Posted on 06/30/2020 7:14:25 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
If Jesus is returning soon, should I still save for retirement?
A young man asked me exactly that question a few years ago. We were at a church service, and I had just preached a sermon on the end times. That week, at his workplace, the young mans employer had given him the option of contributing to a 401(k) retirement savings plan.
This individual knew it was important to plan for the future. But he also wondered if, in light of the Second Coming, that type of savings was an unwise use of money. He asked me for advice.
Ill be honest: Im a pastor, not an investment advisor. I dont get asked for financial planning advice very often. But I did have an answer for that young man. Before I tell you what it was, however, let me share a fascinating story. The young mans question brought to mind a unique moment in American history.
Abraham Davenport and New Englands Dark Day
History recalls May 19, 1780, as New Englands Dark Day. At the time, George Washington and the Continental Army were still fighting in the Revolutionary War. Camped with his troops in New Jersey, General Washington noted in his diary how the weather had been strange for several days. The sun had appeared to be red. The skies had grown yellowish and the clouds were the color of rust.
On May 18, he recorded the presence of dark, ominous, heavy and uncommon kind of clouds.
The next day, the morning of May 19, the clouds grew even darker. Fog and a shadowy sky settled across the region. By noon, the sun had been completely obscured across New England, as if day had become night. Indoor workers took lunch by candlelight. Outdoor laborers struggled to see their work, and some quit early.
As the darkness continued, birds returned to their nests, farm animals reacted in terror, and local commerce began to shut down. Shop owners closed their businesses. Citizens speculated about the cause.
Had the sun somehow been darkened? Was this the judgment of God? Could the darkening skies be a sign of the Second Coming of Christ?
The state legislature was meeting that day in Connecticut. As the darkness persisted, members of the governing body became uneasy. One legislator made the motion to adjourn their meeting, suggesting everyone return to their homes and families to prepare for the end of the world.
Thats when a 65-year-old councilman and militia colonel named Abraham Davenport stood up to calm his colleagues. I am against adjournment, he said in a stirring speech. The day of judgment is either approaching, or it is not. If it is not, there is no cause of an adjournment; if it is, I choose to be found doing my duty. I wish therefore that candles may be brought.
Aides brought in candles and the meeting continued. The world did not end and the skies eventually cleared. Historians later determined that the darkness was the result of extensive forest fires in Ontario, Canada, which the wind had blown south into New England.
In the days that followed, however, Davenport was hailed as a great hero and leader. The 19th-century poet John Greenleaf Whittier even wrote a poem commemorating the councilmans resolve, noting how simple duty hath no place for fear.
Should we plan for tomorrow?
This brings me to my answer to the young mans question. If the end is near, should we carry on with our daily business? Should we make wise financial decisions about the future? Should we save money at all?
Or should we simply hunker down with our families, preparing for the apocalypse and awaiting Christs return?
I believe we should follow the example set by Abraham Davenport. When Christ returns, I choose to be found doing my duty.
In other words, hope for Christs return on a future date but do the right thing today. Live as if you will experience a full life on earth. Go to school. Get married. Have children. Spend wisely and save responsibly.
Yes, contribute to your 401(k) or otherwise plan for retirement.
Not every student of Bible prophecy will give the same advice, of course. All of us know the stories of otherwise well-meaning believers who made public statements that the end would occur within a specific year or even on a particular date. These teachers were inevitably proven wrong. Many of them lost credibility and many of their most dedicated followers lost their savings or businesses as a result.
As I explain in my new book, Tipping Point, I believe we are living in the end times and that Christs return is sooner than many expect. But while I am confident of the things I preach and teach, I am not God. I do not have the right nor the ability to set an exact date for when the end will come.
Instead, I would rather point you toward Scripture, highlighting the signs and evidence. I will leave it to God to measure time and keep the dates.
So live your life for the honor and glory of God. Do your duty but do it with a constant awareness that the Day of the Lord may arrive at any moment, like a thief in the night.
Is He coming here, or are we going There.
“Should we plan for the future...?”
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Yes
I’m sure someone asked that question in 1914. And in 1942. And in 1948. And in 2017.
Jesus sent a note:
“You are on your own. Good luck. I will be back when I can.”
That is how I plan my life.
“Soon” could be thirty years. Or a hundred.
In 1988 as well.
Matthew 6:34
Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about its own things. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble.
Planning is not worry.
Luke 14
For which of you, desiring to build a tower, does not first sit down and count the cost, whether he has enough to complete it?
Most likely we are seeing “birth pangs”, but the Bible clearly states that ONLY the Father knows the time, not even the Son knows. I don’t see any benefit to this kind of pure speculation. We are also clearly told that we should live EVERY day like He is coming tomorrow, that he will come like a thief in the night. Hyperventilating about it is unnecessary . . . IF you are ready.
Instead, , you ought to say, “If it is the Lord’s will, we will live and do this or that.”
James 4:15
This neatly answers the question because it presents a condition under which we might plan: that we acknowledge the future is in His hands.
Don’t forget comets Kahoutek and Elenin!
“Therefore keep watch, because you do not know the day or the hour.”
Death is coming for all of us in the not-to-distant future. Maybe its tomorrow, or maybe its 80 years from now. either way, In Gods time, its the blink of an eye.
Of course we might go THERE at any moment.
My old man was very caught up in all the “End is Near stuff” in the late 80’s. He was a very devout man, but went off the deep end IMHO.
Although he did end up dying un-expectantly in 1988 - so, the end WAS near for him. Just as it could be for me - today.
We know He is coming, but we don’t know when, much less “soon” ...
Yeah I don’t get it it seems a lot of people are in a rush for the end times. I’m in no particular rush at all :-)
maybe they either lived their lives already and are old and don’t care or they just can’t handle this world. I can understand that.
but Jesus said he will come like a thief in the night. It doesn’t get more clear than that.
He didn’t say I will come like a thief in the night but if you really pay attention to possible prophecies that you interpret in your own way in the Bible then maybe you can figure out what night.
I had a friend in college that, if he woke up in the night, he would leap to the window to look for Jesus. I thought it was sort-of weird. He acknowledged that it was, but he viewed it more as sort of a spiritual training. “I will come like a thief in the night.”
He did it for an entire year. Then he moved on to other things to strengthen his faith.
Few plan for the future anyway, why bother.
...Instead, , you ought to say, If it is the Lords will, we will live and do this or that.
Lord’s Will, or the creek don’t rise
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