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The holocaust of time


Note: this blog post turned into an essay. If you don’t have TIME to read it, then don’t. But it just might save you some time.

There is a war on time. As I resolved to waste less time this year, I had the chilling thought that modern life is fracturing our souls with its pulls and lures in every direction, so much so that we are barely left human. It’s the holocaust of time.

What a harsh word to use - holocaust. I think about my comfortable, wise viewpoint of 2010 as I look back upon the Holocaust of the 1930s - 1945 in Europe. HOW could the bystanders and the apathetic and the scared and the collaborators have EVER let it happen?

And then I thought about what evil forces are at work at this moment in history, a very different holocaust, the annihilation of well-spent time, and I believe that my descendants will have the same judgement: HOW could the bystanders and the apathetic and the scared and the collaborators have EVER let it happen?

Time is…what? Even the greatest physicists don’t understand the nature of time. Time is clearly more than a hand on a clock. It is motion, logic, and life. Time is perhaps a dimension, an eternal state. Whatever it is, in our daily life we understand that we are limited in our access to time, and if more time is consumed than we have accounted for, we are left motionless, logic-less, and lifeless.

Oh, how often people say “I don’t have enough time” or “I ran out of time.” Time is a commodity that is essential to life itself, and so I’m not surprised that the Enemy of our soul would like to destroy our time. Since there is nothing new under the sun, I suspect that the modern version of time-wasters have some kind of past counterpart.

I’d like to try to identify some of the biggest modern time-wasters, then discern what it is that makes us human, and next, distill some basics of life that must be done before all else. I think this progression of thought will be helpful in eliminating those elements that steal time, and hope that we can make some radical changes to avoid a time-crisis of holocaust proportions. Finally, I’ll look at the elements of a holocaust.

First, what are some of the biggest time wasters? Here’s a short list I came up with, and by the way these are all probably addictions:

TV. There is an overarching theme of voyeurism and vicarious living in how 21st century people watch TV. That there was an uproar over Lost being scheduled opposite the State of the Union is pathetic.

Internet. Clicking with the theme of too much information. Both China and South Korea have pronounced internet addiction their number one public health issue.

Gaming.There’s the 23 year old I know who flunked out of college and lost several jobs over this online computer games addiction.

Junk. There’s the news junkies, the junk reading (ie People Magazine and all the junk novels masquerading as literature), junk talking (gossip is a huge time-sucker), junk shopping, junk managing.

A friend recently sent me an email ending with this pronouncement that says it best: So when you want to talk in real time, using real voice and ears, please feel free to dial us up. E-mail is OK, but you won’t find us on Facebook, tweet, twitter, or twerp; nor on YouTube, the boobtube, or at Jiffylube.

Next, identify what makes you human. This is really important because if we don’t understand how we are created to truly be fulfilled, we’ll keep squandering our time on unprofitable things.

Relationships, not reality-TV. Why do we care more about what celebrity couple has tied the knot than we do about the ties that bind?

Connecting with God’s Creation, not a Wii or a PC. What ever happened to the very dirt beneath our feet, the growing things, the natural sun, the natural?

Connecting with God, through the simplicity of personally reading the Bible and prayer. How much time, relative to this, do we spend pursuing the latest spiritual fad or trendy Christian author instead?

Finally, recognize the basics of life that must be done before all else. See, because time is in fact limited by the nature of our finite lives, it would be wise to do the things that have to be done first, those things essential to being human, then, whatever time is left, tend to the non-essentials. You may discover there actually is no time for the non-essentials. Sadly, we’ve reversed this precept, and are left with the essentials hanging out to dry. So, earn a living, take care of your family and home, and get enough rest, good nutrition, and exercise. That’s about all you’ll really have time for.

If there is a holocaust of time, who or what is the perpetrator? In the midst of a holocaust, it seems there are four main groups of people: the strong minority perpetrators, the weak majority victims, the mass of unassisting spectators, and the few and brave of the resistance.

My mind screams, “Hollywood!” “Consumerism!” “Gluttony!” But who can I point a finger at, where is the evil Hitler who is the diabolical villain behind the extermination of quiet evenings at home reading to your children and the massacre of talking to your neighbors after work instead of garage door up, garage door down?

