Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ephesians 5:16
Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.
16. redeeming the time ] Lit., buying out (from other ownership) the opportunity. So Col 4:5. The same phrase occurs (Aramaic and Greek) Dan 2:8; “I knew of a certainty that ye would buy the time ”; where the meaning plainly is, “that ye would get your desired opportunity, at the expense of a subterfuge.” Here similarly the meaning is, “getting each successive opportunity of ‘walking and pleasing God’ at the expense of steady watchfulness.” In Col 4:5 the special thought is of opportunities in intercourse with “them that are without.” So, perhaps, here also, in regard of Eph 5:12-14. Cp. Gal 6:10; where render “as we have opportunity.”
because the days are evil ] As if to say, “Make this sustained effort of getting opportunity; for it will be needed. The ‘days’ of human life in a fallen world do not lend themselves to it. Circumstances, in themselves, are adverse, for sin attaches to them.”
The Apostle very probably had in view the special difficulties of the then present time, but his words have a permanent bearing on each following period with its new phases of difficulty, all related as they are to the permanent underlying difficulty, sin.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Redeeming the time – The word rendered here as redeeming, means to purchase; to buy up from the possession or power of anyone; and then to redeem, to set free – as from service or bondage; notes, Gal 3:13. Here it means, to rescue or recover our time from waste; to improve it for great and important purposes.
Because the days are evil – Because the times in which you live are evil. There are many allurements and temptations that would lead you away from the proper improvement of time, and that would draw you into sin. Such were those that would tempt them to go to places of sinful indulgence and revelry where their time would be wasted, and worse than wasted. As these temptations abounded, they ought therefore to be more especially on their guard against a sinful and unprofitable waste of time. This exhortation may be addressed to all, and is applicable to all periods. The sentiment is, that we ought to be solicitous to improve our time to some useful purpose, because there are, in an evil world, so many temptations to waste it. Time is given us for most valuable purposes. There are things enough to be done to occupy it all, and no one need have it hang heavy on his hands. He that has a soul to be saved from eternal death, need not have one idle moment. He that has a heaven to win, has enough to do to occupy all his time. Man has just enough given him to accomplish all the purposes which God designs, and God has not given him more than enough. They redeem their time who employ it:
(1)In gaining useful knowledge;
(2)In doing good to others;
(3)In employing it for the purpose of an honest livelihood for themselves and families;
(4)In prayer and self-examination to make the heart better;
(5)In seeking salvation, and in endeavoring to do the will of God.
They are to redeem time from all that would waste and destroy it – like recovering marshes and fens to make them rich meadows and vineyards. There is time enough wasted by each sinner to secure the salvation of the soul; time enough wasted to do all that is needful to be done to spread religion around the world, and to save the race. We should still endeavor to redeem our time for the same reasons which are suggested by the apostle – because the days are evil. There are evil influences abroad; allurements and vices that would waste time, and from which we should endeavor to rescue it. There are evil influences tending to waste time:
(1)In the allurements to pleasure and amusement in every place, and especially in cities;
(2)In the temptations to novel-reading, consuming the precious hours of probation to no valuable purpose;
(3)In the temptations of ambition, most of the time spent for which is wholly thrown away, for few gain the prize, and when gained, it is all a bauble, not worth the effort;
(4)In dissipation – for who can estimate the amount of valuable time that is worse than thrown away in the places of revelry and dissipation;
(5)In wild and visionary plans – temptations to which abound in all lands, and pre-eminently in our own;
(6)And in luxurious indulgence – in dressing, and eating, and drinking.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Eph 5:16
Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.
On redeeming the time
I. Directions.
1. We must redeem time by sincerely repenting of sin and devoting ourselves immediately to the great business of life.
2. We must redeem time by considering the various ways in which we have wasted it, and avoiding them for the future.
3. We must redeem time by forming a wise and judicious plan for the regulation of our conduct, and firmly and conscientiously adhering to it. The immortal Alfred, one of the best of kings that ever filled the British throne, divided his time into three portions, allotting eight hours to sleep, recreation, and meals, eight to public business, and eight to private study and devotion; and by constantly adhering to his plan, he accomplished the works and acquired the wisdom which have excited the admiration of posterity. Dr. Doddridge adopted nearly the same plan, and by that means he was enabled to educate so many young men, to preach so frequently, and to leave the world those various writings which have enlightened the minds and aided the devotion of multitudes. Colonel Gardiner always set apart two hours in the morning for devotion, and if his troops had to march at six oclock he rose at four to commune with God, and like his Divine Master prepare for arduous duties by fervent prayer.
4. We must redeem time by forming habits of activity and diligence. It requires great labour to improve time as it comes–what then must it require to redeem it? Should a husbandman or mechanic have lost any time in his work, he redeems it by extra exertion; in like manner should we redeem the time which we ought to have spent in serving God and preparing for eternity.
II. Reasons.
1. The merciful purpose for which time is granted, and the greatness of the work which we have to perform.
2. Because the period in which we can redeem time is not only very uncertain, but may be extremely short. The goldsmith gathers up every particle of gold. The very least which he can discern he deems too valuable to be lost. Can you, then, willingly suffer the loss of your precious moments, when worlds on worlds cannot buy one of them back again? Many who are now on the bed of death or passing into eternity, would part most gladly with all the wealth they have amassed, and all the fame they have acquired, for another year, or another month. While time lingers for you, improve it. Conscientiously set apart its hours as they come to the highest purposes.
3. We should redeem time because of the eternal consequences which will result from the use we make of it. As our time is given us by God, He will call us to account for the way in which we have spent it. Every day therefore brings with it an awful responsibility. (Essex Congregational Remembrancer.)
Redemption of time
To redeem is to reclaim by price, or recover by labour, that which has been lost or alienated; or to preserve by prudence that which is in danger. A metaphor taken from the practice of merchants, who observe the favourable seasons of buying and selling, of making profits and repairing losses, who keep regular accounts of their expenses and gains, and often inspect their affairs, to know whether their interest is in progress or decline.
I. It is here supposed that time is precious.
1. It is precious, because we have much business on our hands; business which relates, not to our bodies only, but to our souls; not merely to this life, but to the whole duration of our existence.
2. It is precious, because it is short and uncertain; and our work must be done soon, or it never can be done at all.
3. It is precious, because part, and with many, the greater part of it is gone already. What remains is increased in value, as it is contracted in length. We had none to waste at first; we have need to be frugal now.
II. We must regain the time which is lost. Time past, indeed, cannot be recalled. Each moment, which flies off, is gone forever, and will return no more. Like the wind, it passeth away and cometh not again. But we do the best we can toward the recovery of lost time, when we reflect with sorrow on follies past, and resolve to be wise in future.
III. We must use prudence to save, and diligence to improve, the time that remains. In vain you pretend to lament your past folly, unless you apply your heart to wisdom. Godly sorrow will work in you carefulness.
1. Enter on your work speedily.
2. Attend to your work with diligence.
3. Guard against the things which rob you of your time.
(1) An indolent habit is inconsistent with laudable actions. It creates imaginary, and magnifies real, difficulties arid dangers. It enervates the powers of the body, and stupefies the energy of the mind.
(2) A versatile humour is active, but wants patience. It flies from object to object too rapidly to appropriate or retain any. Time is lost, because nothing is prosecuted to effect.
(3) An excessive fondness for company and amusement is the cause of much waste of time. Diversions may be innocent: but then they must be
(a) well chosen;
(b) wisely timed;
(c) moderately used.
(4) Do every work in its season. Attend with discretion to the calls of duty, and you will save much time and prevent much loss. It is so in your worldly business. Make a good arrangement of its parts, and take up each part in its order, and you will execute the whole with facility and success; while your improvident neighbour, who leaves all his matters in confusion, and takes hold of his business as it happens, and usually at the wrong end, is always embarrassed with cares, straitened for time, and disappointed in the result.
This attention to seasons is no less necessary in the work of your salvation.
1. Youth is the most promising season. Then the work is most easy, and attended with fewest obstructions; and then there is the fairest prospect of Divine concurrence. If that season is past with you, take the present; for the future is uncertain, and the difficulty of your work and the indisposition to attempt it will increase by delay.
2. The time of health is more favourable than a time of sickness; for you are now more capable of intense thought and persevering application, and better able to prove your sincerity.
3. There are some tender seasons, when the conscience is awakened, serious sentiments impressed, and good resolutions excited. Improve these seasons.
4. There are seasons friendly for particular duties. For your daily devotions, choose the hours when your mind can be most free from the occupations of the world, that you may attend on God without distraction. If you would advise or reprove a friend, take a time when you can speak to him in private; when you feel your own mind affectionate, and think his to be calm and tender; when you can address him inoffensively, and he may hear you dispassionately. Also in doing works of charity, observe opportunities.
5. Wisely divide your time among your various duties. Lawful things will become criminal in you, if they occupy your time so far as to exclude other things of greater importance. The duties of religion are consistent with each other, and may be made to harmonize in practice. If they interfere, it is because you throw them into confusion, and your time into disorder. Distribute your seasons properly, and arrange your works prudently, and you will find there is a time for everything. (J. Lathrop, D. D.)
Redeeming the time
First: In the duty there is the act and the object. Both must be explained.
1. The act, buying; or, as we render it, redeeming. Well, then, what is the meaning of redeeming the time, or buying the time? The term is proper to civil contracts, but is here applied morally.
(1) In buying there is some price paid; we part with one thing to obtain another; so we must part with anything less than it rather than lose time; as Pro 23:23, Buy the truth, and sell it not. As merchants stand upon no rate or price if they may get such wares into their hands as they may make benefit of, so time is such a precious commodity, and so useful to us in order to eternity, that we should not stand upon ease, carnal pleasures, and worldly conveniences, that we may purchase it.
(2) That which is bought belongeth to the buyer; and so buy time to make it your own for spiritual advantages. But our translation useth the word redeem, which implieth another metaphor–namely, the recovery of a mortgage, or the redeeming of what hath been lost or pawned out; and so it noteth our former improvident misspence of time. We have, as it were, mortgaged it to Satan, to the world, and to vanity, and now should redeem it out of the hands of these engrossers, and by future diligence recover our former neglect.
2. The object–the time. The word properly signifieth the season and opportunity, but yet it is the usual word for time in Scripture, for to a Christian all time is season. Time in general is but short: But this I say, brethren, the time is short (1Co 7:29). But the season or opportunity, which is the flower of time, is shorter; therefore this must not be slipped: As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good unto all men (Gal 6:10).
Secondly: The reason by which this duty is enforced–Because the days are evil.
1. For the meaning of the phrase.
(1) It may be understood of the whole course or race of mans life: (Gen 47:9). Time in itself is neither good nor evil, but in regard of the accidents of time, as it is encumbered with variety of vexations, cares, and miseries, so our days may be called evil. And in this sense we must take that of our Saviour (Mat 6:34). Every day bringeth evil enough and sorrow enough to exercise us. Therefore you had need to lay up for a better life, for you have but sorry evil days here.
(2) More properly and specially it relateth to the times the apostle wrote in, which were hard and calamitous, and full of danger, because of the wickedness of those among whom they lived. There were many enemies then, both to Christian verity and piety.
2. The force of the consequence.
(1)Because others vainly misspend time, Christians should be more careful to redeem it. The worse the times are, the better should we be, as fountain water is hottest in the coldest weather, and stars shine brightest in the darkest night.
(2) Adversity makes men serious.
(3) With relation to the heathen among whom they lived, he advised them to redeem the time (Col 4:5).
(4) Some are so bad and froward, that they would take away liberty, estates, yea, life itself from you, and with it all occasions of doing and receiving good. You carry your own lives in your hands, and the lives of many of Gods precious instruments are in danger; and therefore, before means and opportunities be wholly lost, redeem the time. That it is the duty of Christians to look to the due improvement of the time and season. I shall draw out the force of the apostles exhortation in this method.
I. The commodity or thing to be bought. The word signifieth time and season, the general and particular opportunity.
1. Time.
(1) If you have not begun already by conversion, it must not be delayed and left to uncertainties. The sooner you begin to buy time, the better bargain you will have; for every man would have as much for his money as possibly he can, therefore take the market while it is at the best (Ecc 12:1).
(2) After you are once admitted into the evangelical estate, your whole time should be redeemed and spent for God (Luk 1:75; Rom 6:10).
2. The season: buy it, whatever it cost you. The season of receiving good and of doing good.
II. The use we must put it to when we have gotten this commodity into our hands. It is a precious commodity; you should never let it go but for something better than itself. There are two great ends, the glorifying of God, and the saving of our own souls. Thirdly: I shall now proceed to the encouragements to the bargain to redeem time and season. First: Let me press you to redeem the time.
1. Too much time hath been spent already (1Pe 4:3).
2. We are to be accountable to God for time.
3. That time is only yours which is spent well, in pleasing God, and doing good; for that time is bought and redeemed which otherwise is lost to you. We lose all that time which is not spent in the love and service of God.
4. Time is not ours to dispose of at pleasure. A Christian, when he giveth up himself to God, he giveth up everything that is his to God. My time is not mine, but Christs. It is sacrilege to rob God of what is consecrated to Him.
5. Time is a precious commodity, worth the looking after. The devil values it; if he can cheat you of your time, he can cheat you of your souls; for when conviction is strong, and all your prejudices are borne down, and his outworks taken, excuses and self-flatteries vanish. The last thing that he is loath to let go is time; his game is to cheat you of today, and so of the next day. God saith, Today (Heb 3:13); and the devil saith, Not today, but at a more convenient season; as Felix put off Paul (Act 24:25).
6. The present time is the best: I made haste, and delayed not to keep Thy commandments (Psa 119:60). Ludovicus Cappellus telleth us of a Jewish rabbin, who being asked when a man should repent, answered, One day before his death; that is, presently, this day; it may be your last in the world: Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation (2Co 6:2).
7. You have no time bug what may be serviceable for some good use. There is no time wherein thou dost not enjoy some blessing to provoke thee to thankfulness, or hast not some sin to be mortified, or some good work to be done. We have a great deal of work to do in a short time.
8. We have much work to do, therefore let us spend it in matters that most concern us. We all complain of the shortness of time, and yet everyone hath more time than he useth well. We should rather complain of the loss of time than the want of time. In the general, use time well. If it be short, do not make it shorter by your negligence and improvident misspending of it. A thing that is hired for a while, it is a loss to us if it be not used and employed; as a horse that is bargained for if he be kept idle, or money taken up at interest. So it is with time lent us by God for a while; we pay dear for it if we use it not, and improve it not for God. It is good to see what advantage we make of time daily. One could say when he heard the clock strike, Now I have another hour to answer for.
9. The slight price we are to give for time. You part with nothing but what is better lost than kept; with a little ease of the flesh, vain pleasure which passeth away as the wind, a little worldly profit, which at death will be of no use to thee. Now these are of no worth in comparison of time. 10. The necessity should quicken us, because there are many things which are apt to steal away and engross our time, and therefore must be redeemed; as–
(1) Sloth and idleness.
(2) Vain and sinful pleasures, and carnal sports.
(3) Worldly distractions.
(4) Vain company; they steal a jewel from us they can never restore, which is our precious time.
Secondly: Why we must redeem the season.
