Sermon Illustrations

The Time Is Now! (07.07.05--Joy Every Day--Ecclesiastes 7:13-14)

I stood in front of the used book shelf for what seemed like the longest time holding two books. The one, an anthology in nearly new condition seemed too good to pass up. Even though it contained much of the same material that several other volumes I already owned contained, it was at a bargain price and it still had its original book jacket. In the other hand, a very shabby, old book that had seen better days. It’s cover was barely hanging on and there was some worm damage evident in places. Yet, thumbing through its yellowed pages, I got the distinct impression that there were treasures hidden among those leaves. The price was probably a bit high for its condition; yet, I decided to buy them both.

I use both books to this day. Both sit on my office library shelf. I enjoy just taking the newer book out and moving my hands over the smooth cover. It just feels good to own it even though I don’t often dig too deeply into it. Nevertheless, I am glad to own it because it just gives me pleasure to open it and browse through it. The other book? Its binding is taped and I need to be careful turning the fragile pages. Yet, I find myself using it often, even though it would never be my first choice. Both books give me joy, each in their own, distinctive way.

Author Leo Buscaglia tells this story about his mother and their “misery dinner” It was the night after his father came home and said it looked as if he would have to go into bankruptcy because his partner had absconded with their firm’s funds. His mother went out and sold some jewelry to buy food for a sumptuous feast. Other members of the family scolded her for it. But she told them that “the time for joy is now, when we need it most, not next week.” Her courageous act rallied the family. (Christopher News Notes, August, 1993)

The Bible tells us that “When times are good, be happy; but when times are bad, consider: God has made the one as well as the other.” (Ecclesiastes 7:14) Like those two books, God gives us those wonderful, new and “smooth” days filled with good things and happiness. And, if we think about it, those days often far outnumber the “rough” days; so much so that we even become a little jaded to them. Yet, they are appreciated and the joy they give us is a necessary ingredient to living a good life. But those “rough” days? On the surface there isn’t much they offer in the way of “appearance” or “convenience.” Nevertheless, like that musty old book, if we look within their tattered covers, there are treasures to be found. It is simply a matter of being predisposed to know that joy is both experienced and discovered. There really is no time like the present to be happy; since the present is a gift, a real joy, no matter how it comes wrapped.

“Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own” (Matt 6:34)

If you have a special prayer request, please send your request to “This Passing Day!”, . God bless you for Jesus sake.

This Passing Day!

www.beechsprings.com

Related Sermon Illustrations

Related Sermons

  • Do Something: Be The Hands And Feet Of Jesus

    Contributed by Chris Jordan on Jan 30, 2015
    based on 3 ratings
     | 47,731 views

    God has called us, His church, to be the hands and feet of Jesus to take His justice and mercy into the world, to minister to the lost, the poor and the broken.

  • The Poverty Mindset

    Contributed by Jeff Van Wyk on Apr 13, 2013
    based on 4 ratings
     | 38,480 views

    One false concept is that poverty has some mysterious refining qualities. Some believe that it is spiritual to be poor. That is not the way God lives and neither does He want us to live that way. Just look how He blessed Abraham. The Bible teaches us that

  • I’m Gone Get To My Better Series

    Contributed by Charles Jones on Jun 30, 2012
    based on 1 rating
     | 27,094 views

    You may know that God wants to save you. You may know that God wants to heal you. But do you also know that God wants to prosper you?

  • Lazarus And The Rich Man

    Contributed by Dietrich Bonhoeffer on Aug 2, 2012
    based on 4 ratings
     | 18,167 views

    It has become common practice to see as the whole meaning of this story that the rich should help the poor... But this particular story especially, if one allows oneself to be affected fully by its original meaning, is a very concrete proclamation of the

  • The Rich Man And Lazarus

    Contributed by Christopher Holdsworth on Sep 14, 2013
    based on 7 ratings
     | 15,473 views

    Death is the great leveler. Not all rich men go to hell, nor do all poor men go to heaven. It was how Lazarus lived his life before God, and how the rich man squandered his opportunities, that determined their differing destinies.