Is it just modernity? Declining morality? Certainly there is a particular greed surrounding the monetizing of time that can be found in Hollywood and the corporate gadgeteers. There’s money to be made off of people wasting their time on your latest fad, gadget, game, icon, celebrity, or cereal.

The weak majority of Americans who fall for these artifices are suffering intensely. We have anxiety over the stress we feel on our time, so we’re perhaps on some kind of medication, we fail at family life, maybe turn to drugs or alcohol. It takes time to be healthy mentally, spiritually, and physically!

What about that mass of spectators that is typically found in a holocaust? I would describe the unassisting spectators as those whose heads are buried in the sand and think nothing is wrong. They love their sitcoms and sit idly by while their kids play violent games on the X-Box and become entrenched in a depraved culture with little likelihood of finding their way out.

And the resistance. I’m a big fan of the heroes of the French Resistance, the Dutch Resistance, and others who bravely fought to defeat the Nazis. They worked underground, through stealth and reconnaissance, and turned the tide. True, they were also betrayed, tortured, and killed. So, to complete the holocaust analogy, this is where it happens.

It’s the Resistance who need to be courageous in this battle for our time. Resist the time-wasters and for heaven’s save, do not allow your children to succumb to them. Get rid of your TV if you have to. Unplug. Kids do not have to join organized sports at age three. They don’t need to check Facebook and text their friends twenty times a day, nor do you.

Blessings upon your time, my friends.

Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time, for that is the stuff life is made of. - Benjamin Franklin

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8 Responses

  1. Chris January 10th, 2010 at 3:28 pm

    Superbly stated. Our compulsive desires to gratify our flesh via so many artificial stimuluses is simply through the roof. I am as guilty as the next. I have often thought that relationship, with God and our fellow man, is the reason for life itself. If our soul does indeed have a masterful enemy, then his goal would be to destroy relationship, directly through damaging emotions and behavior or indirectly via the relational vacuum created through egotism, voyeurism and apathy.

    In the end we fail to engage and relationships wither. It is the stuff of so many hollywood movies and so many sad songs we all identify with. I can hear Cat Stevens singing… “When you coming home dad? I don’t know when, but we’ll get together then.”

  2. e-Mom January 10th, 2010 at 11:30 pm

    Wonderful title… and yes, I read (most of) your post!

    This week the Lord gave me this verse: “Be very careful, then, how you live—not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil.” (Eph 5:15-16) How we flesh this out will look differently for each of us, based on our gifts and stage of life…

    Blessings! :~D

  3. tipper January 12th, 2010 at 9:50 am

    Jennifer-a wonderful well written post-full of truth. I’m guilty of saying I don’t have time-while simultaneously wasting time.

  4. Amy January 13th, 2010 at 12:50 pm

    Wonderfully stated, something to think even more on (these things I think on, you just added to it for me). Yes, I have gotten SOME benefit (even blessing) from Face Book, yet I know I tend to check it “too much” (priorities, like you said!). I appreciate the previous comments, as well. Food for (more) thought. Thank you.

  5. Julie O'Neill January 15th, 2010 at 9:47 pm

    Amazing how you have time to write this amidst your amazing feat of starting a school! Goes to show your point - we really do have more time then we think we do if we just focused it on important things versus the many lures to engage in activities that are simply blackholes of wasted time.

    http://www.runninggalinsights.blogspot.com

  6. Jen January 25th, 2010 at 9:32 pm

    e-Mom, I love the verse you quoted about living wisely and making the most of the time we’re given. Thank you for reminding me of this.

    Thank you, friends, for taking the time to comment here.

  7. Cathy February 8th, 2010 at 6:09 pm

    Thanks for this well state commentary! I agree with every word!!! Now if I could just do what is necessary to break old and lazy habits! With God’s will I can. He isn’t done with me yet!

  8. Jen May 11th, 2010 at 10:05 pm

    Cathy, I’m late responding to you, but I am just as lazy and bad-habit filled as the next person, and I do realize that it takes God’s help to rescue us from our unhealthy ways. Keep on!

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