1. Because all things are beautiful in their season. It is said that the good man is like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season (Psa 1:3). Now, fruit in its season is a carriage answerable to all providences (Mat 9:15).
2. Because the season may soon slip out of our hands (Gal 6:10). Take and seek all occasions of doing good. To take the season relates to the necessities of others; to seek the season relates to our own capacity and ability; both together bind the duty stronger on us. We must not defer a benefit. Some are like hogs, good for nothing till they are dead; they will not part with anything till they are incapable of the use of it any longer. So for exhorting (Heb 3:13). So for serving public good (Act 13:36). They that mind to do good in the world engage themselves in a warfare, and the loss of our season is no small part of the enemys conquest.
3. This is wisdom. Some are wise in time, others too late; as the foolish virgins; they saw a necessity of getting oil into their vessels, but it was too late (Mat 25:10). But the godly make much of time before it is lost.
4. The foresight and provision of the creatures may shame us. God will not only teach careless men by His prophets and messengers, but by His creatures. There is a great deal of morality lieth hid in the bosom of nature if we had the skill to find it out. In this business of redeeming the time we are sent to the pismire (Pro 6:6-8).
5. Most of the calamities of the world come for not observing and improving the season (Ecc 8:6).
I. Reproof of several sorts of men.
1. Of them that wilfully spend their time vainly, either in doing nothing, or doing what they should not, or in doing evil.
2. It reproveth them that delay their conversion and return to God; as those invited to the marriage supper did not deny, but delay (Mat 22:1-46).
3. Reproof to fallen believers, who do not take the next advantage of recovering themselves by repentance. The longer sin continueth unmortified or unpardoned, the more dangerous is your case. A candle, as soon as the flame is blown out, sucketh light and is re-enkindled; but when it is grown cold and stiff, it requireth more ado.
4. It reproveth those that withstand the special seasons of grace, when Gods arms are most open to receive us. (T. Manton, D. D.)
Redeeming the time
Literally to comply with this exhortation of the apostle, is not in our power. Sooner may we stop the revolutions of the orbs of heaven, and arrest the sun in his course, than recall the years that are past, the days that are gone, or even the moment which but now is vanished. But by quickening our pace in our Christian course, and increasing our industry in every good work, we may, in some sort, retrieve the losses of past time, and make up for our former tardiness and waste of life. This is the duty to which the apostle exhorts; and a very solemn duty it is upon us erring and accountable beings. To the discharge of it, we have as strong motives as can affect the human mind. Time in itself is the gift of God, produced for us by His continual agency; and, therefore, not to be wasted or abused. It is by the power of the Deity that we are upheld in being. Again: The importance and magnitude of the business of life gives infinite value to every moment of it. Evidently, to exercise faith and exhibit obedience, to purify our nature and to acquire Divine habits, with a view to an immortal existence beyond the grave, is the primary object of our present being. Once more: We should be moved to obey the apostles exhortation by the solemn consideration that we are accountable for our time. Life is the first, the greatest, and most wonderful talent with which we are entrusted. Nor is it given to us merely for our sport. It is something which we are to use for our own benefit and our Makers glory. And this leads me to observe, further, that we should be engaged to this duty, and excited to very great fidelity in it, by a sense of the goodness of God in yet prolonging our days. Finally, we should be induced to an immediate compliance with this apostolic exhortation, by reflecting upon the uncertainty of life; and that the longer we defer the duty, the more complicated and arduous will be the task. (Bishop Dehon.)
Redeeming the time
Bishop Morton, of Durham, lived to a great age (ninety-eight), and few men made better use of their time, for he was never idle. He was often up at his devotions and study before four oclock, even after he had reached fourscore years; yet he seldom went to bed till after ten, and then had always a man servant to read some book to him till such time as sleep overtook him. When he travelled in his coach, he took care not to lose that time from study, carrying with him always some portion of his library. (Memoirs of Bishop Morton.)
As you cannot overtake Time, the best way is always to be a few minutes before him.
Redeeming the time
I. The value and power of time. Gods estimate of it very high. The one gift He gives His creatures sparingly. Millions of flowers, gems on the fingers of Nature, burning on every landscape. But not so does God give time: only one moment at a time, and never that until the previous one has been taken back. Also, we may see the power of time from the lives of men who have carved their way from obscurity to fame. They achieved their success entirely from perseveringly employing spare moments wasted by others. And time is irreparable; once gone you cannot recall it, be your grief never so deep and your regret never so unfeigned.
II. The importance of redeeming and how to do it. Time equally given to all; so all have the same responsibility. He that has a soul to be saved from eternal death need not have one idle moment. He that has a heaven to win, has enough to do to occupy all his time. They redeem their time who employ it–
1. In gaining useful knowledge.
2. In doing good to others.
3. In employing it for the purpose of gaining an honest livelihood.
4. In prayer and self-examination to make the heart better.
5. In seeking salvation, and endeavouring to do the will of God.
There are several temptations to waste time which we should avoid.
1. The allurements to sinful pleasures and amusements.
2. Novel reading.
3. Temptations to ambition, spending time in self-aggrandisement.
4. Dissipation.
5. In wild and visionary plans.
6. Luxurious indulgence in dressing, eating, drinking, and overmuch sleep.
Determine, then, to redeem your time by–
1. Usefully employing it.
2. Methodically employing it.
3. With an eye to Gods judgment day employing it, rescuing each opportunity from the chains of sloth, ease, and listlessness. (G. T. Dunney, M. A.)
Redeeming the time
What is the time meant there? How can we in any way redeem this time? The question may be answered by considering our state and relation to the present, and the invisible worlds. Time has been defined as the consideration of duration, the measure of it, as set out by certain periods, and marked by certain measures. Time is but a fragment of eternity, and we obtain the best idea of it, perhaps, from the revolutions of heavenly bodies, as the sun, moon, and stars, although it is difficult to make clearer by philosophy the intuitive idea we all have of its relations and fleeting nature. The clearest idea may be given of time, to a thoughtful mind, by one standing on the banks of a mighty river; he beholds the flowing waters glide along in a powerful volume, taking complexion from all things round; he views the floating bubble, the fallen leaves, the scattered branches of trees, or various boats or living beings constantly borne away; he stands rapt in contemplation, not knowing what is above or what is below his vision, but he finds all life and time hero imaged, vividly, and all rapidly pass away into the vast ocean of eternity. Time, however, has only reference to man. To the omniscient God all periods, beings, circumstances, and seasons, are present and alike. This results from the perfection of the Divine nature. But time has an important relation and bearing to man. It means the period of his life; his opportunities of doing evil or good; a trust and a talent confided to his care. In the apostles exhortation there is embodied a fine metaphor, taken from the practice of enterprizing merchants, who diligently look for the proper season of buying and selling; and who deny themselves, or readily part with their own mere pleasure for the sake of gain or property. Wisdom and skill thus combine with perseverance in obtaining the best goods for the best market and profit. Thus the Christian seizes old Father Time by the forelock, and uses every lawful opportunity for promoting his own spiritual happiness and the eternal welfare of his fellow men: this is what Christianity positively demands; and this is what the true Christian delights to do.
I. The merchant redeems or improves the time. We behold him employ his capital wisely, and find him sedulously attentive to all his worldly interests, so arranging all his business and regulating all the affairs of traffic that he knows how he stands in the world. What a lesson may the Christian learn from him I Ought he not to know in what state he stands before God? Ought he not to examine carefully whether his spiritual concerns are safe–declining or improving?
II. The farmer redeems or improves the time. See how carefully he prepares the seed and the ground, early and late in season. His watchfulness is ever alive, his cares never cease, while he looks for the dew and air and light of heaven to bless his fields with abundance and joy. Here, again, is a lesson for the Christian. For sowing Divine truth in the mind and doing good in the world is but acting as the farmer does in his fields. Sow broadcast and constantly the seeds of holy truth. Seize upon time, and redeem it from the world to God.
III. The philosopher, student, or statesman redeems or improves the time. No man ever rose to any eminence who did not wisely employ time. Our narrow space of days is so brief, that we must treasure well its moments. It is prime wisdom to use time as the gift of God. Behold the pale student with his books; often by the midnight lamp he ransacks tomes of the ancient or illustrious dead: see, though the sober light of thought settles on his cheek, though hectic fever fills his veins, and may flush his damp brow, yet he never tires in the pursuit of important knowledge. Thus the philosopher tests, by science and reason, the mysteries of nature, and with noble perseverance he draws forth some secret into the full daylight of knowledge; and thus the wise statesman studies the complicated webs of political or moral life, and penetrates with the keen eye of sagacity the undercurrents of human government, and the bearings of moral action. No student of books, nature, or men, is satisfied unless he adds daily to his stores of knowledge. Hence he is an economist of time. If even one day has borne no fruit of advancement to his hope, he sighs over lost opportunity, and exclaims, with the Roman Emperor, I have lost a day! And yet he has only tasted, not exhausted, the springs of knowledge! Other fields possess intellectual treasure; other Alps command a purer heaven! The purest philosophy, the noblest study, the highest statesmanship, are those which the Christian is invited to spend his life in mastering and acquiring!
IV. The Christian redeems or improves the time. We can behold this from the life of a consistent child of God. He lives not for himself, but for Him who died for him and rose again. All his thoughts and actions are regulated by the standard of Divine truth. The discipline of his heart and the duties of life are referred to this sacred test. (J. G. Angley, M. A.)
Admonitory counsels for the closing year
I. The subject to which we are directed. That is to time.
1. Consider its true character.
2. Consider its value.
3. Consider the brief portion which is allotted for our service.
4. Consider the right application of time.
II. The course recommended. Redeem–recover, buy back. This we may do in a certain sense–
1. By saving all the time we can.
2. By cherishing activity and diligence.
3. By regarding first the most momentous subjects.
III. The motives assigned–Because the days are evil.
1. They are uncertain in their number.
2. They are days of temptation and sin.
3. They are liable to be interrupted by infirmity and sickness. (J. Burns, D. D.)
Reasons for redeeming the time
1.Redeem the time, for time is very precious. Nothing is so valuable as time. Not all the gold in the universe–not all the hoards of ages–can purchase a single moment.
2. Redeem the time on account of the momentous consequences which depend on our use of it. These consequences are an eternity of woe, or an eternity of bliss.
3. Redeem the time, for the time is short. What are the longest lives? My days, says Job, are swifter than a post: they are passed away as the swift ships; as the eagle that hasteth to her prey. What is your life? says St. James; It is but a vapour which appeareth for a time and then vanishes away. Time is short, and the work we have to do is great. How important it is to redeem the time.
4. Redeem the time, for when it is once past it cannot be recovered. If we chance to lose a valued treasure, is may be found again though it be buried in the depths of the sea. It is not so with time. Not all the entreaties of eternity will bring back a single moment of time. It is a vessel dashed in a thousand pieces which can never be repaired; it is as water spilt upon the ground which can never be gathered up again.
5. The last reason I shall urge why we should redeem the time, is that it is not our own. Woe to that idle servant who neglects to improve and to trade with the talents given him to traffic with. (J. J. S. Bird, B. A.)
The use of opportunity
The apostle bids us buy up out of the market what we can never purchase so cheaply again–what, in fact, we can never buy again at any price. The lesson is–use opportunity, and use it thoroughly while you have it. Go read the old weird myth of the Cumaean Sibyl. She wrote her predictions upon leaves, and laid them at the entrance of her cave. Those who consulted her were compelled to exercise the greatest care and caution, lest the wild wind should take up the leaves, and scatter and displace them, destroy their arrangement, break their connection, and turn the clear oracles into inexplicable enigmas. That was a mythological lesson on seizing opportunity. Again, according to the familiar Roman legend, a Sibyl came to the palace of Tarquin II bearing nine volumes, for which she demanded a high price. Her offer being declined, she went away, and burned three of the precious books. Returning, she offered the remaining six, but asked for them the same price which she had demanded for the nine. Again her proposition was rejected, and again she departed and committed to the flames three more volumes. Once more she came back, bearing the last three, and refusing any less sum for them than that by which all might once have been bought. Tarquin, startled by this strange conduct of the merciless Sibyl, advised with his augurs, and bought the books, which proved the invaluable Sibylline Verses; but the chance of purchasing those priceless sister volumes was forever lost. Buy up opportunity! Your privileges will never be offered so cheaply again. Each time lifes Sibyl comes to us her precious treasures are diminished in number, and relatively increased in value. Each time she has less to offer, and asks a higher price for each opportunity that remains. So comes Times stern, relentless Sibyl, until she herself finally disappears, and Time and her opportunities are no morel (A. T. Pierson.)
Redeeming the time
1.In the first place we may be exhorted to redeem our time from the power of indolence. Those who have accomplished much in the world have learned the happy art of redeeming these fragments, just as the goldsmith spreads his apron and saves all the filings of gold, which, little in themselves, when ran together form something of great value.
2. Again, we may be exhorted to redeem time from its misapplication. It is said of a wise man that, being in company with some learned friends and philosophers, from whose society he had expected great profit, but finding that their occupation was gaming and their discourse trifling, he took out his tablets, and for an hour or two noted down their words, which he afterwards read to them, whereat they were so ashamed that they threw aside their cards and sought to pass their time more profitably.
3. But a third point for our consideration is the redeeming a larger portion of our time for the immediate concerns of the soul and the service of our God. (W. H. Lewis, D. D.)
Redeeming the time
I. In these words we have a figure most expressive, both of the condition in which our hours by nature abe, and of that in which by grace they should be. Time is represented as in captivity. We are bidden to redeem it as from bondage. Those hours which are given us for the trial of our hearts, for the exercise of our souls through grace unto salvation; those hours are too commonly enslaved to the pursuit of mere worldly objects. They are devoted to the service of Mammon, laden with the fetters of tormenting care, dishonoured in the base indulgence of sensual pleasure, or in the vain pursuit of frivolous amusements.
II. Many reasons might be urged with force for our thus redeeming the time. We might argue that it is scarce, dealt out to us in single moments, poured forth as it were drop by drop, like a precious gift, of which it would be too much for us to possess more than one particle at once. But the special reason given by St. Paul is that the days are evil. Bad times are not times for indolence, extravagance, or amusement. The days are evil. Therefore work harder in your spiritual work. The days are evil. Therefore enjoy less of earthly pleasure, that you may enjoy more of bliss in heaven hereafter.
III. You have now seen how time is in captivity, and what is meant by redeeming it. You have heard also the force of the apostles argument why you should ever labour so to do. In what remains, I shall set forth some plain practical rules for so doing.
1. One very important rule towards redeeming the time is this, that you avoid all waste of it, and so make the most of what time you have.
2. Next to a diligent frugality of time comes the right allotment of its parts, the due proportioning of its several employments.
3. And observe further, that these things, however proper in their place, must not engross, as they are apt to do, too much of our time.
4. Lastly, in all these holy offices, and in all the duties of life, be watchful. Time steals on smoothly, but swiftly. If you would stay it for good, watch. (C. Girdlestone, M. A.)
