Time and the Christian
By ROLAND CHIA
METHODIST MESSAGE PICTURE Time in itself, as part of God's good creation, is not evil |
IN 1985 I was invited by the Basle church in Labuan to speak
at a series of revival services. I arrived at the idyllic island
after a fairly hectic week in Singapore, hoping to enjoy its
slower, more relaxed pace of life. I remember the warm hospitality
of my hosts, who had made arrangements for me to be housed in
a pleasant room in a building adjacent to the church. The 10-day programme was well organised, and, judging from the number of people who attended, well publicised. But the services were all in the evening. Nothing was planned for the day. My hosts, determined to ensure that I had adequate rest, made sure that I was not disturbed during the day. The only intervals to my otherwise eremitic and reclusive existence were the meal times. The slower pace that I had so looked forward to enjoying soon became an unbearable vexation. The days seemed incredibly long, the quietness deafening, and the lack of activity simply unbearable. I found myself glancing often at both watch and clock. Frustration mounted with each glance. I usually carry a mini-library with me whenever I travel. In this instance, I brought three books, which I read in as many days. On that idyllic island of Labuan, I was struck by an uncomfortable revelation: that in this modern world of ours, time is a tyrant, and that I am its victim. "The clock", G. Woodcock is known to have said, "represents an element of tyranny in the life of the modern man more potent than any machine." Moderns tend to feel the oppression of time more than their forebears, not least because of the fact that ours has evolved into such a materialistic society. The relentlessness of our culture in its pursuit of wealth is graphically described by John Kenneth Galbraith in his now classic "The Affluent Society" (1958). Galbraith compared the mindless and frantic pursuit of material wealth with "the efforts of the squirrel to keep abreast of the wheel that is propelled by his own efforts". In capitalism's "squirrel cage", time is the ruthless, merciless tyrant compelling the "work-and-spend" cycle to run its course at an ever increasing frenzy. But it would be unfair to dump every form of cultural neurosis in the courtyard of the period we call modern. Shakespeare some centuries ago could write about that "envious and calumniating time that bald sexton, Time". |
And still further back in the history of human civilisation
a lone Preacher could say:
"All is vanity
One generation passes away,
and another generation comes
All things are full of weariness
and there is nothing new under the sun."
These negative statements must not lead us to conclude that
time is evil. Time in itself, as part of God's good creation,
is not evil. But the times are. Christians sometimes tend to think
of the absolute disjunction between time and eternity, as if time
will in the end be destroyed by eternity. Jesus Christ did not
come to destroy time. Rather in the fullness of time, He came
to redeem it.
This brings us aptly into the New Year and the confluence of expectations
and fears pertaining to it. The calendar is, to be sure, in some
sense an artificial division of time. But it enables one to sense
nature's rhythm and to "periodise" one's life, and by
so doing, to order it. But the calendar also alerts us to the
fleeting nature of time and the transience of human existence
here on earth.
Our calendar tells only part of the story. There is another calendar
which gives us a much bigger picture and portrays a deeper reality.
The Christian orders his or her life according to this calendar,
the Christian calendar, for it frames human existence within a
deeper, more profound perspective. And this brings us right into
the seasons of Advent, Christmas and Epiphany.
It is not a curious coincidence that Advent is designated
as the start of the Christian calendar. Advent signals the dawn
of a new era, a new age in which our time is taken up into God's
eternity - God's time - in the incarnation. Advent reminds us
that time as we experience it - which is both fragmentary and
fleeting - is the result of the Fall. Ours is a fallen world,
and our time is fallen time.
QUOTE:
'When we understand what it means that our times are in
God's hands we will escape the tyranny of time and the prison
of our own busyness. We see things in perspective.'
Know that our times are in God's hands
In this essay I shall not be addressing
the philosophical question, "What is time"? I am rather
attending to the pastorally and existentially more pressing question,
"What is time for?" In the incarnation, God has come
into time - our time - in order to redeem it, so that it may take
the form of His time. In so doing, God has brought meaning to
time. This truth is presented with eloquence and brilliance in
T.S. Eliot's "The Rock":
"Then came, at the predetermined moment, a moment in time
and of time,
A moment not out of time, but in time, in what we call
history: transecting, bisecting the world of time, a
moment in time but not like a moment in time,
A moment in time but time was made through that moment:
for without the meaning there is no time, and
that moment of time gave the meaning."
But what does this mean for us who live in a time between the
Advent and the Parousia, between the first coming and the second?
What does this mean for us in the here and now, in the period
which awaits the complete transfiguration of time?
The incarnation gives us a glimpse of the eternal Kingdom that
awaits consummation and the promised redemption. The Christian's
hope for the promised future radically changes - or at least it
should - his perspective of the present. It brings new meaning
to the words of the Psalmist: "But I trust in Thee, O Lord.
My times are in thy hands." (Psalm 31: 14-15a).
When we understand what it means that our times are in God's hands
we will escape the tyranny of time and the prison of our own busyness.
We see things in perspective. In our daily experience of time,
this perspective escapes us. We become compulsively busy and scurry
about to make more money, to make that important business contact,
or to write that book. In church we become compulsively busy by
multiplying programmes. We behave as if we have full control of
our lives.
But our times are not in our hands. They are in His. This is not
a recipe for sloth or passivity. It is a caution against filling
our time with restless activity. It reminds us that we should
rather use our time to do the needful. For only by so doing can
we redeem the time, and glorify God in what we do.
The incarnation reminds us that God is with us: He is Emmanuel.
God is with us not only in space, but also in time. He is with
us in times of work and relaxation, in times of sorrow and joy.
And because He is with us - and we are in Him through Christ -
we can live freely, knowing that He will give us time to do that
which He wants us to do - which may not be what we hope and plan
to do. He will give us time to complete the work that He has set
out for us in our life-spans, whether long or short.
Dr Roland Chia, a lecturer at Trinity Theological College,
is also the Director of the Centre for the Development of Christian
Ministry at TTC. He is a member of Fairfield Methodist Church