Let us pray… Father God, thank You for choosing us and giving us to Jesus. We know by His own promise that what You have given to Him will never be lost. Thank You, Father, for Your great mercy and love. Please help us be closer followers, better servants for You and our Lord. Help us to do as You will and not just what we want to do. Please keep us strong in our faith and of one purpose in our service to Christ Jesus. Please keep us healthy and safe through these trying times. And Father, please guard us from Satan and those who do his bidding, whether knowingly or not.
Speak to us now, Father, that we might hear Your voice through Your Spirit and better understand the message You have for us this morning. Remind us of our life without You so we won’t be tempted to return to it. Show us what we can do to make this life better for all those we encounter. This we pray in the blessed name of Christ Jesus our Lord. Amen.
A farmer walked into his bank and announced that he had bad news and good news. "First, give me the bad news.", the banker sighed. "Well," said the farmer, "I can't make my mortgage payments. And that crop loan I've taken out for the past 10 years -- I can't pay that off, either. Not only that, I won't be able to pay you the couple of hundred thousand I still have outstanding on my tractors and other farm equipment. So I'm going to have to give up the farm and turn it all over to you for whatever you can salvage out of it.” Silence prevailed for a minute and then the banker asked, "What's the good news?" "The good news is that I'm going to keep on banking with you," said the farmer.
I’m sure the banker was absolutely thrilled that the farmer intended to continue doing business with him. Anytime someone comes up and says, “I have good news and I have bad news”, we can be fairly sure we’re in trouble, that the bad will be greater than the good. In the case of the farmer, he might as well have started out by saying, “I have bad news and I have worse news”.
But generally we’re an optimistic people. We want the good news to be far better, far greater than anything bad we hear. Just as we want our memories to be of good times, blocking out as much of the bad as possible. Which is why, I think, we look back fondly on the good old days.
Like I said, though, if we’re honest and realistically view the past, we’ll see that not everything was all that good. Not everything from those times is worth returning to, nor something we’d want to come back. Those good old days we remember are often romanticized versions of reality, painted up in our minds to be all pretty and sweet.
In many ways, what we have right now is far better than in any of our days before. And that is especially true of our life now, with Christ, in comparison to our life before we accepted Him as our Lord.
I think Paul provides a pretty good example of this for us, using his own life as an object lesson. As a Pharisee, Paul enjoyed a good life. He obeyed the Law of Moses and gladly did his duties for the Temple, trying to stamp out this new Way. He did everything he could in order to please God, and in so doing to please himself.
He could have easily looked back on those times as the good old days, especially in light of what happened to him after his eyes were opened. He suffered multiple beatings, shipwrecks, threats on his life, imprisonments, and all because he was now working for Jesus.
But did he look back fondly on those days as a Pharisee? No, just the opposite! Because Jesus showed him that what he once thought was valuable was actually worthless. Everything he had before, everything he knew from those days, was garbage. There is nothing, nothing as wonderful as knowing and accepting Christ Jesus as our Lord! As far as Paul was concerned, these were the good old days: serving, and suffering for, Jesus.
I’d like to turn to wise King Solomon’s Book of Ecclesiastes for a moment to see what he has to say about “the good old days”. I’ll start with chapter 7, verses 10 and 14…