On redeeming time
I. What we are to redeem. Time.
1. Its nature. It differs from eternity as space differs from infinity.
2. Its value.
II. What is implied in redeeming time and how this may be done. The word used alludes to the custom of merchants and traders, who buy up the articles they know to be of value, and what they know they can turn to good account. But where may we buy up time? Where is it to be met with? In the hands of sin, wickedly and madly employed. At what price may we buy it? To buy it out of the hands of sin, we must part with our sins, our lusts, and passions; out of the hands of amusements, pleasures, worldly ambition.
III. For what purpose time should be redeemed. Not to hoard it up as misers do their gold, nor to spend upon ourselves; but that we may use it for our spiritual and eternal profit, for our instruction, conversion, renovation, for the glory of God, and the good of others.
IV. The reason of this advice, and the wisdom of taking it. (J. Benson, D. D.)
Redemption of time
I. What makes it so supremely important to redeem time?
1. Its connection with eternity. Time is the seed of eternity.
2. So much time has gone by, and cannot be recalled. A dying English queen cried, A world of money for an inch of time!
3. Because of the worth of the work that is given us to do in it. What would be said of a farmer idling his time while his fields lay uncultivated, or a general occupied with trifles when the enemy was in the camp?
4. The special reason given in the text–Because the days are evil.
II. Mark how this redemption of time can be accomplished.
1. Take the exercise of the responsibility to God. Begin with heartfelt prayer. Seek to know the value, and to obtain strength for performing the duty. We must begin with God if we are to prosper. Even all our strength put to the wheel will not move it; the work will break down because the power is insufficient. But God will give what we need (Deu 33:25; 2Co 12:9; Php 4:13-19).
2. Having begun to lead a new life in the exercise of prayer, and in the life that prayer brings out for us to live, remember another important rule, viz., to keep the great end of life before us. We are either sinners lost in sin or saved by grace. If lost in sin, the work given us to do is, Believe, etc. We look to the Saviour as the object of our love, and we go to Him as the source of our strength. One brings the brightness and the other brings the power.
3. Another rule for us to remember as redeemed and saved sinners, is our responsibility, and the one object of our life, viz., To me to live is Christ, etc. Let us turn our eyes on Him. If we suffer our hearts to wander from that centre we immediately become palsied creatures, living for no earthly object or value at all. In conclusion, let us remember, in the exercise of this life, that He who died for us has a claim on the best of our time and the whole of our heart. (Charles Bridges, M.A.)
The value of time
It was a saying of Charles V, I have spent my treasure, but that I may recover again; I have lost my health, but that I may have again; but I have lost a great many brave soldiers, but them I can never have again. So other temporal blessings may be lost and recovered again; but, if the term of life wherein you should work for heaven be once lost, it is past all recovery; you can never have another season of grace for your soul. (T. Watson.)
Time, its loss, and its redemption
I. How time is lost.
1. By idleness.
2. By excessive amusements.
3. By unprofitable talk.
4. By exclusive attachment to worldly pursuits.
5. By positive wickedness.
II. How is time to be redeemed?
1. By guarding against its loss.
2. By acting according to rule or method.
3. By specially attending to the parts of our time that are most precious.
4. By being habitually engaged in doing good.
III. Why is time to be redeemed?
1. Because it is short and uncertain.
2. Because the work to be done in it is important.
3. Because the days are evil. (G. Brooks.)
The redemption of time
I. Why time should be redeemed.
1. It is the most choice and precious thing in the world.
2. When once passed, it never returns.
3. It must be one day accounted for.
4. The shortness and uncertainty of human life.
5. Because of the work we have to do, and the difficulty of doing it.
6. Because we have already lost so large a proportion of the time allowed us.
II. How it may be redeemed.
1. Observe a method in the distribution of your time.
2. Be moderate in your recreations.
3. Cut off, as much as may he, unnecessary visits.
4. Examine, every evening, how you have spent the day. (Bishop Horne.)
Redeeming the time
There was once a young shoemaker, who became so much interested in politics, that his shop was filled with loungers, talking, and discussing, and disputing about one thing and another from morning till night; and he found it often necessary to work till midnight to make up for the hours lost in talk during the day. One night, after his shutters were closed, and he was busy on his bench, a boy, passing along, lout his mouth to the keyhole, and mischievously piped out, Shoemaker, shoemaker, work by night, and run about by day. Had a pistol been fired off at my ear, he said, I could not have been more startled. I dropped my work, saying to myself, True, true; but you never shall have that to say of me again. I never forgot it. To me it was the voice of God, and it has been a word in season throughout my life. I learned from it not to leave till tomorrow the work of today, or to be idle when I ought to be working. From that time I turned over a new leaf. This shoemaker was Samuel Drew, who subsequently wrote on the Immortality and Immateriality of the Soul. Wise investments:–From the year 218 to the year 212 B.C. for ancient Rome the days were evil. A fierce and warlike invader was in the land; the army of the Commonwealth had been twice defeated by him with terrible loss; and, finally, there came a day in which the proud Roman people suffered the humiliation of seeing their very capital reduced to a state of siege. Hannibals army lay encamped against it. Outside the walls, where the children had played and the citizens had lounged, foreign standards were waving in the breeze. On the very spot where, in days of security and peace, the busy fair had been held, and the gay booths had plied their brisk trade, foreign sentinels challenged the passer-by. It was while affairs were in this state that the Roman senate took a remarkable step. They put up to public auction a piece of ground outside the walls on which at that very moment the invading generals tent was standing, and the ground was forthwith purchased by a senator. Now you will see at once the wisdom of the senates action. You will perceive that no more politic or statesmanlike stroke could have been played. For what would the immediate result of such action be? Why, to give heart and hope to every man, woman, and child within the city walls. Their leaders, the people would argue, were evidently but little disturbed by what had happened. Evidently they regarded Hannibals action as mere bravado. The enemy would never set foot within the gates–very soon he would be compelled to raise the siege and retreat in haste. As a matter of fact, this is exactly what did happen. But why do I speak of it now, and what has all this to do with redeeming the time? Well, it furnishes us with a very good illustration of what the apostle means when he uses these words. For the expression, redeeming the time, may more accurately be rendered, buying up the opportunity, because the days are evil. Now this is just what the senate did. The opportunity (a very great opportunity) was in the hands of the foe. The prestige of the victor in two bloody engagements; of the besieger of a strong, proud city, was all on his side. Then, by a master stroke, the Roman Fathers bought up the opportunity, so to speak, from Hannibal; wrested it out of his hands, and secured a moral victory. (J. B. C. Murphy, B. A.)
The purchase of opportunities
A better rendering would be, Buying up the opportunity, because the times are hard. But no mere translation can fully convey the idea St. Paul had in his mind. The picture or parable suggested by the Greek is this. Here stands a wise and wary merchantman, keen for spiritual traffic and gain. Like Milton, he has fallen on evil times; on bad times, as men of business would say. The days drag slowly by, bringing him few means of moral culture, rare occasions in which he can trade with his talents and make them more. But, at last, as the caravan of Time moves tardily by, among the captives in its train he espies an opportunity such as his heart has long craved. He leaps at it, seizes it, redeems it, i.e., pays a price for it, and makes it his own. This seems to have been the conception, the picture, in the apostles mind. And thus he defines the Christian attitude toward Time. Its days and hours are for the most part in bondage to vanity and corruption. We are to watch them as they pass by, keen and prompt to rescue them from their bondage, to set them free by devoting them to the service of God and man, to purchase any precious opportunity they may bring with them, whatever it may cost us. There are many reasons why we should take and maintain this attitude.
1. Opportunities are only too apt to slip by unrecognized. Even the wisest of us is hardly wise enough to recognize his opportunities till they are past. As a rule our days are samely and monotonous. There is not sufficient difference between them to awaken attention and inspire hope. Our days, moreover, come to us masqued for the most part, so that even when they bring us a great opportunity, we do not recognize its greatness at the time, and therefore do not seize upon it and improve it as we should if we knew its worth. The current of our life is often turned by seeming trifles, which we assume to be quite incapable of seriously affecting it. When the crises of our life occur, when the great opportunities come to us, which come so seldom, they are hidden from us by a multitude of subsidiary accidents and occurrences. If there were no God above us, ruling even the accidents of life for our good, and working out the counsels of His will even when we let our wills drift on the tide of chance or drive before the waves of impulse, what would become of us all?
2. These opportunities, critical as they are, when once they are gone, can never be recalled. The occasion once lost, can never be recalled. Says Plato, It is quite clear, quite clear, that if a person lets the right moment for any work go by, it never returns. For the thing to be done does not choose, I imagine, to tarry the leisure of the doer. Our past neglects should lend new force and urgency to the apostolic injunction, Redeem the time, and make our obedience to it more prompt and vigorous. Today we may listen to the Divine voice to which yesterday we were deaf. Today we may renounce those hurtful passions and lusts which ought to have been renounced long ago. Today we may begin to grasp occasions as they rise, and to do the duty we have often thought of doing, and even talked of doing, but have not done.
3. But if we set ourselves to seize and redeem present opportunities, we shall need to remember that they are only to be redeemed at a certain cost. In St. Pauls view these opportunities were as captives which the days led by in chains; and to redeem a captive we must pay a price. We can avail ourselves of no occasion of serving God and man except as we rouse ourselves to labour and self-sacrifice. And these sacred opportunities, like the Sibylline books, both rise in price and grow fewer every time we refuse to purchase them. If it be hard to subdue passion and the cravings of irregular desire today, it will be harder tomorrow, should we leave the hours of today unimproved. If it would cost us much to do what we know to be the will of the Lord today, it will cost us more every day we neglect our duty.
4. Finally, the apostle warns us that when the times are hard, we should be the more eager to redeem the opportunities they bring us. Hard and evil times, indeed, bring opportunities of a special value, not only because they are scarce, but also because they have a great intrinsic worth. Nay, more, hard times, sorrowful times, times of temptation and difficulty, are themselves opportunities of preeminent value. Then, if ever, we have a chance of showing of what stuff we are made, of testing and proving the sincerity, the genuineness, of our religious life. Too often we forget that every provocation, wrong, loss, hardship, is an opportunity to be redeemed; that it is sent by God even though it comes from men; that He tasks our strength to test our character, to teach us what we really are, to wake us up from any delusion into which we have fallen about ourselves. (S. Cox, D. D.)
Thrift of time
It is the counsel of reason, as well as of inspiration, which bids men do with their might whatsoever their hand findeth to do. The value of time is what few men ever adequately learn; and the number is still smaller of those who ever learn to improve it to the best possible advantage. Dr. Johnson was once asked how it was that the Christian fathers, and other voluminous authors of former days, ever found leisure to fill so many large folios with the productions of their pens. Nothing is easier, said he; and then he proceeded to make a calculation, by which he showed that an author who should write no more than one octavo page in a day would easily be able, in thirty or forty years, to produce works as extensive as those of Jerome, Chrysostom, Augustine, Luther, Calvin, or Baxter. Mr. Gladstone is one of the best living illustrations of the truth of his own words, addressed to the students of Edinburgh University as its Lord Rector. He said to them: Thrift of time will repay you in after life with a usury of profit beyond your most sanguine dreams; while the waste of it will make you dwindle, alike in intellectual and moral stature, beyond your darkest reckoning. (Christian Age.)
Time veiled
Ones vocation is never some far-off possibility. It is always the simple round of duties that comes with the passing hour. Someone has pictured the days as coming to us with their faces veiled, bearing only the commonest gifts in their hands; but when they have passed beyond our recall the draped figures became radiant, and the gifts we rejected are seen to be treasures fit for kings houses. No day is commonplace, if we only had eyes to see its splendour. There is no duty that comes to our hand, however homely, but brings to us the possibility of kingly service. There is opportunity for the most ordinary people to make their years beautiful. There is room in lifes common relations for noblest heroism. (Christian Age.)
Wasted opportunities
If a girl who had been strolling in the parks or pastures before breakfast came in laden with bunches of primroses and violets, with cowslips for bracelets, with daisies for brooches, and dandelions for earrings, you would not reprove her, or consider that she had forfeited a splendid chance: what was there better than these fair blossoms? But now, if every pebble in her ramble had been a diamond, or a topaz, or an amethyst, and yet she came in with nothing but these fading blossoms, what would you say to her then? Would you not; exclaim, Silly, stupid girl! you have missed a fortune; you have despised treasures? And what shall we say of ourselves if we occupy ourselves with worldly vanities, or scramble on anyhow in idleness, when God has strewn our path with what should enrich us for heaven? We might have gathered wisdom, which is above riches: we might have gained Gods favour; we might have adorned ourselves with virtues and graces; we might have imitated Mary in her choice; but we let the whole train glide by us without seizing on a single gem. (Anon.)
Definition of time
Time is a continual over-dropping of moments, which fall down one upon the other, and evaporate. (Richter.)
Economy of time
How many minutes have you to spare? Five, ten, fifteen? Much may be done with them. We have heard of a young man who perused a History of England while waiting for his meals in a boarding house; we have heard of a mathematician who is said to have composed an elaborate work when visiting with his wife, during the interval between the moment when she first started to take leave of her friends, and the moment she had finished her last words. (E. P. Hood.)
Employment of time
We all complain, says the philosopher Seneca, of the shortness of time; and yet we have more than we know what to do with. Our lives are spent either in doing nothing at all, or in doing nothing to the purpose, or in doing nothing that we ought to do. We are always complaining that our days are few, and acting as though there would be no end of them. Alfred the Great was one of the wisest, the best, and most beneficent monarchs that ever swayed the sceptre of this realm; and his example is highly memorable. Ever hour of his life had its peculiar allotted business. He divided the day and night into three portions of eight hours each; and though much afflicted with a very painful disorder, he assigned only eight hours to sleep, meals, and exercise; devoting the remaining sixteen, one half to reading, writing, and prayer, and the other to public business. So sensible was this great man that time was not a trifle to be dissipated, but a rich talent entrusted to him, for which he was accountable to the great Dispenser of it! We are told by historians that Queen Elizabeth, except when engaged by public or domestic affairs, and the exercises necessary for the preservation of her health and spirits, was always employed either in reading or writing; in translating from other authors, or in compositions of her own. Gassendi, the celebrated philosopher, was perhaps one of the hardest students that ever existed. He generally rose at three oclock in the morning, and read or wrote till eleven, when he received the visits of his friends. He afterwards at twelve made a very slender dinner, at which he drank nothing but water, and sat down to his books again at three. There he remained till eight oclock; and after having eaten a very light supper, he retired to bed at ten. Among the ancient Indians there were a set of men called gymnosophists, who had a great aversion to sloth and idleness. When the table were spread for their repasts, the assembling youths were asked by their masters in what useful task they had been employed from the hour of sunrise. One, perhaps, represented himself as having been an arbitrator, and succeeded by his prudent management in composing a difference between friends. A second had been paying obedience to his parents commands. A third had made some discovery by his own application, or learned something by anothers instruction. But he who had done nothing to deserve a dinner was turned out of doors without one, and obliged to work while the others enjoyed the fruits of their application. (Knowles.)
The season of mercy
Neglect not the seasons of mercy, the day of grace, because opportunity facilitates the great work of your salvation; it is much easier to be done in such a season than it can be afterwards: an impression is easily made on wax, when melted, but stay till it be hardened, and if you lay the greatest weight on the seal it leaves not its impression upon it. Much so it is with the heart, there is a season when God makes it soft and yielding, when the affections are thawed and melted under the Word; conscience is full of sense and activity, the will palpable: now is the time to set in with the motions of the Spirit; there is now a gale from heaven, if you take it, and if not, it tarries not for man, nor waits for the sons of men: neglect of the season is the loss of the soul. (J. Flavel.)
