ONE DAY
AT A TIME
There are two days
in every week over which one should never stress or worry, two days which
should be kept free from every potential fear and apprehension.
One of those days
is yesterday…with its errors and
cares, its faults and blunders, its aches and pains. Yesterday has passed and thus it is forever
beyond our control. All the money in the
world cannot bring back yesterday. We
cannot undo one single act we have performed. We cannot erase one single word we have spoken. Yesterday is gone!
The other day we
should not worry about is tomorrow,
with its unidentified adversities, its unknown burdens, its potential promises
and its possible performances. Tomorrow
is also beyond our immediate control. Tomorrow’s sun will rise, whether in radiant splendor
or behind a mask of somber clouds. But
it will surely rise. Until it does, we
have no tangible stake in tomorrow (certainly not from the perspective of anxiety),
for tomorrow is yet unborn.
That leaves only
one day in which to freely invest and fully focus our effort and energy: today.
Consider this. All of us can somehow manage to fight the
battles of just one day. It is only when
we emotionally summon the cumbersome concerns of yesterday and the plausible
problems of tomorrow that we enter into a terrible state of trepidation and torment.
The experiences of
today do not necessarily disturb or destroy our peace of mind. No. Oftentimes,
it is the sheer disappointment or bitterness about something that occurred yesterday
or an irrational dread about what tomorrow might bring. Let us resolve, therefore, to live one day at a time.
There
is a song that corrects and comforts when I am tempted to obsess over my past
or my future:
One day at a time…sweet Jesus…
That’s all I’m asking from You;
Give me the strength to do every day
What I have to do.
Yesterday’s gone…sweet Jesus…
And tomorrow may never be mine;
So for my sake, help me to take
One day at a time.
Sisters
and brothers, be continually blessed, and please (above all else) MAKE SURE YOU
ARE READY TO MEET OUR SOON COMING KING. Maranatha!
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