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WILL YOU WASTE YOUR YOUTH?
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"Remember now thy Creator in
the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh,
when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them" (Ecclesiastes 12:1).
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I am speaking especially to the
young people here, people under the age of 30, and especially people under the
age of 25. If you're over 30 years of age, I hope you will listen in, and come
to the same Jesus Christ about whom I will preach to the young people - people
who are in college or in high school, or working people of college age.
It is very easy to waste your youth,
to use up your time without doing anything important, and especially without
becoming a Christian. To you, it looks like you have lots of time left. In one
sense, your life has been going well. You've been seeing your power increase
from year to year as you move out of childhood towards full adulthood.
Every year you get smarter,
especially as you move forward in college. Every year, you get physically
stronger. Every year you become more able to earn money. Every year you become
less dependent on your parents and more able to do things for yourself and to
decide for yourself. Some of you are already living the way you decide instead of
the way your parents or other older people decide. Some of you haven't reached
that time yet, but you've certainly been thinking about the time when you will
be your own man or your own woman. Time is on your side, or so you think.
You may be optimistic about your
life. You've been thinking about having a good time, about going to parties or
dances or the mountains or the beach or Las Vegas and enjoying yourself. You've
been thinking about the person you're going out with, or about someone you'd
like to go out with. You've been planning to build a life for yourself, with a
good education, a good job, lots of money, your own car, your own place to live
- you've been thinking about having a great future.
But if you think your future will be
a steady moving up until you die, you are wrong. The different stages of life
are not the same. You will never be as free as you are now. And you will
never have the same level of opportunity to know God as you do now. The Bible
says:
"Remember now thy Creator in
the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw
nigh, when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them" (Ecclesiastes
12:1).
What does this mean, "the evil
days"? It means that soon time will turn against you. Later in your
life will come the "evil days" - when you won't have the kind of
pleasure that you do now. Soon the "evil days" will begin to come
upon you.
Very soon, your body will begin to
run down physically. Right now your body is in good
shape. But very soon, after you reach the age of 25, certainly after the age of
30, your body will be weaker. You won't be able to do everything you can do
now, physically. And you'll have more aches and pains, and you'll be weaker,
until you become sick, and one day you will die.
We all know that even the best
athletes have to stop playing professional baseball or football or basketball
soon after the age of 35, and certainly after the age of 40. Their bodies just
aren't the same.
Let's face it. You won't get
stronger and stronger every year until you die. The "evil days" will
soon come for you. Soon you will be much weaker physically than you are now.
Even the strongest of you will be weak. And all of you will die. It comes much
more quickly than you can imagine! That's why our text says,
"Remember now thy Creator in
the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh,
when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them" (Ecclesiastes 12:1).
The rest of your life will not
be like the life you are living now. Very soon, your life will change from a
life of freedom to a life of obligations. Right now you are thinking about
how to enjoy yourself and what to do with your time. You have a lot of time -
so much that some of you don't know what to do with your time. You are thinking
about movies to see, places to go, and people you'd like to be with.
Very soon your life will be
different. It'll hit you! Very soon you will be out in the working world. You
will have to pay for yourself. You'll have to pay for rent and food and gasoline
and a hundred other things. Instead of wondering what to do with your time,
you'll be thinking about things you'd like to do, but you can't do because you
have no time and no money. What? No time and no money? That's right - you will
come into a life of limits and obligations just like your parents did before
you.
And it gets worse! Soon you will be
married and then you will have children. Your life will be almost totally
filled with demands and obligations - with things that you have to do for other
people. There will be bills to pay - and they never stop coming! One thing
after another will take up your time - and you won't have much time for
yourself. Other people - your children - will depend on you! You will go
from one week to the next and from one paycheck to the next. You will fight to
survive, as demands and obligations pile higher and higher on top of you. You
will never be as free in your life as you are now, in your youth.
As you get older, you will be
less and less free in your mind, your character, and your habits of life. Humanly
speaking, we know that people get set in their ways as they get older. People
form their habits of life and thought when they are young, and when they are
older it is very hard for them to change their ways and their thoughts. People
who study hard and work hard when they are young will do the same when they are
older. People who learn how to manage their time when they are young will do
the same when they are grown up. People who learn how to take care of their money
when they are young will do the same when they are older. On the other hand,
people who are sloppy and lazy when they are young will be the same, or worse,
as they get older. People who don't do their chores at home and don't do their
homework at school will be irresponsible when they get older. People who make a
mess of their life when they are young will keep on making a mess of their life
when they get older. And it will be harder and harder for you to change.
As you get older, you will be
less and less free to change the direction of your life. Most important, you
will lose the freedom to change your relationship with God. I have
mentioned that people become set in their ways as they get older.
