The other day I was trying to download a program onto my computer and, needless to say, was having a great deal of difficulty. After struggling with it for over an hour I decided to go on the internet and get tech support from the makers of the program. When I got to their site, I logged in and got a friendly message that read that I would have a wait of 1 minute, 37 seconds before I would be served.
“1 minute and 37 seconds? That’s not bad,” I thought. So I waited……and waited…..and then I waited some more. After about 6 or 7 minutes, another message came across the screen that read that I would have a wait of 1 minute and 37 seconds. “Hopefully, their timing is accurate now,” I assured myself. So I waited again. Five minutes passed and still no help. Then another message came across the screen. Yeah, you guessed it: “you will be served in 1 minute and 37 seconds!” It then dawned on me what was going on. The site I was dealing with really had no idea of how long a wait I was going to have—it could be 2 minutes, it could be 20 minutes—but 1 minute, 37 seconds was an acceptable time to hook people and keep them waiting. After all, anyone can wait for a minute and a half, right?
In life, we are always going to run into people (and their philosophies) who are a lot like that website. They are going to say whatever needs to be said in order to pacify and appease their audience—when in fact, they really don’t have any idea of what the future holds. Sometimes they come in the form of politicians who like to tell the public what they want to hear in regards to issues such as the economy or the environment. Other times they may come in the form of futurists and social scientists who like to predict what the world will be like in 50 years. (Hey, weren’t we supposed to have flying cars and space colonies by 2010?). Still other times they may come in the form of “wanna be” prophets who like to dabble in eschatology and tell their listeners when the world will end.
Listening to these folks for very long can evoke a number of emotional responses. If the news is bad, it can cause people to panic and worry. If the news is good, it can lull people into complacency or even apathy. The truth is, no one really knows the future except God (read Matthew 24:36). He is the author and creator of life and He is the One who decides future events (see Proverbs 21:1). The best thing to do as a believer in such matters is to simply trust in the sovereignty of God.
As Christians, it is best for us to be faithful to that which Christ has called us to do, so whatever the future actually does hold, we’ll be glorifying God as it transpires. Remember, we don’t know what the future holds–but we do know who holds the future! In such turbulent times, trusting in God and His timeless Word is the wisest investment a person can make.