Making the Most of Your Time
Ecclesiastes 3 reminds readers that life unfolds in seasons, each with its own time and purpose. This article reflects on the precious, non-renewable gift of time and encourages wise stewardship in every season of life.
- Ecclesiastes 3 describes lifeโs changing seasons through 28 paired activities.
- Time is precious, non-renewable, and should be stewarded wisely.
- Every season is an opportunity to prepare for eternity with God.
By David Faust
Timing matters when comedians tell a joke or a quarterback throws a pass. Timing matters at work (donโt ask for a raise if your boss is having a bad day) … when you grill a steak (donโt cook it too long) … and when managing your finances (thereโs a right time to buy and sell).
The word time or season appears 30 times in the first eight verses of Ecclesiastes 3. The chapter starts by saying, โFor everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heavenโ (Ecclesiastes 3:1, New International Version). Using a poetic device called Hebrew parallelism, the writer lists a series of couplets that describe the fleeting, shifting cycle of life. The ups and downs mentioned in Ecclesiastes 3:2-8 include times …
- to be born and to die
- to weep and to laugh
- to mourn and to dance
- to keep and to throw away
- to be silent and to speak
Altogether these verses list 28 activities, divided into 14 pairs of positive and negative things that happen in a typical lifetime.
How Will You Spend Your Time?
Time is precious. Whether youโre young or old, rich or poor, you have 24 hours in a day, 168 hours in a week. People say, โTime is money.โ Many workers are paid by the hour. We talk about โspending time.โ Wouldnโt it be great if someone gave you $1,440 every day? God gives you 1,440 minutes every dayโover half a million minutes each year.
Time is non-renewableโa resource to be stewarded well. You canโt actually save time. If you waste time, itโs gone and canโt be reclaimed. William Penn said, โTime is what we want most, but what we use worst.โ If you are 20 years old, you already have spent more than 10 million minutesโand the clock is ticking.
Time can move slowly or quickly. Time flies when youโre on vacation, but it drags when youโre at a red stoplight or enduring a dull class or business meeting. When I watch football on TV, my wife asks, โHow much longer till the game is over?โ I reply, โItโs down to the last two minutes.โ But the final two minutes of a close football game can take half an hour!
Time is a gift of God. Someone quipped, โThatโs why itโs called โthe presentโ!โ Scripture says, โTeach us to number our daysโ (Psalm 90:12). We shouldnโt squander time, for we donโt know how much weโll be given.
Maximizing Your Time
How can you make the most of your time?
Embrace the season. There is a time to plant. When youโre young, you are planting habits and friendships that will either build or destroy your health and reputation. You are developing your worldview, values, and goals. Plant wisely.
There are times to weepโto embrace the loss and feel the sadnessโbut there also are times to laugh.
Should you search for a new job and make new friends? Is it time to downsize and give things away? Should you keep your mouth shut or speak up? We need Godโs help to decide what to do as lifeโs seasons unfold. David wrote, โMy times are in your handsโ (Psalm 31:15).
Know the Reason
Know the reason. Ecclesiastes reminds us that without God, life is meaningless. Without God, we merely โput in our timeโ as if weโre serving a prison sentence. But life isnโt meaningless; itโs a prelude to eternity. The Lord โhas made everything beautiful in its timeโ and he โhas set eternity in the human heartโ (Ecclesiastes 3:11).
Augustine said our hearts are restless until they rest in God. Do you have a restless soul? Do you long to connect with God? Do you feel a spiritual itch you cannot scratch? These are signs of eternity in your heartโa reminder that this world isnโt enough.
Every season is a time to prepare yourself and others for the place where time will be no more.
This is the second in a series of articles based on the book of Ecclesiastes. Next week: โWe Need Friendsโ (Ecclesiastes 4).