Opportunity
Time is deservedly reckoned among the most precious mercies of this life; and that which makes it so valuable are the commodious seasons and opportunities for salvation which are vouchsafed to us therein. Opportunity is the golden spot of Time. If time be a ring of gold, opportunity is the rich diamond that gives it both its value and glory. (J. Flavel.)
That the wisdom of a Christian is eminently discovered in saving and improving all opportunities in this world, for that world which is to come
God hangs the great things of eternity upon the small wires of times and seasons in this world: that may be done, or neglected in a day, which may be the groundwork of joy or sorrow to all eternity. There is a nick of opportunity which gives both success and facility to the great and weighty affairs of the soul, as well as body; to come before it is to seek the bird before it be hatched; and to come after it, is to seek it when it is fled. (J. Flavel.)
The mystery of time
That great mystery of Time, were there no other; the inimitable, silent, never-resting thing called Time, rolling, rushing on, swift, silent like an all embracing ocean tide, on which we and all the universe swim like exhalations, like apparitions which are and then are not. This is forever very literally a miracle–a thing to strike us dumb; for we have no word to speak about it. (Carlyle.)
Time, a treasure
An Italian philosopher expressed in his motto, that time was his treasure; an estate, indeed, which will produce nothing without cultivation, but which will always abundantly repay the labours of industry, and satisfy the most extensive desires, if no part of it be suffered to lie waste by negligence, to be overrun with noxious plants, or laid out for show rather than use. (Dr. Johnson.)
Redemption of time
Our moments slip away silently and insensibly; the thief steals not more unperceived from the pillaged house. And will the runagates never stop? No: wherever we are, however employed, time pursues his incessant course. Though we are listless and dilatory, the great measurer of our days presses on, still presses on, in his unwearied career, and whirls our weeks, and months, and years away. Is it not, then, surprisingly strange to hear people complain of the tediousness of their time, and how heavy it hangs upon their hands? To see them contrive a variety of amusing artifices to accelerate its flight, and to get rid of its burden? Ah! thoughtless mortals! Why need you urge the headlong torrent? Your days are swifter than a post, which, carrying despatches of the last importance, with unremitted speed scours the road. They pass away like the nimble ships, which have the wind in their wings, and skim along the watery plain. They hasten to their destined period with the rapidity of an eagle, which leaves the stormy blast behind her, while she cleaves the air, and darts upon her prey. Now the day is gone, how short it appears! When my fond eye beheld it in perspective, it seemed a very considerable space. Minutes crowded upon minutes, and hours ranged behind hours, exhibited an extensive draught, and flattered me with a longer progression of pleasures. But upon a retrospective view, how wonderfully is the case altered! The landscape, large and spacious, which a warm fancy drew, brought to the test of cool experience, shrinks into a span, just as the shores vanish, and mountains dwindle to a spot, when the sailor, surrounded by skies and ocean, throws his last look on his native land. How clearly do I now discover the cheat! May it never impose upon my unwary imagination again! I find there is nothing abiding on this side eternity. A long duration, in a state of finite existence, is mere illusion. Hark! what sound is that? In such a situation every noise alarms. Solemn and slow it breaks upon the silent air. Tis the striking of the clock–designed, one would imagine, to ratify all my serious meditations. Methinks it says, Amen, and sets a seal to every improving hint. It tells me that another portion of my appointed time is elapsed. One calls it, the knell of my departed hours. Tis the watchword to vigilance and activity. It cries in the ear of reason, Redeem the time. Catch the favourable gales of opportunity. Oh! catch them while they breathe; before they are irrecoverably lost. The span of life shortens continually. Thy minutes are all upon the wing, hastening to be gone. Thou art a borderer upon eternity, and making incessant advances to the state thou art contemplating. May the admonition sink deep into an attentive and obedient mind! May it teach me that heavenly arithmetic, of numbering my days; and applying my heart unto wisdom! (Hervey.)
The flight of time
Refusing to hear anything from me, or take anything from the physician, he lay silent, as far as sudden darts of pain would permit, till the clock struck. Then he with vehemence cried out, Oh! Time! Time! it is fit thou shouldst thus strike thy murderer to the heart. How art thou fled forever! A month! Oh, for a single week! I ask not for years, though an age were too little for the much I have to do. So much the worse. Tis lost! Tis gone forever! (Life of Rochester.)
Value of time
As every thread of gold is valuable, so is every minute of time. (J. Mason.)
Fragments of time
As in money, so in time, we are to look chiefly to the smallest portions. Take care of the pence, and the pounds will take care of themselves. Take care of the minutes, and the hours and years will take care of themselves. Gold is not found in California for the most in great masses, but in little grains. It is sifted out of the sand in minute particles, which, melted together, produce the rich ingots that excite the worlds cupidity. So the spare pieces of time, the shreds, the odds and ends of time put together, may form a very great and beautiful work. Hale wrote his Contemplations when on his circuits. Dr. Mason Good translated Lucretius in his carriage, while, as a physician, he rode from door to door. One of the chancellors of France penned a bulky volume in the successive intervals of daily waiting for dinner. Doddridge wrote his Exposition chiefly before breakfast. Kirke White studied Greek, went over the nouns and verbs, as he was going to and from a lawyers office. Burney learned French and Italian while riding on horseback. Franklin laid the foundation of his wonderful stock of knowledge in his dinner hours and evenings, while working as a printers boy. In the Palace of Industry there were several curious specimens of art, wrought by humble individuals out of such fragments of time as they could secure from their regular occupations. Oh, the preciousness of moments! no gold or gems can be compared to them. Yet all have them; while some are thereby enriched, and others leave themselves in poverty. The wealth of time is like gold in the mine–like the gem in the pebble–like the diamond in the deep. The mine must be worked; the pebble ground and polished–the deep fathomed and searched. (J. Stoughton.)
The value of time
Time is lifes freightage, wherewith some men trade and make a fortune; and others suffer it to moulder all away, or waste in extravagance. Time is lifes book, out of which some extract wondrous wisdom; while others let it lie uncovered, and then die fools. Time is lifes tree, from which some gather precious fruit, while others lie down under its shadow, and perish with hunger; Time is lifes ladder, whereby some raise themselves up to honour, and renown, and glory; and some let themselves down into the deeps of shame, degradation, and ignominy. Time will be to us what, by our use of the treasure, we make it; a good or an evil, a blessing or a curse. (J. Stoughton.)
Time as seen in old age
I who squandered whole days heretofore, now husband hours and minutes; thus, when the glass begins to run low, I will not spend what remains in trifles. At the end of the lottery of life, our last minutes, like tickets left in the wheel, rise in their valuation; they are not of so much worth, perhaps, in themselves, as those which preceded, but we are apt, with great reason, to prize them more. (Bishop Atterbury.)
The shortness of time
Times a hands breadth; tis a tale;
Tis a vessel under sail;
Tis an eagle in its way,
Darting down upon its prey;
Tis an arrow in its flight,
Mocking the pursuing sight;
Tis a short-lived fading flower;
Tis a rainbow on a shower;
Tis a momentary ray
Smiling in a winters day;
Tis a torrents rapid stream;
Tis a shadow; tis a dream;
Tis the closing watch of night,
Dying at the rising light;
Tis a bubble; tis a sigh;
Be prepared, O man, to die.
(Quarles.)
Redeeming and improving of time
I. To show in general what it is to redeem the time.
II. To set before you the particular manner of redeeming the time.
III. To offer you the reasons of it. And as to that particular reason or motive adjoined here by the apostle, I will treat of that by itself, when I have dispatched this part of my discourses on the words.
IV. I will present you with those practical inferences which this doctrine affords.
I. The first thing I undertake is, to give you a more general account of this apostolical injunction, and to acquaint you what it is to redeem the time.
II. I am to propound to you the particular manner of redeeming the time; and this cannot be said in fewer and more comprehensive words than these, that we take care to spend every day well; and if you ask me how this is to be done, I answer, It may most effectually be done these three ways.
1. By beginning every day well.
2. By proceeding in it accordingly.
3. By concluding it in a like manner.
4. Remember to be cautious in respect of your recreations.
No man can pretend to redeem his time who is not exceeding careful here. Wheat a great portion of time is spent by some persons in foolish sports and pastimes, as they call them.
5. I add this as another excellent way of redeeming the time; see that you retire from the world very often, abandon all company, and be alone. Company devours time excessively, and your greatest company keepers are the worst managers of time.
6. When you go abroad take care of this, that you do not mix yourselves with evil companions; be very circumspect as to the persons you converse with; never think you can redeem time, if you be careless as to this particular, for a wonderful deal of time is lost (and the person too often) in unprofitable and sinful society.
7. If you would redeem the time, busy not yourselves about mean and trifling matters, but mind those things which are great and worthy.
8. To sum up all in few words, make it your great care to employ all the time you have, and that very well. Let no opportunity of doing good be omitted. As I have showed you how you ought to begin, and to continue every day of your life; so it remains, that I let you know what it is to conclude the day well.
And this must be done–
1. By serious reflection and meditation. Sit down in good earnest, and recollect the passages of the past day. Let every evening be the audit of the days actions.
2. Conclude the day with solemn acts of repentance.
3. Endeavour, as much as in you lieth, to make your peace with the offended Majesty of heaven, by humbly begging forgiveness of your sins through the satisfaction and atonement of Christ Jesus the Redeemer. And yet now it will be requisite to tell you that the work is not yet at an end. Religion takes care of the night as well as the day. It is not to be thought that the night was made altogether for sleep. It may sometimes be improved to the same pious ends which the day is. The holy psalmist is our pattern here, he remembered God upon his bed, and meditated on Him in the night watches (Psa 63:6). And he professes thus of himself, When I awake, I am still with Thee (Psa 139:18). But I would give you a further view of this duty by acquainting you with this, that there are some particular seasons and opportunities of our lives, which are more especially to be improved and redeemed. Thus the days of youth are to be secured with a more than ordinary diligence, because the whole sequel of a mans life doth very often depend upon them. Also, the days of bodily health are another special season, which we are engaged to improve to the utmost. This also I commend to your thoughts, that the day of peace and prosperity and the fruition of the good things of this life is another seasonable opportunity of doing our duty with great alacrity and vigour, and of omitting nothing that may tend to our everlasting welfare. But, above all, the day of grace, and of Gods offering the means in order to it, is a season which you are to attend to with the greatest care. How do you know but that this holy Dove, like that of Noah, if you let it go from you once and again, may never return back to you? Jerusalem missed her day, she let pass her opportunity, and that caused the merciful Jesus to weep over her, and to lament her destruction.
III. According to my propounded method I proceed to show you how reasonable it is that we should redeem the time. You will find this to be a most rational performance when you have considered of these following things.
1. The inestimable value of time.
2. The brevity and uncertainty of it.
3. The impossibility of recalling it.
4. The end and design of Gods intrusting us with it.
5. The account we must give for it.
I read of Amasis, an Egyptian king, that he made an order, that every man should once a year give a particular account how he spent his time, and in what way he lived. My brethren, there is a day coming, when you must all give an account of your time; all your time must be reckoned for at the great and general audit of the world.
IV. I proceed to the application of all that hath been said; take it in these three particulars.
1. Those are to be rebuked who have misspent their time.
2. Let us beg of God to forgive us the misspente of our time.
3. Be exhorted for the future to redeem it. (John Edwards, D. D.)
The worse the times are the better should we be
1. The reasonableness of this proposition will appear, in regard of God, who is pleased to stand by us in the worst times, and therefore we are obliged to stand up for Him.
2. In regard of those whom we live amongst, we are concerned in the worst times to look most carefully to our lives and conversations. For in such a season as this we may light on a happy opportunity of converting others, and of reforming the world by our exemplary behaviour.
3. In regard of ourselves, it is our concern in evil times to walk strictly and circumspectly, and to be very exact in our lives. Because
(1) hereby we evidence to ourselves, that we have in us the truth and life of grace. Yea, true goodness and virtue are always exalted and made more vigorous by the corruption and wickedness of the times. There is a moral or religious antiperistasis as well as a physical one. There is a repulse in bodies, whereby either heat or cold are made more strong and active by the restraining of the contrary on every side. So there is something like this to be seen in those that are truly and sincerely good, when they are encompassed with contraries, when they live in the midst of vice, and are environed with evil men; their virtue grows more vigorous and strong; the true spirit of zeal and fire of love are hottest in them in the sharpest and coldest seasons; their graces are more inflamed and increased by opposition, which is as great a testimony as can be of the true vital energy of saving grace in them.
(2) When the days are evil, that is perilous and calamitous, we know not how long we may be permitted to appear for religion, we know not how soon we may be cut off by its implacable adversaries, at least be deprived of the opportunity of doing that good which at present it is in our power to do. Therefore we ought to be more than ordinary stirring, and to muster up all our forces, and to make our last effort as it were, because we cannot tell but that it may really prove to be so.
(3) This is the only way to provide for yourselves an ark, a refuge, a sanctuary in the days of Gods indignation. When the times are not only sinful, but calamitous, when Gods judgments are abroad in the earth, you must prepare yourselves to receive them by a blameless life and conversation. In this you may be encouraged by the example of the most eminent servants of God, who have striven to be signally virtuous and good in times of general impiety; and this their singular practice is taken notice of and commended by the Holy Ghost in Scripture. Lot lived in a great city, and very populous, but where there were very few righteous men to be found, and yet he was not corrupted by those wicked people amongst whom he sojourned. Job was perfect and upright in the land of Uz. The place of his habitation is remarkable. It is no wonder to be good in good company, but Job feared God and eschewed evil in a country where there were but few that had the true knowledge of God, and walked in His ways, which redounds to the eternal honour of this holy man. Elias stood firm and unshaken amongst a people that were almost overspread with idolatry; he had as great a zeal for the true God as they had for their false one, which was very great indeed. We read of Joseph and Moses in Pharaohs Court (for all the Egyptian kings in those times were Pharaohs). We read of Obadiah in Ahabs court, of Daniel in Nebuchadnezzars, and of believers in Herods house, and even saints in Neros palace. Joseph of Arimathaea, though a counsellor belonging to the high priests consistory, would not consent to the counsel and deed of the other counsellors and chief priests that contrived our Saviours death (Luk 23:51). (John Edwards, D. D.)
Improvement of time
Boyle remarks that sand grains are easily scattered, but skilful artificers gather, melt, and transmute them to glass, of which they make mirrors, lenses, and telescopes. Even so vigilant Christians improve parenthetic flagments of time, employing them in self-examination, acts of faith, and researches of holy truth; by which they became looking glasses for their souls, and telescopes revealing their promised heaven. Jewellers save the very sweepings of their shops because they contain particles of precious metal. Should Christians, whose every moment was purchased for them by the blood of Christ, be less careful of time? Surely its very minutiae should be more treasured than grains of gold or dust of diamonds. (S. Coley.)
