By David Faust
Every May and June, high school and college students don caps and gowns, and relatives and friends gather at commencement ceremonies to watch them receive their diplomas. Celebrities or members of the graduating class deliver speeches. Occasionally, a commencement speech makes headlines because the speaker said something especially quotable or controversial.
Imagine if a Bible character could address the graduates. Would Joshua conclude by saying something like this? โYou must choose your priorities in life. As for me and my household, we will serve the Lord!โ Would Solomon pass along some pithy proverbs? I imagine the graduates nodding when he said, โMuch study wearies the body,โ but would they agree with his conclusion that they should โfear God and keep his commandmentsโ (Ecclesiastes 12:12-13)?
How would a commencement crowd respond to a passionate message from a pull-no-punches prophet like Amos or Jeremiah? How would they react to Jesusโ Sermon on the Mount or the speech Paul delivered to the philosophers in Athens?
What Daniel Might Say
If he were around today, the prophet Daniel would be a natural choice for a graduation speaker. According to Daniel 1, he was intelligent and good looking, filled with leadership potential. Here are some points I think Daniel might have emphasized in a speech to young adults.
โServe the Lord wherever you go.โ After being yanked away from his home in Judah into Babylonian captivity, Daniel was selected to participate in an elite three-year training program established by the king (Daniel 1:1-5). However, he didnโt leave his convictions behind. When Daniel found himself in stressful situations far from home, he remembered the faith of his fathers.
โChoose your friends wisely.โ Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego (v. 6) shared Danielโs worldview and later they faced their own intense test of faith. I imagine these four friends formed an accountability group and encouraged each other to uphold their convictions.
โRemember who you are and whose you are.โ A government administrator assigned Daniel and his friends new Babylonian names (v. 7), but this band of brothers never forgot their Hebrew roots. The Lord, not the prevailing culture, determined their true identity.
โTake care of your body and mind.โ Daniel and his friends didnโt fall into the trap of alcohol abuse and careless overeating. Rejecting the kingโs fancy food (and its menu items prohibited by the Law of Moses), they consumed a simple vegetarian diet and were healthier than their peers (vv. 8-16).
โLearn all you can, but donโt forget the Lord.โ Danielโs education exposed him to โall kinds of literature and learningโ (v. 17), but along with his other studies, he devoted his heart, soul, mind, and strength (including his intellectual prowess) to loving God.
โUse the gifts God has given you.โ Daniel possessed a rare God-given ability to โunderstand visions and dreams of all kindsโ (v. 17). Thatโs not my gift and itโs probably not yours, but the Lord has given all of us gifts we can use to serve him and to bless others.
โStand up for what you believe.โ Danielโs career blossomed and in time he rose to a top government position, but he never compromised his convictions. His faith even withstood the lionโs den of persecution.
Daniel would be an inspiring commencement speaker, but since he isnโt around today, I hope others will get his message across. Young adults (and older ones, too) still need to hear it.
Personal Challenge:ย Write a note of encouragement to someone who is graduating from high school or college.ย ย
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David Faust’s new book, Not Too Old: Turning Your Later Years into Greater Years, was released April 10. It is available from College Press and Amazon. To read an article/excerpt from Not Too Old, click here.







Very good.