But as they get older, people become
less and less open. Often they won't even give their name or telephone number
to a Christian who invites them to a meeting of the church. They act like the
church is something bad instead of something good. They certainly aren't
interested in being converted.
Humanly speaking, it will be harder
and harder for you to be converted as you get older. But there's another reason
why it will be harder. The time will come when it will actually be impossible
for you to be converted. The day will come when God Himself will stop speaking
to you. One day, perhaps very soon, God's Holy Spirit will withdraw from you
and never speak to you again in the way He is speaking to you now. God says:
"My spirit shall not always
strive with man" (Genesis 6:3).
God Himself will give up on you. Speaking
of people before you, the Bible says,
"God gave them up" (Romans
1:26).
"God gave them over to a
reprobate mind" (Romans 1:28).
When God gives up on you, you can't
ever be saved, even if you want to be. You might go on living physically
for years - perhaps for many years. You might call yourself a Christian, or
think about God from time to time, but you will never be able to come to Christ
for conversion. Physically, you'll live as long as you live, but spiritually
you will be dead for ever, as sure for Hell as though you were already there.
The Bible says,
"She that liveth in pleasure is
dead while she liveth"
(I Timothy 5:6).
(I Timothy 5:6).
That's why it's important to come to
Christ now, while you still can. It's a mistake to think you can wait and be
converted just before you die. Yes, a few people have been converted in their
old age, but only a very few. Ninety percent of all conversions occur before
age of thirty. The great majority of all conversions happen before the age of
twenty-five. I myself came to Jesus Christ at the age of twenty-three. You must
come to Jesus Christ now, while you are still young. The Bible says,
"Remember now thy Creator in
the days of thy youth"
(Ecclesiastes 12:1).
(Ecclesiastes 12:1).
Don't wait any longer to become a
Christian. Don't waste your youth!
Today as a youth, I want to show you
four ways you can waste your youth forever - and then plead with you not to
waste it.
I. FIRST, YOU WILL WASTE YOUR YOUTH IF YOU DIE WITHOUT CHRIST
while you are young.
while you are young.
Most young people think they are
immortal! That's why many young people take drugs or get into fights or drive
their cars in a wild and crazy way - they don't think they could die!
In theory, you admit that one day
you will die just like everyone else. But you think and act as though you were
never going to die. You live your life as though it was impossible for you to
die while you are still young.
But the Bible says you can't be sure
even about the next day! The Bible says,
"Boast not thyself of tomorrow,
for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth" (Proverbs 27:1).
Under the inspiration of the Holy
Spirit, David said, "There is but a step between me and death" (I
Samuel 20:3).
Have you ever had a close call with
death? Almost everyone has. There was a time when you were sick, or when you
had an accident, or almost had an accident - and you almost died. Almost
everyone has come close to death.
When I was ten years old, even as a
a sick boy I was running around in a playhouse. I didn't watch where I was
going, and fell down through a trap door and hit my head. My brother ran and
told my mother, "Debola fell through a trap door and hit his head, and he
isn't moving!" Thank God that I had only fractured my skull and had to
spend three days in the hospital. That was bad - but if I had died that day I
would have gone to Hell forever.
Everyone has a close call with death
- usually many of them. If you've been on the streets and freeways of Lagos,
you've had some close calls. You could die very soon.
I can remember a fellow I knew in
secondary school. He was good-looking and popular. He was elected captain of my
class. He didn't expect to die in his youth. But when he was only 21 years old,
he was driving across a bridge. He wasn't driving wrong - but someone else was!
I can still remember when another friend came to me and told me, "He was
killed in a car crash." He had wasted his youth.
I can remember another young man, a
man named Dele. He wasn't my personal friend. He was a wild fellow. He smoked
marijuana and hung out with people in a gang. Today, people think it's cool to
be a gangster - or at least to dress like one, talk like one, and listen to gangster
music. That's what Dele thought. He lived right here in Lagos. But we were
never personal friends. I only met him once.
I met him for the first - and the
last - time when I heard shots one night, and went out into the street and
looked down. He was lying there with round holes in his body and blood coming
out of him. Some gang people had driven up in a car and put six bullets into
him. I spoke into his ear about Jesus, but I don't think he heard me. Dele died
that night. His gangster friends sprayed his name on the wall where he died,
but that didn't do him any good. It was too late for him.
Dele wasn't expecting to die that
night - but he did. Now it is too late for him. He did not obey our text:
"Remember now thy Creator in
the days of thy youth"
(Ecclesiastes 12:1).
(Ecclesiastes 12:1).
II. SECOND, YOU WILL WASTE YOUR YOUTH IF
YOU DESTROY IT BY WRONG LIVING.