Value of time
Melancthon noted down the time lost by him that he might thereby reanimate his industry and not lose an hour. An Italian sculptor put over his door an inscription intimating that whosoever remained there should join in his labours. We are afraid, said some visitors to. Baxter, that we break in upon your time. To be sure you do, replied the disturbed and blunt divine. Time was the estate out of which these great workers, and all other workers, carved a rich inheritance of thoughts and deeds for their successors. (Smiles.)
Value of time
It is related of the Duke of Wellington that he made an appointment with a city dignitary to meet at a certain hour on London Bridge. The dignitary was five minutes late, and finding the Duke watch in hand and angry, pleaded, It is only five minutes, your grace. Only five minutes! he replied; five minutes unpunctuality would have, before now, lost me a battle. Next time the city magnate took care, as he thought, to be on the safe side. When the Duke appeared he greeted him rather triumphantly, You see, your grace, I was five minutes before you this time. Shows how little you know times value, said the old Field Marshal. I am here to the moment. I cannot afford to waste five minutes. (Sunday at Home.)
Time lengthened
A venerable lady was once asked her age. Ninety-three, was the reply. The Judge of all the earth does not mean that I shall have any excuse for not being prepared to meet Him.
Time to be seized and used
On the outer wall of one of the towers of Beverley Minster is a quaint old dial with the pregnant legend, Now, or When? A simple question it asks, silently, yet continuously–in the morning, at noon, at the setting of the sun–of all the dwellers in that place, of all the strangers that come there, of all the passers-by; a simple question, yet one deep in its suggestiveness.
Time and its loss
You have made us lose a whole hour, said a gentleman to a lad as he came into a room where an important committee was meeting. Beg pardon, sir, that is impossible, said the youth, taking out his watch; I am only five minutes late. Very true, replied the other, but there are twelve of us here, and each one of us has lost five minutes; so that makes an hour. (Thain Davidson.)
Time not to be spent in frivolous amusements
On his way to Marengo Napoleon stopped at the door of the barbers shop and asked his former hostess if she remembered a young officer named Bonaparte once quartered in her family. Indeed I do, and a very disagreeable inmate he was. He was always either shut up in his room (at study), or if he walked out he never condescended to speak to anyone. Ah! my good woman, Napoleon rejoined, had I passed my time as you wished to have me, I should not now have been in command of the army of Italy.
Time saved from sleep
General Henry Lee once observed to the chief, We are amazed, sir, at the vast amount of work that you accomplish. Washington replied, Sir, I rise at four oclock, and a great deal of my work is done while others are asleep.
Value of time
One morning, when Benjamin Franklin was busy preparing his new paper for the press, a lounger stepped into the store and spent an hour or more looking over the books, etc. Finally taking one in his hand, he asked the price. One dollar. One dollar! said he. Cant you take less than that? No, indeed; that is the price. Another hour was nearly passed, when the lounger said, Is Mr. Franklin at home? Yes, he is in the printing office. I want to see him. The boy immediately informed Mr. Franklin that there was a gentleman in the store waiting to see him. Franklin was soon behind the counter, when the lounger, book in hand, addressed him thus, Franklin, what is the lowest you can take for this book? One dollar and a quarter. One dollar and a quarter! Why, your boy here said I could have it for one dollar. True, said Franklin, and I could have better afforded to take a dollar than to have been taken out of the office. The lounger seemed surprised, and wishing to end the parley of his own making, said, Come, Mr. Franklin, what is the lowest you can take for it? One dollar and a half. A dollar and a half! Why you offered it yourself for a dollar and a quarter! Yes, said Franklin, and I had better have taken that than a dollar and a half now! The lounger paid down the price and went about his business (if he had any), and Franklin returned to the printing office.
Value of time
Mr. W.M.F. Round relates how, in 1871, being engaged in a series of sketches of eminent Frenchmen, he wrote to Carlyle, asking for the name of an authority, and requested a single line to be enclosed in a directed envelope. In reply he received four pages of valuable information. Some time after, Mr. Round was in London–or, rather, in Cheyne Row–and saw his benefactor for the first time. He was in company with a friend who knew Carlyle, and who told him that Mr. Round was too modest and grateful to trespass on his time, upon which Mr. Carlyle made the following characteristic remark: No man can trespass on my time who comes for anything, or who can take anything of use away. Only those who come for the less than nothing of looking at me are unwelcome. Come in.
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 16. Redeeming the time] Buying up those moments which others seem to throw away; steadily improving every present moment, that ye may, in some measure, regain the time ye have lost. Let time be your chief commodity; deal in that alone; buy it all up, and use every portion of it yourselves. Time is that on which eternity depends; in time ye are to get a preparation for the kingdom of God; if you get not this in time, your ruin is inevitable; therefore, buy up the time.
Some think there is an allusion here to the case of debtors, who, by giving some valuable consideration to their creditors, obtain farther time for paying their debts. And this appears to be the sense in which it is used by the Septuagint, Da 2:8: ‘ , I know certainly that ye would gain or buy time-ye wish to have the time prolonged, that ye may seek out for some plausible explanation of the dream. Perhaps the apostle means in general, embrace every opportunity to glorify God, save your own souls, and do good to men.
Because the days are evil.] The present times are dangerous, they are full of trouble and temptations, and only the watchful and diligent have any reason to expect that they shall keep their garments unspotted.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Redeeming the time; or, buying the opportunity: a metaphor taken from merchants, that diligently observe the time for buying and selling, and easily part with their pleasure for gain; q.d. Deny yourselves in your ease, pleasure, &c. to gain an opportunity of doing good.
Because the days are evil; either wicked, by reason of the wickedness of those that live in them, or troublesome, full of difficulties and dangers, by reason of mens hatred of you, and so either depriving you of the opportunity of doing good, or exposing you to hazards for doing it.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
16. Redeeming the time (Col4:5). Greek, “Buying up for yourselves the seasonabletime” (whenever it occurs) of good to yourselves and to others.Buying off from the vanities of “them that are without”(Col 4:5), and of the “unwise”(here in Ephesians), the opportune time afforded to you for the workof God. In a narrower sense, special favorable seasons for good,occasionally presenting themselves, are referred to, of whichbelievers ought diligently to avail themselves. This constitutes true”wisdom” (Eph 5:15).In a larger sense, the whole season from the time that one isspiritually awakened, is to be “redeemed” from vanityfor God (compare 2Co 6:2;1Pe 4:2-4). “Redeem”implies the preciousness of the opportune season, a jewel to bebought at any price. WAHLexplains, “Redeeming for yourselves (that is, availingyourselves of) the opportunity (offered you of acting aright), andcommanding the time as a master does his servant.” TITTMANN,”Watch the time, and make it your own so as to control it; asmerchants look out for opportunities, and accurately choose out thebest goods; serve not the time, but command it, and it shall do whatyou approve.” So PINDAR[Pythia, 4.509], “The time followed him as his servant,and was not as a runaway slave.”
because the days are evilThedays of life in general are so exposed to evil, as to make itnecessary to make the most of the seasonable opportunity so long asit lasts (Eph 6:13; Gen 47:9;Psa 49:5; Ecc 11:2;Ecc 12:1; Joh 12:35).Besides, there are many special evil days (in persecution,sickness, c.) when the Christian is laid by in silence therefore heneeds the more to improve the seasonable times afforded to him (Am5:13), which Paul perhaps alludes to.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Redeeming the time,…. Or “buying time”; a like expression is used in Da 2:8, which we render, gain time: but in the Chaldee text it is, “buy time”: and so Jacchiades, a Jewish commentator on the place, renders it, , “ye buy this opportunity”; and the Septuagint version uses the same phrase the apostle does here; but there it seems to signify a study to prolong time, to put off the business to another season; but here taking time for a space of time, it denotes a careful and diligent use of it, an improvement of it to the best advantage; and shows that it is valuable and precious, and is not to be trifled with, and squandered away, and be lost, as it may be; for it can neither be recalled nor prolonged: and taking it for an opportunity of doing good to ourselves or others, it signifies that no opportunity of discharging our duty to God and man, of attending on the word and ordinances of the Gospel, and to the private and public exercises of religion, of gaining advantage to our own souls, or of gaining the souls of others, and of doing good either to the bodies or souls of men, should be neglected; but even all risks should be run, and means used to enjoy it: in the Syriac and Chaldee languages, , “time”, comes from , “to redeem”: the reason the apostle gives for the redemption of time is,
because the days are evil; as such are, in which iniquity abounds, and many wicked men live, and errors and heresies prevail, and are days of affliction or persecution; see Ge 47:9.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Redeeming the time ( ). As in Col 4:5 which see.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Redeeming the time [ ] . See on Col 4:5.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “Redeeming the time” (eksagorazomenoi ton kairon) Redeeming the seasons, periods of life,” the opportunities or use of every opportunity at hand to perform the Christian duties, Rom 14:11-14.
2) “Because the days are evil” (hoti ai hemerai ponerai eisin) “Because the days are (given over to) wickedness,” or exist as evil days. This is a statement of the motive for ones buying up, utilizing or making the most of every opportunity because of the prevalence of corrupt moral evils of the day. The same motive prevails today, Rom 12:9; 1Th 5:22.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
16. Redeeming the time. By a consideration of the time he enforces his exhortation. The days are evil. Everything around us tends to corrupt and mislead; so that it is difficult for godly persons, who walk among so many thorns, to escape unhurt. Such corruption having infected the age, the devil appears to have obtained tyrannical sway; so that time cannot be dedicated to God without being in some way redeemed. And what shall be the price of its redemption? To withdraw from the endless variety of allurements which would easily lead us astray; to rid ourselves from the cares and pleasures of the world; and, in a word, to abandon every hinderance. Let us be eager to recover it in every possible way, and let the numerous offenses and arduous toil, which many are in the habit of alleging as an apology for indolence, serve rather to awaken our vigilance.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(16) Redeeming the time.Or rather, the opportunity, whenever it arises. The meaning of this phrase (used also in Col. 4:5) is clearly illustrated by its use (although in a bad sense) in Dan. 2:8, I know that you would gain the timei.e., catch the opportunity to escape from difficulty. To redeem is to buy up for oneselfnot having essentially the idea of ransom or redemption, which attaches to the use of the word in Gal. 3:13; Gal. 4:5, only from the nature of the context. As applied to opportunity, it carries with it the idea, first of making sacrifice for it, then quickness in seizing it, and sagacity in using it to the utmost, whether by silence or by speech, by facing or avoiding danger, by yielding to a crisis (see Rom. 12:11) or conquering it. The reason given that the days are evil must be taken in the widest sense, of all that induces temptation to swerve out of the strictness of the right way. The general lesson is that which is drawn by our Lord in the parable of the Unjust Stewardto apply the wisdom of the buyers and sellers of the world to the work of the children of light.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
16. Redeeming Literally, buying off for ourselves.
The time The word time, here, signifies opportunity or occasion; that is, of administering moral reproof, and testifying. The sense is, at whatever cost find or seize the opportunity to check sin.
Days are evil This is a depraved period, an evil generation, rushing in a course of licentiousness, and scouting all moral rebuke. Few are the chances, and dangerous the effort, to reprove the impetuous sinner, but at any price snatch the opportunity. John the Baptist seized the occasion to reprove Herod at the price of his head. St. Paul’s whole life was a series of costly opportunities of rebuking the men and the age.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Eph 5:16. Redeeming the time, The word , redeeming, has a peculiar force, and implies, as the French word racheter, and the English word redeem, also does,the recovery and purchasing again what has been lost. “Endeavour to recover, and bring back, as far as possible, the time which has been unhappily lost and thrown away in the enormities of your heathen life, by diligently making use of what remains, and studying to improve it to the best and most valuable purposes; for which you should be careful to embrace the present opportunity, because the days we live in are evil; in which we are on every side surrounded with persecutions and perils, and God only knows how soon our liberty or our life may be taken away.” Dr. Heylin reads Improving the time; and he observes from Tully, that every hour has its proper duty; nullum tempus vacare officio potest. When we discharge that duty, we improve, that is, make the best of our time. The motive added is, because the days are evil: the frequent disasters which happen to us furnish materials for the exercise of holiness and virtue, which is the true improvement of time.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Eph 5:16 . Accompanying modal definition to the preceding : ementes vobis (middle) opportunitatem, i.e. in that you make your own the right point of time for such walk , do not let it pass by unused. In this figurative conception the doing of that for which the point of time is fitted, is thought of as the purchase-price , by which the becomes ours . Comp. Col 4:5 ; LXX. Dan 2:8 ; Antonin. vi. 26: , Plut. Philop. 15: . The opposite is , Thucyd. iv. 27. Gal 6:10 is parallel as to substance . Classical writers say . , Dem. 120. 26, 187. 22, but in the proper sense of buying for money. Others have thought of the sacrifice of all earthly things and of all lusts as the purchase-price (Chrysostom, Theophylact, Oecumenius; comp. also Augustine, Flacius, Zanchius, Estius, Rckert, and others); but this is imported, since the context yields nothing else than the fulfilment of duty meant by the ; hence we have not, with Harless, to interpret it of the right moment “for letting the light of correction break in upon the darkness of sin” (comp. Michaelis and Rosenmller), which would be to revert, at variance with the context, to the topic of the already ended. Luther [266] incorrectly renders: “Suit yourselves to the time.” That would be , Rom 12:11 . Similarly also Grotius (comp. Hammond): “quovis labore ac verborum honestis obsequiis vitate pericula et diem de die ducite.” Comp. Bengel, who compares Amo 5:13 , and understands the prudent letting the evil day pass over “quiescendo vel certe modice agendo,” whereby the better time is purchased , in order to make the more use thereof. In opposition to Grotius and Bengel, it may be urged that this alleged mode of the is not mentioned by Paul, but imported by the expositor, and that the counsel of such a trimming behaviour is hardly compatible with the moral decision of the apostle, and with his expectation of the approaching end of the . We may add that the compound . is not here to be understood as redeem (Gal 3:13 ; Gal 4:5 ), as e.g. Bengel would take it ( from the power of evil men ), and Calvin (from the devil ), seeing that the context does not suggest such reference; but the in the composition is intensive, and denotes what is entire, utter , as also in Plut. Crass . 2; Polyb. iii. 42. 2; Dan 2:8 .
] supplies a motive for the . . . , for the days , the present times, are evil , for moral corruption is now in vogue. So much the more must it intimately concern you as Christians (for how exalted is their task above the wickedness of the present time! Phi 2:15 ; Phi 3:20 ) . Beza, Flacius, Grotius, Hammond, Rosenmller, and others refer to the misfortune of the time (Gen 47:9 ; Psa 49:6 [5]); but the context opposes the moral bearing of the Christian to the immoral condition of the time. According to de Wette’s here very unfounded scepticism, the writer is indistinct and hesitating, because he is bringing Col 4:5 . into another connection.
[266] Who in earlier editions had rightly: release the time .
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
16 Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.
