Calmly, quietly, and infrequently, i write what comes to mind and share only what might be helpful to others.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Faith in Time?

Faith: belief that does not rest on logical proof or material evidence (dictionary.com)
Faith: the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen (Book of Hebrews in the Bible)

What is this "faith" that is both casually tossed about by some and seriously held by others? Faith in what or in whom? Most American's don't need faith. We're doing fine without it, since we are mostly concerned about what we possess and how we look. We have what we want (or can purchase what we want) and we look how we want to look (or we can purchase the way we want to look).

It seems the only thing we can't purchase is time. This we don't have enough of, and we prove it every day by purchasing things that save us time, but we still don't have enough of it, so we keep searching for time saving devices and time saving methods and life extending treatments.

Interestingly, there is probably not another society that has ever existed that had more time to do whatever it wants. Most of our basic needs can be easily met with very little of our personal effort. Our food, clothing and shelter is made by someone else. We have the means to purchase it through working, but we don't have to kill our food or grow our food or harvest our food ourselves; we don't have to use a loom to weave our clothes, or kill animals to have skins to make shoes or coats ourselves; we don't have to cut down trees and saw them or plumb our houses ourselves; we don't have to fetch water or dig latrines ourselves. Machines make our food, wash and dry our clothes, get us to where we need to go quickly, process our waste, compute our bills, and even help us create our blogs (before anyone begins looking for me to upbraid me for my insensitivity to those who work in the home, I'm comparing our society to past societies -- I know taking care of a family's basic needs is hard work and time consuming, but not like it was even 50 years ago).

Since we can only desire what we do not have and the only thing most Americans don't have is time, we insatiably desire time. We stretch our time as far as possible through the use of machines, those machines that save us time and those machines that keep us alive so that we can have more time. We extend our time (lives) at great (all?) cost. What makes time so important? Can you have faith in time itself? Why is time so important that we would spend treasure and talent for it? Is it because if we don't have faith, time is all there is?

3 comments:

Tim Spivey said...

Wow...great thoughts...

Liz Moore said...

Great post! You have given us a lot to think about. Sometimes it seems we always want what we can't have. And we can never seem to have enough time. As you pointed out, we should have more time than anyone in any other society. The problem is we put faith in ourselves and what we "think" we need to accomplish. Because of our conveniences, we as Americans really waste a lot of time doing meaningless things that have no value in our life. If we had more faith in God instead of so much faith in ourselves and what we can accomplish, we would probably have more time than we thought.

john alan turner said...

Okay, why am I just now finding out about your blog?