Jesus told a parable about a young
man. He wasn't talking about any person in particular. Instead, he gave a
parable, which is a story that illustrates a spiritual truth. In Luke, chapter
fifteen, verse eleven, he said this:
"A certain man had two sons:
And the younger of them said to his father, Father, give me the portion of
goods that falleth to me. And he divided unto them his living. And not many
days after the younger son gathered all together, and took his journey into a
far country, and there wasted his substance with riotous living. And when he
had spent all, there arose a mighty famine in that land; and he began to be in
want. And he went and joined himself to a citizen of that country; and he sent
him into his fields to feed swine. And he would fain have filled his belly with
the husks that the swine did eat: and no man gave unto him" (Luke
15:11-16).
This young man took his father's
money and lived a wild life of partying - for a while. When he ran out of
money, his friends left him and he wound up in the pig-pen. That's the story of
most people's lives today - a big flash for a little while, and then a life in
the pig-pen.
Later in this parable, the young man
woke up and came to salvation. But I'd like to ask you a question: "What
if he didn't wake up?" He probably wouldn't have died right then.
But he would have had a miserable, ruined life for as much time as he did live
- without real friends, without money, without hope for getting out of his
troubles, and especially without God.
That's exactly what happens
to most people in this city. You start out with a body, a mind, and hope for
the future. Your body gets stronger and so does your mind. You have a plan for
your life.
But you go wrong. You waste your
youth. You listen to your "friends" and the music and the movies and
everything else. You get wild. And in just a few years, you've messed up your
life and you can't put it back. You have wasted your years. You have wasted
your opportunities. You have wasted your youth.
It's hard to keep on the straight
road when you are young. It's hard to put your nose in the books, and then work
hard, and make something out of your life. It's easy to stay away from Christ,
to stay out of church, to get wild for a few years - and waste your youth.
You'll have a couple of wild years, and then all the rest of your life will be
unhappy until you die and go to Hell. You might live on until you're old, but
you'll never fulfill the plans and hopes and dreams you had when you were
starting. You messed up and lost your way just like everyone else. You will
live out an unhappy life until you die without Jesus Christ and go to Hell.
I can remember a story about a young
high school girl. She liked to talk to people. She was good-looking. One day
she decided to stop coming to church. A few months later someone saw her riding
around in a car with a bunch of friends. No, she didn't die that day - but she
wasted her youth just the same. She found a boyfriend. That's not hard for a
girl to do. A few months later she wound up with a baby just like thousands of
other girls before her. It's the same old story. The girl is still alive, but
she's not having a good wild time now. She'll never have much or do much in her
life. And she's not interested in becoming a Christian. Although she is still
alive, her life might as well be over. She wasted her youth.
I can think of one young girl after
another who was planning to have a professional career - but fell in love and
got physical with a boy. You can guess what happened after that. Now their
lives are going nowhere. This sort of thing happens so often that when my wife
and I hear it about still another person, my wife and I say to each other,
"The story goes on." "The story goes on." Please don't
waste your youth!
I can remember a young man who
thought he didn't need to come to church. Instead, in simple words, he
"spun out" into a life of sin. Today he has a job, but he is divorced
and his children are somewhere else. His life is going nowhere. And he's not
interested in being converted. There are so many people like him that his story
is almost universal. "The story goes on." "The story goes
on."
Will that be your story? Will you
refuse to come to Jesus Christ? Will you waste your time in wild living instead
of coming to church? Will you throw away your life in a short time of flash and
pleasure - and then live as a nobody going nowhere until you finally die and go
to Hell? Will you waste your youth?
"Remember now thy Creator in
the days of thy youth"
(Ecclesiastes 12:1).
(Ecclesiastes 12:1).
III. THIRD, YOU WILL WASTE YOUR YOUTH IF YOU
PUT YOUR SELFISHNESS
AHEAD OF THE CALL OF JESUS CHRIST.
AHEAD OF THE CALL OF JESUS CHRIST.
Perhaps you won't die in your youth.
Perhaps you won't destroy your future in a burst of savagery. But you can, and
probably will, waste your youth by putting your life plans ahead of Jesus
Christ.
You have plans for your life - and
you have no time to come into a Bible-believing church, get converted, and live
as a serious Christian. Your plans take up all of your life and leave no real
room for Jesus. But Jesus warned against putting your own plans ahead of His
call to you when He said:
"For whosoever will save his
life shall lose it: but whosoever
will lose his life for my sake, the same shall save it"
(Luke 9:24).
will lose his life for my sake, the same shall save it"
(Luke 9:24).
You may agree that it is a mistake
to throw yourself into a life of drugs, partying, and illicit sex, but for the
wrong reason - because it would interfere with your plan for your life. When I
was in college, there were students who got high every day, by smoking
marijuana or using some other drug. There were other students who got drunk
every night. I briefly thought about what they were doing and decided not to
live like them. My real reason for not getting drunk and high was that it would
interfere with my plans to get a lot of education, do a lot of work, and make a
lot of money. My real reason was selfishness.