Ver. 16. Redeeming the time ] As wise merchants, trading for the most precious commodity, and taking their best opportunity. The common complaint is, We lack time; but the truth is, we do not so much lack it as waste it. Non parum habemus temporis, sed multum perdimus. (Sen.) The men of Issachar were in great account with David, because they had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do, 1Ch 12:32 . So are they in great account with God that regard and use the season of well doing. It is reported of holy Ignatius, that when he heard a clock strike, he would say, here is one hour more now past that I have to answer for. And of Mr Hooper the martyr, that he was spare of diet, sparer of words, and sparest of time; for he well knew that whereas of all other possessions a man might have two at once, he cannot have two moments of time at once, for any money.
Because the days are evil ] Corrupted by the devil, who hath engrossed our time, and out of whose hands we must redeem time for holy uses and pious purposes.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Eph 5:16 . : buying up for yourselves the opportunity . Definition of the , specifying the way in which they were to give token of the quality of wisdom. The expression occurs only once again in the NT (in Col 4:5 ); and there are but few proper parallels to it. The phrase as used in Dan 2:8 has rather the sense of gaining time, delaying . The classical phrase (used, e.g. , by Demosthenes) has the plain meaning of purchasing for money. Even the cited from Anton., vi., 26, and the of Plut. ( Philop. , 15) are but partial analogies. In the NT the verb has at times the sense of redeeming , ransoming one from another by payment of a price, and so it is applied to Christ’s vicarious death (Gal 3:13 ; Gal 4:5 ). It has the sense of ransoming occasionally in profane Greek ( e.g. , Diodor., 36, 1, p. 530). Hence some take the idea here to be that of redeeming , as from the power of Satan (Calv.), or from the power of evil men (Beng.); the sacrifice of earthly things being taken by some (Chrys. Theophyl., Oec., etc.) to be the purchase-price. But it is doubtful whether any such technical or metaphorical sense can be attached to the word here, where the subject in view is the plain duty of a careful Christian walk. The simpler sense of buying is more appropriate to the context. The – probably has its intensive force, although Ellicott takes it to refer merely to the “undefined time or circumstances, out of which, in each particular case, the is to be bought”. Giving the Middle also its proper sense, we get the sense of “buying up for yourselves”. The thing to be “bought up” is the , not “the time,” but “the fit time,” the “opportunity,” and the purchase-money implied in the figure is left undefined, but may be the careful heed expended on their walk. Thus the sense comes to be this the character of wisdom by which their walk was to be distinguished was to show itself in the prompt and discerning zeal with which they made every opportunity their own, and suffered no fitting season for the fulfilment of Christian duty to pass unused. Luther’s “suit yourselves to the time” would require some such phrase as (Rom 12:11 ), and is otherwise inappropriate. Other explanations, such as Harless’s supposition that the matter in view is the fit time for letting the break in upon the darkness of sin, are remote from the immediate subject or impart ideas which are not in the text. The RV gives “redeeming the time” in the text, and “buying up the opportunity” in the margin. : because the days are evil . Statement of motive for buying up the opportunity, viz. , the evil of the time. The context makes it clear that what is in view is the moral evil of the days, not merely as, e.g. , in Gen 47:9 , their difficulties and troubles (Beza, etc.). The fact that the times in which they lived were morally so corrupt was a strong reason for making every opportunity for good, which such times might offer, their own.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
Redeeming. Greek. exagorazo; literally to buy out. See Gal 1:3, Gal 1:13 –
time. Greek. -kairos. Compare App-195. Here, the opportunity.
evil. Greek. poneros. Compare Eph 6:13. App-128.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Eph 5:16. , redeeming the time) So the LXX., , Dan 2:8, ye (would) gain the time. The days, says Paul, are evil, and are in the power of wicked men, not in your own power. Wherefore, since you see that you are hard pressed, endeavour, until the hostile intervals of this unhappy period pass away, to pass through and spend your time, if not with profit, at least without loss, which is done by keeping quiet, or at least by acting with moderation. This is the force of the verb in a passage of Amos, which will be presently quoted. Wisdom and , circumspection, are commanded, not sloth. There is however one mode of acting in summer, another in winter, even with greater labour [in the former than in the latter]. Those who in evil days seek meanwhile no fruit of time, but [the mere gaining of] time itself (according to the example of the Magi, Daniel 2, or like a besieged city waiting for assistance), these act wisely, and in the end will the better use the time, which they have thus redeemed (gained). Sirach 10 :(27) 31, , boast not in the time of thy distress. A similar expression occurs in Polycarps Ep. to the church at Smyrna, where the martyrs are said, , to have bought off (gained exemption from) everlasting punishment by the sufferings of one hour.- 2. The opposite is to lose (throw away) time.-, days) ch. Eph 6:13.-, evil) Amo 5:13, () , , he who has understanding at that time will be silent, because it is an evil time.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Eph 5:16
Eph 5:16
redeeming the time,-So use the time left as to rescue as far as possible the time already lost in the days of darkness when you lived in sin.
because the days are evil.-The times were evil tempting them bade into sin. [Evil days mean days in which evil abounds. This is parallel to the expressions, “evil and adulterous generation (Mat 12:39), and “this present evil world (Gal 1:4). Because sin abounds is a good reason why Christians should seize upon every opportunity to do good; and also why they should make the most of time. The same exhortation is found in these words: Walk in wisdom toward them that are without. (Col 4:5). In the passage before us, Paul says to walk in wisdom redeeming the time. So that this right use of time, or this seizing of every opportunity for doing good, is in both places represented as the evidence and the effect of wisdom, that is, of divine truth which is the wisdom of God, which he has revealed. (1Co 2:6-13). Paul most likely had in view the special difficulties of the then present time, but his words have a permanent bearing on each following period with its new phases of difficulty, all related as they are to the permanent underlying difficulty, sin.]
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
The Purchase of Opportunity
Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.Eph 5:16.
1. These words stand at the end of a series of moral counsels and warnings, of which it is difficult to exaggerate the urgency and solemnity. St. Paul has painted in vivid colours the contrast between the corruptions of society and the holy living of genuine discipleship; he has implored the Ephesians to remember that such holy living is the condition of any inheritance in the Kingdom of Christ and God; he has proved the necessity of carefulness in the religious life, and now he proceeds yet one step further. Carefulness must be directed by wisdom, lest the fears of conscience and the discipline of conduct be wrongly directed, and therefore wasted. Take heed therefore how ye walk exactly, for this is the true sense of the original. The Ephesians are to be wise in their self-discipline, taking heed that the strictness of their walk is directed by right motives to right ends. Take heed therefore how ye walk exactly, not as unwise, but as wise, redeeming the time, or rather, buying up the opportunity, because the days are evil.
The expression is found in Dan 2:8, and is perhaps borrowed from the Old Testament by St. Paul. Nebuchadnezzar complains that the astrologers are buying the time for themselves with a view to wasting it in vain delays: St. Paul bids Christians buy the time for themselves, at whatever cost, in order to use it in wise action. Seneca has a similar saying: Gather up and preserve the time.
2. The picture or parable suggested by the text is this. Standing in the market-place is a wise and wary merchantman, keen for spiritual traffic and gain. Like Milton, he has fallen on evil timeson bad times, as men of business would say. The days drag slowly by, bringing him few means of moral culture, rare occasions on which he can trade with his talents and make them more. But, at last, as the caravan of Time moves tardily by, among the captives in its train he espies an opportunity such as his heart has long craved. He leaps at it, seizes it, redeems it, i.e., pays a price for it and makes it his own. It is exactly the modern notion of making a corner, with this important distinction, that, whereas the modern trust or combine is purely selfish in its calculations, the intensity and astuteness recommended by the Apostle aim chiefly at the salvation and spiritual enrichment of others. Be alert, politic, ready to make sacrifices, so that you improve every opening to possess yourself of the best things and make your neighbours sharers of the riches of Christ.
Ephesus was the great trading city of Proconsular Asia, where the merchants of both the east and west assembled for commerce, watching for opportunities to buy and sell and get gain. The Asian Christians were well acquainted with these things, and the words of St. Paul would come to them with great power, fitness and cogency. As merchantmen watched and seized every opportunity for buying or selling their commodities, so must Christians seize and buy up every opportunity for manifesting their true Christian character, and making known the truth as it is in Jesus. Hostile circumstances and the powers of darkness beset us on every hand: therefore let us lose no opportunities, but, with promptness and full purpose of heart, let us walk as children of the light.
Gifts are given to trade withal for God. Opportunities are the market-days for that trade. To napkin up the one and to let slip the other will end in trouble and disconsolation. Disquietments and perplexities of heart are worms that will certainly breed in the rust of unexercised gifts. God loseth a revenue of glory and honour by such slothful souls: and He will make them sensible of it. I know some at this day whom omissions of opportunities for service are ready to sink into the grave.1 [Note: J. Moffatt, The Golden Book of John Owen, 209.]
The text leads us to trace three ideas in the Apostles mind: first, he thinks of opportunity as an article in the market; second, he feels that there are circumstances which increase the value of the article; and third, he sees the different types of traders, some neglecting opportunity, others eagerly buying it up.
I
An Article in the Market
1. What is this commodity which we are asked to purchase? The text says it is time. But the term used signifies more than the mere duration of anything or the measure of motion; it may be taken for opportunity, or the favourable moment for doing anything, which, if lost, can never be recovered. This is well brought out in Ecclesiastes (Ecc 8:5). A wise mans heart discerneth both time and judgmentthat is, he knows both what he ought to do and the fittest season in which to do it. So, then, we understand that time is redeemed when we diligently embrace and improve all the opportunities which God places in our way, not only for His honour and glory, but also for the good of ourselves and others, not allowing these golden opportunities to be forestalled or stolen from us and irretrievably lost by our own negligence. The exhortation of the Apostle implies that the Ephesians had lost and misimproved opportunities, and that being so they were not to be depressed, but were to double their diligence and do the more good in time to come.
We speak of life as bringing many duties. Life, says some one, is duty; and this is a true way of looking at it. We are hedged all round by duty. We speak of life again as a probation. We are here on trial, to show what we are and what we can do. We are being tested, and the Master is watching us to see what we are good for, and what He can do with us when this life is over. We speak of life, again, as for education. God wants to train us here for another life, and for greater service than our present. All these views of life are true; they set forth some real aspect of our life. But we may speak of our life in another way. It is a succession of opportunities. Life is always bringing opportunities to us, which we may seize and handle and turn to our profit, or which we may neglect to our loss.
Christina Rossetti tells us how in one of her country walks, being then entirely ignorant of its rarity, she lighted upon a four-leaved trefoil. She goes on to say: Perhaps I plucked and so destroyed it: I certainly left it, for most certainly I have it not. Now I would give something to recover that wonder: then, when I might have had it for the carrying, I left it. Once missed, one may peer about in vain all the rest of ones days for a second four-leaved trefoil. No one expects to find whole fields of such: even one, for once, is an extra allowance. Life has, so to say, its four-leaved trefoils for a favoured few: and how many of us overlook once and finally our rare chance!1 [Note: Mackenzie Bell, Christina Rossetti, 26.]
If thou hadst known in those far-distant days,
Which now lie buried with the long-dead past;
If thou hadst known how wistful was the gaze
Love turnd on thee, oh! wouldst thou then have cast
One swift responsive glance, and thus have seen
Lifes possibility?It might have been!
If thou hadst known in those long-vanishd hours
How one heart beat in sympathy with thine,
Wouldst thou have turnd and culld the fragrant flowers
Love offered thee, a garland to entwine
For days to come? Ah! silence lay between
Thy heart and mine; and yet,It might have been!
If thou hadst known how, through the long, long years,
One aching heart would yearn for thee in vain,
Wouldst thou in that far time have dried the tears
With tender answering touch, had all been plain?
Ah, who can tell! Thy lonely grave is green;
Thy memory still lives on. It might have been!2 [Note: Una, In Lifes Garden, 68.]
There is a story told of General Havelock, the father of Sir Henry Havelock-Allan, that when he was serving in India, there was on one occasion need for some military expedition which would be attended with great danger and difficulty, but which would bring distinction to the officer who could lead it successfully. It properly fell to General Havelock; but there was an officer of lower rank who had made some grave mistake or failed in some previous expedition of which he had had charge, and on whose reputation a shadow was resting in consequence. Havelock gave way to the younger officer. He offered him a rare opportunity which he was not slow to embrace.3 [Note: H. Bonner, Sermons and Lectures, 208.]
2. Past opportunities are no longer in the market. St. Paul knew very well that time misspent can never be recalled. Every mans pastits evil and its good; what he has done and what he has left undonelives in the man to-day. If he has lived an evil or thoughtless life, he may, indeed, amend his ways and live a pure and noble life; but time lost is still time lost to him for ever. There are signs in St. Pauls Epistles that he was occasionally haunted by the shadow of his own past, but still he does not attempt to recall that which is irrevocable; rather, he turns his back deliberately upon it, looks away to the present and the future which are still within his power, and says, Forgetting those things which are behind, I reach forward.
Our life is not like a placid stream on which, by steadfast endeavour, we may pull back against the tide. It is, rather, like a torrent which, rising on the mountains of Eternity, plunges, the instant it has passed us, into an unfathomable abyss. Our most strenuous effort only maintains us on the edge of the fall; the stream is for ever sliding from under us; and at last we too shall be swept over and be no more seen. Whatever chances we had yesterday, last week, last year, of showing kindness or doing good, of fitting ourselves whether for earth or for heaven, are past for ever. All these opportunities are gone by. No sighs, no tears, no prodigal vows of amendment, will bring one of them back. We might have redeemed them; but now they are captives for ever; or, rather, they are martyrs, and have perished in their captivity. Henceforth there is no redemption for them.1 [Note: S. Cox, Expositions, i. 9.]
Have you ever seen those marble statues in some public square or garden which are so fashioned into a perennial fountain that through the lips, or through the hands, the clear water flows in a perpetual stream, on and on for ever; and the marble stands there, passionless, cold, making no effort to arrest the gliding water? It is so that time flows through the hands of men, swift, never pausing till it has run itself out; and there is the man, petrified into a marble sleep, not feeling what it is that is passing away for ever.2 [Note: James Brown, Sermons with Memoir, 150.]
Listen to the watermill, all the livelong day;
How the creaking of the wheel wears the hours away.
Languidly the water glides, useless on and still;
Never coming back again to that watermill.
And the proverb haunts my mind, like a spell thats cast
The mill will never grind with the water that has passed.
Take the lesson to yourselves, loving hearts and true;
Golden years are fleeting by, youth is fleeting too.
Try to make the most of life, lose no honest way;
Time will never bring again chances passed away.
Leave no tender word unsaid, love while life shall last
The mill will never grind with the water that has passed.
Work while yet the daylight shines, man of strength and will;
Never does the streamlet glide useless by the mill.
Wait not till to-morrows sun beams upon your way,
All that you can call your own lies in this, To-day.
Power, intellect, and strength, may not, cannot last
The mill will never grind with the water that has passed.
Oh! the wasted hours of life that have drifted by
Oh! the good we might have done, lost without a sigh,
Love that we might once have saved with but a single word,
Thoughts conceived, but never penned, perishing unheard.
Take this lesson to your heart, take, oh! hold it fast
The mill will never grind with the water that has passed.1 [Note: S. Doudney.]
