I would like to share with you a story
about priorities. When I served a small
church in the mountains of Kentucky, I
could visit every member in an afternoon
and there was nothing that I enjoyed
doing more. I remember one man, who
every time I visited him, was on his way
hunting. “Preacher,” he would say,
“One of these Sundays I’m going to walk
into the church and surprise everyone,
but not today.” Not long after such a visit,
he died, sitting in the woods, leaning
against a stump, his gun by his side. I
always wondered what his last thoughts
might have been.
Down the road a mile or two, another
man, about the same age, named Demps,
who was dying with tuberculosis. He had
more time to think about things eternal.
One day, as Demps and I prayed, he asked
Jesus into his heart. When I visited with
Demps later, he confessed, “I have only
one regret in life, that I had not done this
sooner when I was able to serve my Lord.”
In the Bible, the rich fool had counted his
profits and plotted investments. Thinking
that he had plenty of time to think about
things eternal after the eyes dimmed and
footsteps slow. But before he had the
opportunity, time had expired. What
were his priorities? What are ours’
today?
Father may our investments today be
heavenly treasures and our thoughts on
things eternal.
Amen.
No one has greater love than this: to lay down his life for his friends. You are my friends if you do what I command you. I do not call you servants anymore, because a servant doesn’t know what his master is doing. I have called you friends, because I have made known to you everything I have heard from my Father. John 15:13-15 CSB