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Day 3: During my lifetime // Dia 3: Durante minha vida





We have seen in this generation the lack of patience in all terms. Everything has to be fast and disposable. I remember the time when fridges lasted a lifetime or light bulbs. Today, when I say that my cell phone is 4 years old people look at me with a different look. I have also realized that this kind of behavior is not restricted to things, but to people also. Relationships are lasting each day less. Nobody wants to work something out, people just want something brand new, the last new model in the market. The new fashion. 

Have you asked yourself what to do with all the stuff that we "substitute" for a new one where did the go? By any chance did they disappear? Vanished? They might have from your house, but not from the planet. Where did they go? To a land field, to the ocean? 

If we don't cultivate a habit of thinking ahead, who will come in the future will suffer because of it. If we keep thinking egotistically the future for the people who are being born and growing up now it won't exist. If you haven't stopped to think about it, I might think about you as a person who is living the "time of his life" without consequences, compromising the future generations.


Day Three: During My Lifetime

 

How far into the future do we look when we take an action or make a decision?

 

People usually, think of themselves and of their own lifetime. Perhaps not even their own lifetime. Perhaps just this year, or even just today. Carpe diem.

 

But what about the future? What about our children, and our grandchildren, and our great-grandchildren…?

 

There has arguably never been a better time to be alive. In the West, we have an abundance of food and drink, technology that far surpasses the sci-fi imagination of a hundred years ago, easy ways to travel the world and communicate with people across the world, and enough free time and money that we can have a whole host of hobbies and things to fill our time and houses.

 

But what is the cost of all of this?

 

It can be tiring to hear the predictions of scientists about the future, or even to hear reports about what’s happening around the world today about how people and the planet are suffering.

 

Perhaps a better question to ask is: am I happy? And how does my pursuit of happiness affect other people and the planet?

 

As Christians, we are given the task to love: to love God, and to love our neighbor (Mark 12:30-31). It is these two things that make us truly happy.

 

Hezekiah’s reaction to Isaiah’s message is a human one: wouldn’t we all be glad to hear that we will experience peace and security, after all! But is it a just response? Should we think it is good that other people will suffer? Should Hezekiah have reacted differently?

 

Hezekiah was fortunate as there was peace and security in his lifetime. This may not be the case for us – unfortunately, we don’t have a prophet to tell us one way or the other. If we think about how much things have changed over the past fifty years, we can hardly predict how things will look at the end of our own lifetime, let alone in future generations. And based on 2020, we can hardly even predict how things will look from year to year.

 

We may trust that this is all a part of God’s plan, but we must always remember that God gave us free will. It is important that we exercise our free will in ways that serve more than just our own pleasure, comfort, and security.

 

Questions for Discussion

 

1. How much attention should we pay to warnings about the future?

 

2. How do my actions affect the environment? And other human life?

 

3. How much control do we have about what happens in the future?


Vimos nesta geração a falta de paciência em todos os termos. Tudo tem que ser rápido e descartável. Lembro-me da época em que as geladeiras duravam uma vida inteira ou as lâmpadas. Hoje, quando digo que meu celular tem 4 anos, as pessoas me olham com um olhar diferente. Também percebi que esse tipo de comportamento não se restringe às coisas, mas às pessoas também. Os relacionamentos estão durando cada dia menos. Ninguém quer dar certo, as pessoas só querem algo novo, o último modelo do mercado. A nova moda.

Você já se perguntou o que fazer com todas as coisas que "substituímos" por uma nova para onde foi? Por acaso eles desapareceram? Desaparecido? Eles podem ter vindo de sua casa, mas não do planeta. Para onde eles foram? Para um campo de terra, para o oceano?

Se não cultivarmos o hábito de pensar no futuro, quem virá no futuro sofrerá por causa disso. Se continuarmos pensando egoisticamente, o futuro das pessoas que estão nascendo e crescendo agora, ele não existirá. Se ainda não parou para pensar nisso, posso pensar em você como uma pessoa que está vivendo o "tempo da sua vida" sem consequências, comprometendo as gerações futuras.



Dia três: Durante minha Vida

 

Quão longe no futuro olhamos quando tomamos uma ação ou tomamos uma decisão?

 

As pessoas geralmente pensam em si mesmas e em sua vida. Talvez nem mesmo durante sua própria vida. Talvez apenas este ano, ou mesmo apenas hoje. Curta o momento.

 

Mas e quanto ao futuro? E quanto aos nossos filhos, netos e bisnetos ...?

 

Sem dúvida, nunca houve um momento melhor para se estar vivo. No Ocidente, temos comida e bebida em abundância, tecnologia que ultrapassa em muito a imaginação da ficção científica de cem anos atrás, maneiras fáceis de viajar pelo mundo e se comunicar com pessoas em todo o mundo, e tempo e dinheiro livres suficientes para nós pode ter uma série de hobbies e coisas para preencher nosso tempo e casa.

 

Mas qual é o custo de tudo isso?

 

Pode ser cansativo ouvir as previsões dos cientistas sobre o futuro, ou até mesmo ouvir relatos sobre o que está acontecendo no mundo hoje sobre como as pessoas e o planeta estão sofrendo.

 

Talvez a melhor pergunta a fazer seja: estou feliz? E como minha busca pela felicidade afeta outras pessoas e o planeta?

 

Como cristãos, temos a tarefa de amar: amar a Deus e ao próximo (Marcos 12: 30-31). São essas duas coisas que nos tornam verdadeiramente felizes.

 

A reação de Ezequias à mensagem de Isaías é humana: não ficaríamos todos felizes em saber que teremos paz e segurança, afinal! Mas é uma resposta justa? Devemos pensar que é bom que outras pessoas sofram? Ezequias deveria ter reagido de maneira diferente?

 

Ezequias teve sorte, pois havia paz e segurança em sua vida. Este pode não ser o nosso caso - infelizmente não temos um profeta para nos dizer de uma forma ou de outra. Se pensarmos sobre o quanto as coisas mudaram nos últimos cinquenta anos, dificilmente podemos prever como as coisas ficarão no final de nossa própria vida, muito menos nas gerações futuras. E com base em 2020, dificilmente podemos prever como as coisas ficarão de ano para ano.

 

Podemos confiar que tudo isso faz parte do plano de Deus, mas devemos sempre lembrar que Deus nos deu o livre arbítrio. É importante que exerçamos nosso livre arbítrio de maneiras que sirvam mais do que apenas ao nosso próprio prazer, conforto e segurança.

 

Perguntas para discussão

 

1. Quanta atenção devemos prestar aos avisos sobre o futuro?

 

2. Como minhas ações afetam o meio ambiente? E outra vida humana?

 

3. Quanto controle temos sobre o que acontecerá no futuro?

 

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