3. We can all buy up for profitable uses what remains to us of time.
(1) The words of the Apostle have a meaning for our ordinary everyday work. Buy up your opportunities. Be diligent in business. Lay yourself to your work with your full mind and strength. There is no opposition between a godly life and the energetic and successful handling of business. A Christian man need not be a dreamer; he may be as wide-awake, as quick on the spot when there is a chance for him as the man who is not a Christian. Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might.
Of Darwin we read: One characteristic was his respect for time; he never forgot how precious it was. He never wasted a few spare minutes from thinking that it was not worth while to set to work. His golden rule was taking care of the minutes. In one of his letters occurs this passage: A man who dares to waste one hour of time has not discovered the value of life.2 [Note: W. L. Watkinson, The Education of the Heart, 229.]
On his way to Marengo, Napoleon stopped at the door of a barbers shop, and asked his former hostess if she remembered a young officer named Bonaparte once quartered in her family. Indeed I do, and a very disagreeable inmate he was. He was always either shut up in his room, or if he walked out, he never condescended to speak to any one. Ah! my good woman, Napoleon rejoined, had I passed my time as you wished to have me, I should not now have been in command of the army of Italy.1 [Note: J. E. Foster, Pain, 217.]
Wasted an hour at Mortons talking of the pictures, etc. Nothing learned, came home and was in a hurry for the loss of that hour all night. I will spend no more precious time on acquaintances.2 [Note: Life and Letters of Frederic Shields, 43.]
(2) But the great prize of life is spiritual. Business is not simply our opportunity for getting on; it is our opportunity for getting up. Rightly done, daily work helps us towards the great ends of life. We may use all the machinery of our life, the money we get, the work we do, in such a way as to bring us more and more of the riches of the soul. Equality of opportunity is perhaps not conceivable, but we can use our particular circumstances so that they can further Gods great design for us.
The incandescent mantle is made by laying a mantle made of cotton in a chemical solution. A deposit is made on it, a process of crystallization takes place on the threads. When the mantle is used the threads are fired, and only the mantle which has been formed on them is left. This world, our earthly lot, all the machinery of our life, is only the cotton thread for the making of the soul. It will all be burned up, and only so much character, so much soul, as we have made will remain.3 [Note: H. Bonner, Sermons and Lectures, 211.]
Carey, before his call to the mission field, used to go about from village to village preaching, for his soul was filled with the love of God. One day a friend came to him and said, Mr. Carey, I want to speak to you very seriously. Well, said Mr. Carey, what is it? The friend replied, By your going about preaching as you do, you are neglecting your business. If you only attended to your business more you would be all right, and would soon get on and prosper; but, as it is, you are simply neglecting your business. Neglecting my business, said Carey, looking at him steadily, My business is to extend the Kingdom of God, and I only cobble shoes to pay expenses.4 [Note: J. Duff, Illuminative Flashes, 103.]
During December an extraordinary thing happened, for he did allow that there was a small present he would like to have given to him on Christmas Day! This was a seal, and one of Dutch design was found. On the evening of Christmas Day we began to talk of what might be engraved upon it, and I asked him to invent a motto for it. He was silent for a second or two, and then said, I think I should like to say, The Utmost for the Highest. 1 [Note: M. S. Watts, George Frederic Watts, ii. 137.]
(3) The special opportunity that the Apostle urges us to embrace is that of rendering service to God and man. As we have opportunity, says Paul, let us do good unto all men. Every Christian ought to be intent on helping in some form to make the world a happier and a better world. The troubled, the weary, the unfortunate are always near to us. There is always something within our reach which we could do, if we would. The troubles and misfortunes of others are often our opportunity.
One day or other the world will slip through our fingers, and all we hold dearest in it. Only the good we have done will remain. That cannot pass away. It is written down in the memory of God, registered in the books of His Divine Retribution. We will need it all when we come to give in our account of our service and go to get our wagesour love, and kindliness, and faith, and unselfishness, and well-doingwe will need it all and more than all when God puts the question to us: Of what use have you been in My world?2 [Note: Dr. MacGregor of St. Cuthberts, 109.]
A heathen king once said that that day was lost in which he had conferred no benefit on a friend; and shall not we feel that day indeed to be lost on which we have returned no thanks to God for the numberless common blessings which cheer and gladden us, in which we have not sought in gratitude to extend to others the hope which we feel ourselves?3 [Note: B. F. Westcott, Village Sermons, 321.]
It is related of St. Elizabeth of Hungary, that in mid-winter, as she carried in her robe a supply of food to some poor people in the mountains, and as she climbed the steep and slippery path, she met her husband returning from the chase. What hast thou here, my Elizabeth? said he. What art thou carrying away now? And as she stood confused and blushing, he opened her dress and found it full of red and white roses, lovelier than those of earth. So did the Middle Ages invent legends to glorify the sweet charity of this noble woman, who spent her time, strength, and means in caring for the poor people afflicted by famine and plague. Especially she loved children, and built hospitals for them; and they loved her so that they ran after her, calling out Mother! mother! The sick children she took into her hospital, washed and dressed their poor little limbs, and bought them toys and gifts to amuse them. For this she was canonized; and she well deserved it, not because of the miracles which they tell of her, but for that which is more Divine than any miracle, her tender heart and love of humanity.1 [Note: J. F. Clarke.]
Up, up, my soul, the long-spent time redeeming;
Sow thou the seeds of better deeds and thought;
Light other lamps while yet thy lamp is beaming
The time is short.
Think of the good thou mightst have done when brightly
The suns to thee lifes choicest season brought;
Hours lost to God in pleasure passing lightly
The time is short.
If thou hast friends, give them thy best endeavour,
Thy warmest impulse, and thy purest thought,
Keeping in mind and word and action ever
The time is short.2 [Note: E. Prentiss.]
II
Circumstances that Increase the Value of the Article
St. Paul regards life as an opportunity for which a price must be paid; the full price of constant watchfulness and endeavour and sacrifice. He speaks in the language of the market or the exchange; and far down in the undercurrents of his mind seems to be moving the thought that, if men would but expend upon the investment of their intellectual and spiritual possessions one-tenth of the pains they give to the investment of their worldly goods, their redemption would already have begun. And yet it is in the spiritual sphere that it is most needful to pay the price. Experience confirms the protest of King David that he could notnot merely would not, but could notmake an offering to the Lord his God of that which had cost him nothing. In all the higher walks of life, we neither get nor give anything of value, if it has cost us nothing in the getting or the giving.
1. Opportunities both rise in price and grow fewer every time we refuse to purchase them.If it be hard to subdue passion and the cravings of irregular desire to-day, it will be harder to-morrow, should we leave the hours of to-day unimproved. If it would cost us much to do what we know to be the will of the Lord to-day, it will cost us more every day we neglect our duty. A man who has long disobeyed the Divine will has in doing that will difficulties which the obedient can but faintly conceive. His polluted memory, his perverted and obstinate will, the force of sinful habit, the stings of impure desire, or even the mere custom of indifference to things unseen and eternal, turn the obedience which should be his happiness into mere labour and pain.
This moments thine, thou never more mayst hear
The clarion-summons-call thus loud and clear;
What now thou buyest cheap may yet prove dear.
Part with thine all, spare not the needed cost;
That which thou partest with were better lost,
Thy selfish worldly schemes more wisely crossed.
Thy loss infinitesimal, thy gain
Endless, immense; thy momentary pain
The single step the boundless bliss to attain!
Eye hath not seen, mans ear hath never heard,
Nor heart conceivedsave some faint image blurred
The bliss of those who keep the Christly word
Let go; my soul, let go!1 [Note: William Hall, Via Crucis.]
2. Evil times give a special value to opportunity.The disciples of Jesus Christ, living in the midst of a great pagan city, were exposed to grievous and continuous perils. The moral corruption of the ancient world found there its most complete and deadly expression. It entered into all the relations of lifecommerce, politics, society, worst of all, religion, were steeped in it. The very atmosphere of existence was heavy with gross sin. Evil, which in the country diffused itself over a wider area, and was at all times checked and shadowed by the solemn and beautiful scenes of nature, was here brought together into a centre, and obtruded upon the notice without hindrance or intermission. To borrow Cardinal Newmans simile, It was basking under the sun, and rioting and extending itself to its amplest dimensions, like some glittering serpent, or spotted pard without interposition from heaven or earth in correction of so awful a degradation. Such a centre and focus of evil was ancient Ephesus.
St. Paul sets a good example of his own precept by his own practice. When he wrote this Epistle he was a prisoner, bound to a soldier. The days were evil for him: but he redeemed them. He made his prison to be a pulpit, from which he preached to the world. The Roman soldiers presence was a perpetual memento to him that he himself was a soldier of Christ. Every part of the soldiers armour suggested to him a weapon of Christian warfare, to be wielded in the cause of Christ.1 [Note: H. G. Miller, The Epistle to the Ephesians, 278.]
On the death of General Booth of the Salvation Army, one of his lieutenants was asked what the probable effect would be on the army. The reply was, I think that probably the departure of the General will mean the consecration afresh of every Salvationist to the great work to which the General gave his life. Now that he is gone, I must do more.
III
Types of Traders
The Apostle speaks of the wise and the foolish, and urges the Ephesians to be among the wise, walking circumspectly, redeeming the time, and looking to see what the will of the Lord is. All men may be divided into two great classes, according as they do or do not perceive that life is an opportunity. To the one class life has a twofold meaning: it means the opportunity of development; it means the opportunity of service to God and man. To the other class life has no meaning at all; they simply drift from day to day; and whether it is business or amusement of which they see most, there is no real aim or purpose in what they do. The lethargic let chance after chance to do good slip away unseized, unimproved; the wise and watchful, however, charm by a smile, warn by a word, persuade by an action, prevail by a prayer every hour; they are like the quicksilver that does not permit a particle of gold to escape.
If I were Dr. Nansen and proposed to you to join my North Pole expedition, your option would be momentous; for this would probably be your only similar opportunity, and your choice now would either exclude you from the North Pole sort of immortality altogether or put at least the chance of it into your hands. He who refuses to embrace a unique opportunity loses the prize as surely as if he tried and failed.1 [Note: W. James, The Will to Believe, 4.]
1. The foolish miss or misuse their opportunity.There they sit, like Mr. Micawber in David Copperfield, dreaming that something is going to happen which will place them on the wave of prosperity and sweep them into the harbour of success. They never do anything, because that for which they are looking never happens.
Some times are taken from us by force; some others are stolen from us; and others slip away. But the most disgraceful loss is that which arises from our own negligence.2 [Note: Seneca.]
Spend not your time in that which profits not; for your labour and your health, your time and your studies, are very valuable; and it is a thousand pities to see a diligent and hopeful person spend himself in gathering cockle-shells and little pebbles, in telling sands upon the shores, and making garlands of useless daisies.3 [Note: Jeremy Taylor.]
Perhaps there stands in modern literature no more pathetic figure than that of Amiel, whose gifts were so high, and whose achievements were so meagre. One of his friends writes, We found him always kindly and amiable, a nature one might trust and lean upon with perfect security. Yet he wakened in us but one regret. We could never understand how it was a man so richly gifted, produced nothing, or only trivialities. In his own journal one of the last entries, written with trembling hand, ten days before his death, reads thus: So much promise, to end in so meagre a result! I shall end like the Rhinelost among the sands, and the hour is close by, when my thread of water shall have for ever disappeared.
If this befell: At some fair dawning-time,
Ere failed the wistful world its dreams and dew,
Sheer from the height of heaven reached down to you
A cloud-piled stair more pure than glistening rime,
And firm as marble wrought, in flights sublime
That pierced the void, whence lights come faint and few,
Beyond all starry outposts: toward what new
Wild-wondered shoresah, would you dare to climb?
And if, while yet you doubted, lo, too late,
You saw it reft past range of fear and hope,
Caught up the vast, and here you needs must wait
Mere days returning; would not narrow scope
Wide earth yield? Yea, the azures amplest cope
Enclose your spirit like a dungeon-grate?1 [Note: Jane Barlow.]
2. The wise perceive the value of opportunity and buy it up.That is to say, they reclaim it by hard toil from misuse, they turn every fraction of it to good account; they even create occasions to carry out the great ends of life.
For all men alike, failure is blindness to the strategic element in events; success is readiness for instant action when the opportune moment arrives. When nature has fully ripened an opportunity man must stretch out his hand and pluck it. Inventions may be defined as great minds detecting the strategic moment in nature; Galileo finding a lens in the oxs eye; Watt witnessing steam lift an iron lid; Columbus observing an unknown wood drifting upon the shore. To untold multitudes nature offered these opportune moments for discovery, but only Galileo, Watt, and Columbus were ready to seize them. As for the rest, this is our only answer to nature: While thy servant was busy here and there, the strategic moment was gone.2 [Note: N. D. Hillis, The Investment of Influence, 222.]
After much consideration we settled the question where to spend the winter by taking a house at Brighton. There was the advantage of a well-lighted studio, built for a picture-gallery, large enough to take in his big painting of the Court of Death, and as many others as he wished to have there. His doctor knew and recommended this house, and to 31 Sussex Square we went on November 1. A big platform was built up in this studio to make it possible for him to work upon the Court of Death. When he went into that room to find that these preparations had been made, his feeling seemed to be a sort of despair at the amount of work that still remained undone. But before an hour had passed he had pulled himself together, saying, Come, this wont do; and the frail little figure stood drawn up erect and full of unconquerable spirit. He had worked hard the last day before leaving Little Holland House, upon the Physical Energy. There were some roughened bits and deep scores he was anxious to fill up. The idea of its being left in that state was dreadful to me, he said, adding, in case anything should happen to me. He lived always as a good pilgrim, girt and ready for the long journey whenever the summons should come. The tick of the clock had in it for him the sound of Times footstep. I know it, he said, and remember that each line that I draw is one less, one nearer the last.1 [Note: M. S. Watts, George Frederic Watts, ii. 135.]
In a letter from Uganda during the days of fierce persecutions in which that Church was cradled, the following phrase occursTimes of persecution are busy printing times. The undaunted men who planted the standard of the cross in Uganda had already reduced the language to writing, and translated portions of Scripture, with prayers and hymns, for the use of the Baganda. And during those dark days, when active and aggressive work was unwise, if not impossible, they plied the printing-press and issued from it the first literature of that wonderful race, which Mr. Stanley found them studying when he visited them on one of his journeys.2 [Note: T. W. Drury, The Prison-Ministry of St. Paul, 98.]
Sometimes Bonaparte forgot his part, and displayed the shrewd, calculating, hard-working man behind the mask, who was less a fatalist than a personified fate, less a child of fortune than its maker. Great events, he wrote from Italy, ever depend but upon a single hair. The adroit man profits by everything, neglects nothing which can increase his chances; the less adroit, by sometimes disregarding a single chance, fails in everything. Here is the whole philosophy of Bonapartes life.3 [Note: W. M. Sloane, Napoleon Bonaparte, i. 321.]
Another day may bring another mind,
A mind to learn, when there is none to teach;
To follow, when no leader we can find;
To enjoy, when good is now beyond our reach:
A better mind, but not a better time,
A mind to will, but not a time to do
What had been done, if we in lifes bright prime,
When God was ready, had been ready too.
But what the better for his better mind
Were changing man, and God not still the same?
When guide and light and joy we cannot find
Unchanging love has sent us useful shame.
