnโt deliver us enough television, we started laying cable. When that failed, we went with satellites. We combined our internet and TV with streaming. We have phones that reach us virtually everywhere and equipped to take us virtually everywhere in cyberspace. Our bodies stay in one place, while our minds are all over an infinite map.
But letโs remember our principles. Time isnโt money; itโs power. Each one of us wakes up each morning with twenty-four hours. That we speak of โspendingโ time suggests weโve already killed it. Time is what we invest, because the days are evil. When we miss out on a talking with our children, because we just had to check our twitter, we arenโt investing, but spending. When we canโt seem to find the time to read our Bibles, but can find the time to keep up with the latest Tik Tok trends, then we arenโt investing, we are spending.
If we want to worry about the sufferings wrought by sin, we probably donโt need to see which tragedy is boosting Foxโs ratings during sweeps month. It might be better to see how you can help those with whom you have covenanted in the church, or to visit a lonely neighbor.
Itโs true enough that the Bible doesnโt say you canโt listen to talk radio. It doesnโt say you canโt read or write blogs. It doesnโt say you canโt keep up with friends on social media. And as such, Iโm not saying it either. But the issue isnโt whether youโre allowed to drink in this or that from the broader culture. The question is, are there better things to do with our time? And by that I donโt merely mean more work-y kind of things. I mean more joyful kind of things, the kinds of things that will not merely be forever embedded in the asphalt of the information superhighway but that will be ever etched into our own cherished memories.
Hereโs another axiom for you, a fundamental economic reality. At the end of the day, as you weigh this good and that, itโs people that matter, flesh and blood, three-dimensional people. Time is power. People are forever. Invest it wisely; invest in them joyfully.
Thank you RC ๐ Very timely message I needed to hear at this particular time ๐