Good morning. Welcome
to the April 8th edition of Thursday Thoughts.
Years ago, almost in another life it seems, I was a
commercial broadcast technical engineer in radio and television. My job consisted of several facets, among
which was keeping the electronic equipment in good repair, doing some on-air
work, producing local commercial content, and other duties as assigned in a
typical small market operation. At the
time, we didn’t have computers, the internet, cell phones, and all of the
electronic trappings of modern life. We
did many things the old fashioned way.
Telephones were connected to the wall or sat on a desk. They had dials rather than push buttons. We looked up information at the library or in
printed encyclopedia sets and dictionaries.
Computers with memories of up to 16 kilobytes where files were saved on
a cassette tape were just beginning to appear in some outlets.
One of my jobs was to be certain that the clocks in the
control rooms of the stations were at the correct time. That was, after all, a critical part of the
operation. We had to know down to the
second what time it was so we could insert commercials, take a network show
feed, or do whatever else needed to be done in a timely fashion.
In order to do that, we needed a standard of reference for
the correct time. The United States
government conveniently provided such a standard out of what then was called
the National Bureau of Standards…now the National Institute of Standards and
Technology…an arm of the Commerce Department of the Executive Branch of the
federal government.
Now, for those of you wondering why I’m chasing this
particular rabbit, I assure you I have a purpose in mind. Stay with me here.
The government operates a clock so exact that its error rate
is estimated to be one second in well over a billion years. They make this precise timekeeping available to
the public in several forms, one of which is to broadcast time signals by
several means. These signals are
available to someone with a shortwave receiver at certain shortwave
frequencies. They are also available
through a very low frequency radio wave that is used by what is commonly known
as atomic clocks. These clocks are not
really atomic powered…they use regular batteries or are plugged into the
electrical wall socket. They are
inexpensive, self-adjust in response to the radio wave, and are accurate to
within about one tenth of a second at any given time. You may well have one or more of these clocks
in your home.
Another way to obtain the correct time is to make a phone
call to the radio station that broadcasts the signals. When the phone connects, you will hear the
same sounds as you would hear if tuning in to the shortwave signals. The time will be given second by second with
an announcement of the correct time on the minute. Go ahead and try it. The number is area code 303 499 7111.
I have this phone number in my cell phone’s directory. I call it from time to time to reset our
grandfather clock we have at home. When
I listen to the time signals coming from this phone number, I am immediately
struck by the reality of the passage of time.
The prior minute…the prior hour…the prior second…will never repeat. Each tick of the second reminds me that time
continues unabated, regardless of what I am doing, where I am, or whether or
not I’m even alive. And there’s something
that is relentless about time’s passage.
We can’t slow it down, reverse it, or speed it up for ourselves in any
meaningful way. It just
continues…continues…continues.
God had something to say about time and the passage of
time. The Apostle Peter, in what we know
as his second letter in the New Testament says this about the passing of time. First of all, you must understand that in
the last days some people will appear whose lives are controlled by their own
lusts. They will make fun of you and
will ask, “He promised to come, didn't he? Where is he? Our ancestors have already died, but
everything is still the same as it was since the creation of the world!”
These, Peter says, are people who refuse to believe that
there will be a time when time itself will be no more, and there will come a
day when we will have to account to God for the precious gift of life and time
that he has given us.
Peter goes on to say this: “But do not forget one thing, my dear
friends! There is no difference in the
Lord's sight between one day and a thousand years; to him the two are the
same. The Lord is not slow to do what he
has promised, as some think. Instead, he
is patient with you, because he does not want anyone to be destroyed, but wants
all to turn away from their sins. But
the Day of the Lord will come.”
And he continues in the same vein regarding what those of us
who are understanding these words should do: “And so, my friends, as you
wait for that Day, do your best to be pure and faultless in God's sight and to be
at peace with him. Look on our Lord's
patience as the opportunity he is giving you to be saved.”
So, as I close this thought, I ask you again to call the
number for the correct time. Area code
303 499 7111. That’s 303
499 7111. Listen to the ticks of
the seconds as they go by. And
understand that as relentless as they are now to continue, one day those ticks
will cease and the Day of the Lord will indeed come. Be at peace with your God. Rest in His promises. And look forward to that day.
May God continue to bless you this day.
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