Many of you are just like I was. You
feel good about yourself because you don't take drugs, you aren't in a gang,
and you're planning to do something with your life. You say, "Right now, I
don't have time to come to church every Sunday. When I finish school, or when I
get my bills paid, or when the problems in my life are fixed, then I may come
back to church. Really I'd like to be a Christian, but I just can't do that
right now." And so you will waste your youth with excuses, until you
aren't young any more. You are saying "no" to the call of God's Holy
Spirit, and you are building the habit of saying "no" to Him. Years
from now, you will continue to say "no" to God as you always have -
until the day when He says "no" to you.
There is no reason why you can't go
to college, or have a job, and be a Bible Christian at the same time. All the
young people that I have groomed are going to college, or have jobs, or both!
The real reason you don't have time to come to church, and aren't interested in
becoming a serious Christian, is that you want to have the final word in your
life for yourself. Your selfishness is the real obstacle.
You are trying to become just like
they are now! You have no time to come to church, to seek your conversion, or
to become a serious Christian. You are trying to protect your life and your
plans. If you succeed in all your plans, you might get to be like
those people are now, with their cars, their weekend getaways, and their
shopping trips. Then you will have no time for real Christianity, just
as you have no time for it now. You will seek to "save your life" then,
just as you seek to "save your life" now. You certainly won't seek to
"lose your life" for Jesus' sake, and put Him first in your life,
after spending all that time trying to save it! No, you won't reverse your
direction later on. You will go on in your selfishness until you die without
Christ, and hear the words, "Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be
required of thee" (Luke 12:20).
Please, change your priorities now
- before it is too late! Make time for God, even if you have to rearrange your
schedule. Make it your top priority to seek your conversion. There is nothing
more important than making sure that your sins are forgiven and that you are
going to Heaven. Don't wait any longer!
"Remember now thy Creator in
the days of thy youth"
(Ecclesiastes 12:1).
(Ecclesiastes 12:1).
IV. FOURTH, YOU WILL WASTE YOUR
YOUTH IF YOU REFORM OUTWARDLY
WITHOUT AN INWARD CONVERSION TO CHRIST.
WITHOUT AN INWARD CONVERSION TO CHRIST.
Some of you who are here are coming
to church every week, but you are not converted. Some of you have grown up in
the church. You have been brought here by your parents. But you yourself are
not converted. Some of you have been coming to church for a few weeks or a few
months, even for years and you enjoy being with the people in the church, but
you yourself are still not converted. You are in danger of making the biggest
mistake of all. Jesus said,
"Except ye be converted…ye
shall not enter into the kingdom
of heaven" (Matthew 18:3).
of heaven" (Matthew 18:3).
You know mentally the basic facts of
the gospel. You have heard that Jesus Christ died on the Cross to pay for your
sins. You mentally believe that Jesus shed His Blood to wash your sins away.
You have heard that Jesus rose from the dead and ascended to Heaven. You
mentally believe that Jesus is up in Heaven now and calls you to come to Him.
But you yourself are still a lost
sinner, and you know it! In your mind, you know that you still have your sins
on your record before God, and that you are going to Hell with your sins not
washed away by the Blood of Jesus. But in your heart you are content with
yourself, and pleased with yourself for being in church with the Christians and
not committing some of the grossest outward sins. You would like to hear about
salvation as a formula. You may be curious to hear the illustrations and
stories in the sermons from week to week. But you do not seek to have the
burden of your sins removed through a personal encounter with Jesus Christ,
Himself.
You are like a religious young man
who said to Jesus, "All these things [God's commandments] have I kept from
my youth up: what lack I yet?" (Matthew 19:20). Like the rich young ruler,
you are content with yourself as an outwardly "good" person. You may
be curious enough to talk with me after the sermon, or even to ask a question -
but you are not desperately earnest about being forgiven, about being accepted
by God.
After all, you have heard gospel
sermons before, and you expect to hear them again. And so you let the weeks and
months and years of your life pass by - and you waste your youth! Some of you
have let months go by. Some of you have let years go by. You heard me say
earlier in this sermon that it will get harder for you to be converted, and the
day will come when you can't be converted at all. But you applied that only to
other people, people who haven't been going to church, when you should apply it
to yourself.
You are in the deepest danger of
all. You are like a man named Agrippa who said to the Apostle Paul,
"Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian" (Acts 26:28). He was
"almost" ready to come to Jesus - but he never did.
I beg of you - don't lose your soul
like Agrippa! Don't waste your youth until you are so hardened that you never
find peace with God through Jesus Christ. It is time for you to remember the
God who will judge you - if you do not come to His Son. It is time for you to
seek your conversion until you have found the Saviour - before it is too late!
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