This other mind may bring another day,
For days are given as man for days prepares;
Though many days of grace have passed away,
The grace that gave them still the trifler spares;
And saddens times while Time itself may last,
That unwise man may come to better thought,
Accept his future, and renounce his past,
And be by sorrow into goodness brought.1 [Note: T. T. Lynch, The Rivulet, 122.]
The Purchase of Opportunity
Literature
Alexander (S. A.), The Christianity of St. Paul, 204.
Ashley (J. M.), A Promptuary for Preachers, ii. 280.
Baring-Gould (S.), Village Preaching for a Year, 1st Ser., i. 50.
Beaumont (J. A.), Walking Circumspectly, 1.
Blunt (J. J.), Plain Sermons, i. 259.
Bonner (H.), Sermons and Lectures, 206.
Brown (J.), Sermons with Memoir, 148.
Bruce (J.), Sermons, 227.
Calthrop (G.), The Future Life, 174.
Campbell (L.), The Christian Ideal, 223.
Cox (S.), Expositions, i. 2.
Foster (J. E.), Pain: Its Mystery and Meaning, 209.
Henson (H. H.), Light and Leaven, 178.
MacColl (M.), Life Here and Hereafter, 290.
Maclaren (A.), Leaves from the Tree of Life, 1.
Maurice (F. D.), Christmas Day, 56.
Morgan (G. C.), The True Estimate of Life, 151.
Neville (W. G.), Sermons, 194.
Nicholson (M.), Redeeming the Time, 1.
Reid (J.), The Uplifting of Life, 126.
Vaughan (J.), Sermons (Brighton Pulpit), xii. (1874), No. 916.
Watkinson (W. L.), The Education of the Heart, 228.
Westcott (B. F.), Village Sermons, 314.
Wilmot-Buxton (H. J.), The Life of Duty, i. 45.
Christian World Pulpit, xli. 42 (Hocking); li. 248 (Maclagan).
Churchmans Pulpit: The Old and New Year: ii. 477 (Hodges); The Lenten Season, v. 90 (Cooke); Twentieth Sunday after Trinity, xiii. 35 (Moberly).
Clergymans Magazine, New Ser., viii. 230 (Hayman).
Fuente: The Great Texts of the Bible
Redeeming: Ecc 9:10, Rom 13:11, Gal 6:10, Col 4:5
the days: Eph 6:13, Eph 6:15, Psa 37:19, Ecc 11:2, Ecc 12:1, Amo 5:13, Joh 12:35, Act 11:28, Act 11:29, 1Co 7:26, 1Co 7:29-31
Reciprocal: Gen 29:7 – Lo Psa 49:5 – days Psa 90:12 – So Dan 2:8 – gain Dan 9:25 – wall Mic 2:3 – for Mat 25:17 – he also Joh 9:4 – while Act 17:21 – spent
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
REDEEMING THE TIME
Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.
Eph 5:16
We find the words, redeeming the time, occurring twice in the Epistles of St. Paul. They meanwhen literally translatedbuying up the opportunity.
The text addresses itself to Christian people. It is intended, in fact, for them. Let us see, then, what lessons, what warnings, what exhortations it contains for those among us who are living for Christ, and earnestly desirous of glorifying Him by word and deed.
The Apostle tells such persons that they are to buy up opportunities. Now opportunitiesas I have already hintedare of two kinds. There are opportunities of getting good, and there are opportunities of doing good.
I. Opportunities of getting spiritual good for ourselves.Many such occur. Many such are continually occurring. Have we bought all of them up? or have we allowed not a few of them to slip through our fingers?
II. Opportunities of doing good.For these are included, of course, in the precept of the Apostle. Now, doing good to others is no unimportant part of the calling of a Christian. When a man is brought to the saving knowledge of the truth as it is in Christ Jesus, God gives him a work to do. You may be sure of that. And it is every mans business, first, to find out what that work isand then to do it. There are differences of administration, as there are differences of talents.
III. This is a voice to which we may all listen.God keep us all from having to make such a confession as this before the Judgment-seat of Christ!Lord, Thou gavest me talents. I had gifts of mind; I had means; I had many opportunities of doing good in the world; but all I cared about was myself, and to carry out my own schemes and fancies. Lord, I have lived for myself. And now that all is over, here Thou hast the talent that Thou gavest me, wrapped up in a napkin.
Rev. Prebendary Gordon Calthrop.
Illustration
It was years ago. I was returning from some service on a Sunday night; and as I paced rapidly along, my attention was drawn to what seemed to be a heap of ragged clothes, drifted under the porch of a magnificent West End mansion. I stopped to look at it. I touched it. At the touch the heap uncoiled itself, and showed me two poor little childrensisters, if I remember rightlywho had nestled together for warmth in the bitter cold of the night; and who woke up from their sleep to gaze, with a wild, scared looklike that of ill-used animalsat the stranger who bent over them. The whole circumstance was a fit emblem of what is continually taking place amongst us. There was the wealthy family withinwith the power to help and to bless, and, probably enough, not without the inclination, but knowing nothing of its opportunities. There were the children withoutmiserable in soul and in body. The need and the supply were in closest contact. Oh, that we knew what we might do, if only our eyes were opened to the true state of the case!
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
(Eph 5:16.) -Redeeming the time. Col 4:5. The participle has been variously understood. The translation of Luther-suit yourselves to the time, is plainly without foundation-schicket euch in die Zeit. The paraphrase of Ambrosiaster is similar-scire quemadmodum unicunque respondeat. The verb denotes to buy out of-; and the middle voice intimates that the purchase is for oneself-for one’s own personal benefit. , probably allied to , is not , simply time, but opportunity. Tittmann, De Synon. p. 39; Donaldson, New Cratylus, p. 320; see, however, Benfey, Wurzellex. vol. ii. p. 288. This opportunity is supposed to be in some other’s possession, and you buy it. You make it your own by purchase, by giving in exchange those pleasures or that indolence, the indulgence of which would have made you forego such a bargain. The meaning is, then-making the most of every opportunity. Such is at least a signification that neither the words themselves nor the context disprove. We are not on the one hand to say with Meyer, that is merely intensive, for it points to that out of which, or out of whose power, the purchase is to be made; still, we are not anxiously, on the other hand, to find out and specify from whom or what the time is to be redeemed, and to call it bad men, with Jerome and Bengel, or the devil, with Calvin. Such is too hard a pressure upon the figure. Neither are we curiously to ask, what is the price given in exchange? Such is the gratuitous minuteness of Chrysostom, Theophylact, and OEcumenius, who refer us to opponents bribed off, and of Augustine, Calvin, Estius, Zanchius, Rckert, and Stier, who understand by the alleged price the offering of all earthly hindrance and pleasure. Beza’s better illustration is that of a merchant whose foresight enables him to use all things for his own purposes; and Olshausen remarks that such a lesson is taught in the parable recorded in Luk 16:1-16. The exegesis of Harless is by far too restricted, for he confines the phrase to this meaning-to know the right point of time when the light of reproof should be let in on the darkness of sin. Still farther removed from the right conception is the interpretation of Grotius, as if the command were one addressed to Christians, to avoid danger and so prolong their l ife; or that of Wilke, Macknight, and Bretschneider, which is-seize every opportunity to shun danger. It is thought by some that the phrase is founded on the Greek version of Dan 2:8, where Nebuchadnezzar said to the Magi of Babylon- , rendered – . Even though we were obliged to agree with Dathe, Rosenmller, Gesenius, Maurer, and Hitzig, that the phrase meant there, to buy up or to prolong the time, or seek delay, yet here the article prefixed by the apostle gives the noun a definite speciality. Sese (id quod difficillimum fuerit) tempus ipsum emisse judicii sui. Cicero in Verrem, iii. p. 240; Opera, ed. Nobbe, Lipsiae, 1850. The unwise allow the propitious moment to pass, and it cannot be recalled. They may eulogize it, but they have missed it. The wise, on the other hand, who walk correctly, recognize it, appreciate it, take hold of it, make it at whatever sacrifice their own, and thriftily turn it to the best advantage. They redeem it, as Severianus says- . The apostle adds a weighty reason-
-because the days are evil. The apostle, as Olshausen remarks, does not adduce the fewness of the days to inculcate in general the diligent use of time, but he insists on the evil of the days for the purpose of urging Christians to seize on every opportunity to counteract that evil. Beza, Grotius, Rckert, Robinson, Wilke, and Wahl, take the adjective in the sense of – sorrowful, calamitous, or dangerous. But we prefer the ordinary meaning-evil, morally evil, and it furnishes a strong argument. Their days were evil. All days have indeed been evil, for sin abounds in the world. But the days of that period were characterized by many enormities, and the refining power of Christianity was only partially and unequally felt. If these days so evil afforded any opportunities of doing good, it was all the more incumbent on Christians to win them and seize them. The very abundance of the evil was a powerful argument to redeem the time, and the apostle writing that letter in a prison was a living example of his own counsel. It is wholly foreign to the context, on the part of Holzhausen, to refer these evil days to the period of the mystery of iniquity. 2Th 2:4; 1Ti 4:1. The Greek fathers are careful to remark that the apostle calls the days evil, not in themselves- -as they are creatures of God; but on account of the events with which they are connected.
Fuente: Commentary on the Greek Text of Galatians, Ephesians, Colossians and Phillipians
Eph 5:16. Redeeming is from EXAGO-RAZO, and Thayer’s definition (the part in italics) at this place is, “to make a wise and sacred use of every opportunity for doing good.” Time is from KAIROS, and Thayer defines it at this place, “opportune or seasonable time,” then adds the comment, “with verbs suggestive of the idea of advantage.” This definition fits in well with the meaning of redeeming just explained. We should make use of every advantage that comes before us for doing something good. If that is done, it can be Said that the time we spend is not in vain. Days is from EMERA, and it has such a wide range of meaning that Thayer uses two pages of his lexicon in defining it. Paul means there is much evil present in these days, and Thayer’s definition of evil at this place is, “bringing toils, annoyances, perils.” To overcome these evils and make the time count for good, we are exhorted to “redeem the time.”
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Eph 5:16. Buying up the opportunity. This describes the walk of the wise. The impression made by the E. V. (making the most of our time, not wasting or abusing it) is quite incorrect. The simple sense is: improve the opportunities which occur, looking out for them as a merchant does. Buying up suggests that these opportunities are rare enough to be sought out. All special references to these from whom the purchase is made, or to the price paid, seem fanciful.
Because the days are evil; not difficult, or unfavorable, or few (as the common rendering possibly suggests; comp. Gen 47:9), but morally evil, full of iniquity. Hence every opportunity to do good should be seized upon, as a merchant looks for a good bargain, especially when the current of trade is against him. But in this respect too often the children of this world are wiser than the children of light.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Observe here, 1. A most important and necessary duty exhorted to; namely, to redeem the time. This cannot be done in a natural sense: time, once past, is irrecoverably lost, we can no more recall it; but in a moral sense, time may be said to be redeemed, when our diligence to improve it is redoubled, when we do much work in a little time.
To redeem time, supposes and implies a right knowledge of the use and end of time, and high valuation of the worth and excellency of time, and resolution to rescue it out of the hands of those that would devour it: idleness, excess of sleep, inordinate adorning of the body, immoderate recreations, vain company, an excess of worldly business, all these are robbers of our time, and time must be rescued out of their hands.
Quest. Who are the persons more especially concerned to redeem time?
Ans. All those that are young: such as have idly wasted a great part of their time;
all that are ignorant and graceless; all that are weak and aged, and have but a few sands in their glass; all those that are recovered from sickness; and all such as, through poverty, restraint or service, are scanted of their time,
should wisely redeem it, and industriously improve it, for God and their souls: because upon this moment depends eternity, and according to our present choice will be our eternal lot.
Observe, 2. The apostle’s argument here, to excite all persons wisely to redeem their time; namely, because the days are evil; that is, full of sin, by the scandalous lives of professors; full of error, by the subtility of heretical seducers; full of affliction and misery, by reason of sharp and hot persecutions. When days are most evil, most sinful and calamitous, then it is a Christian’s duty to improve his time well and wisely, for God and his soul! Redeem the time, because the days are evil.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.
The reason for our circumspect walk is that we are to redeem the time left. The days are evil – well duuhhh might be the thought of one living in this century. You don’t have to be a brilliant person to know that the days are evil. Paul was speaking of his time – he thought his days were evil! My what he would say if he could experience downtown any city in this country today.
Evil is at every turn of the corner, at many song listened to, and most conversations overheard. Today I went to the neighbor’s home to retrieve a tree saw he had borrowed. While he went to the back of the house to get it I stood on the walk outside and was showered with some of the most filthy language I’ve heard in a long time. This coming from a living room where two small children were playing.
Yes, evil abounds, but we are here to be light in this evil generation and we had better get to work soon. We are to confront the wickedness of our generation and do what we can for the Lord that will direct our path.
I believe that you could sit down and write down every wickedness, and every type of evil that you can think of, call in your friends and have them add all they could to the list, and then watch television and find other items to list. The media is filling our minds and the minds of our families with the trash of the world and we allow it.
As you watch the news reports you must wonder if the world can get any more evil, and then they report something new that you would have to list.
Redeem – buy back the time is an interesting concept. The word implies that we can purchase something, in this case time. How can we purchase back time? How can we redeem the time?
I suspect this relates to what we have mentioned before in this study – being the light that we ought to be and by being light, we are driving back the darkness to some small extent. We can, and should be fighting and confronting evil to the point that it is stopped or at least slowed in its progress in the world.
The Holy Spirit is mentioned as “convicting of sin” and this would be a part of that – He, through us can convict the world of sin and slow the wicked effects of the world. I must admit if we don’t get busy in the process we are going to be steam rolled by evil. (Joh 16:8 “And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment:”
On the good side of this, how wonderful is it that the Spirit and the Father want us involved in the massive work of hindering the progress of sin. We aren’t called on to overcome sin, we aren’t called on to eliminate sin from the world, but we are called to take a stand against it every chance we get. We are privileged to speak for Him, to act for Him and walk with Him – all for His glory and not our own.
It has been a pet theory of mine that each dispensation ends when mankind is totally against God and He moves onto some other method of governing. This is fairly clear in the Word. When Adam and Eve sinned, all mankind was against God even if there were only two. At Babel all had joined in against God. At the end of Noah’s economy all but Noah’s family had turned against God. At the end of Promise all but Moses was seemingly against God – even his own people were making an idol. At the end of the Law all mankind was against God including His people. God had left the temple due to their sin and corruption. It seems to me that the world is nearing a time when all of mankind is nearing the same point. We have areas of the world where there are Christians living for Him, but those areas seem to be on the decline.
One is left to wonder if Christ’s return is near. Might He soon return to set up that last glorious economy when He will rule mankind Himself.
Fuente: Mr. D’s Notes on Selected New Testament Books by Stanley Derickson
5:16 {h} Redeeming the time, because the {i} days are evil.
(h) This is a metaphor taken from the merchants: who prefer the least profit that may be before any of their pleasures.
(i) The times are troublesome and severe.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
We live wisely when we use every opportunity to please and glorify the Lord. Every day and every hour provide opportunities, and we should seize them for these purposes. This is important because we live in days that evil influences and evil individuals dominate.