Sacrificing Your Future
“Never sacrifice the future on the altar of the present.”
The RULE
- Your future is what lies ahead. It is what you will experience in life … and in eternity.
- Your spiritual future is only seen by faith, and your natural future only by maturity.
- Parents and pastors can see present choices and better estimate your future results.
- While only God knows the details, He has promised consequences to your actions.
- You build your life one block (or day) at a time. How great will the building be?
- Today is one of those blocks; tonight is also one of them. Build well starting now.
- Forfeiting is losing things by choice. You can lose future blessings by foolish choices.
- It is giving up any hope for victory in a game by not even attempting to play it.
- If you let life happen without thinking, you will forfeit blessings by ignorance.
- If you choose short-term or sinful choices, you will forfeit blessings by rebellion.
- The present is now. It can be reduced to life, to time, five senses, two lusts, and pride.
- Every day, including today, you will make many choices to think, speak, and act.
- Every day, including today, you will choose both what you will and will not do.
- The present presses upon your senses, for it is always upon you and coming at you.
- What you do today is determining your future – you can never forget this rule.
- The altar is your desire or need for immediate gratification of some short-term goal.
- The altar is where sacrifices are burned – it is a present choice to burn your future.
- The lustful demands inside you for pleasure or success overwhelm future concerns.
- Lusts on the inside and peer pressure and temptations outside supply its stones.
- A sacrifice occurs when you choose a short-term pleasure at the cost of your future.
- It is choosing a thing now, in the present, that will ruin a thing later, in the future.
- If done ignorantly, you hungrily devour a pleasure now oblivious to consequences.
- If done rebelliously, you haughtily decide that you want it regardless of the future.
- Have you ever done anything you later regretted? Surely! Multiply it by a billion!
The WISDOM
- Decisions made today determine your tomorrow, form your habits, or waste your life.
- Wise men consider where they are going, but fools deceive themselves (Pr 14:8).
- Wise men consider the lives of the wicked and see their destruction (Prov 21:12).
- Wise men look ahead and see potential danger or loss and avoid it (Pr 22:3; 27:12).
- Wise men look at the assets/income of the slothful and see sacrifices (Pr 24:30-34).
- Moses prayed and exhorted Israel to wisely consider their latter end (Deut 32:29).
- Wisely seeing your last end includes circumspection and redemption (Ep 5:15-16).
- Youth should remember their Creator while young, so said Solomon (Eccl 12:1-8).
- The Bible carefully warns against the things increasing carefulness (I Co 7:29-35).
- No one ever plans to live dysfunctionally or ruin his life, so how does it often happen?
- How many men could have done much better? Most never approach their potential.
- You must learn the perspective to always ask, What will this choice cost me later?
- Temperance is self-discipline to sacrifice the present for the future (I Cor 9:24-27)!
- Do not be deceived by any means to put the emphasis on the present over the future.
- You may think you are getting away with sin, but you are wrong (Psalm 50:18-23).
- You may think others are getting away with sin, but it is only fool’s gold (Pr 1:32).
- The way of transgressors looks rosy, but it is hard (Pr 13:15; 14:12; 16:25; 21:16).
- Christian liberty is a wonderful thing, but it is limited by expediency (I Cor 6:12).
- A multitude of wise counselors can help immensely by being outside your lusts.
- Greater instruction eliminates excuses of ignorance and increases duty (Lu 12:47-48).
The GOOD EXAMPLES
- Joseph sacrificed the intimate pleasures of Mrs. Potiphar to obey God (Gen 39:7-12).
- Moses sacrificed the pleasures and riches of Egypt for a future reward (Heb 11:24-27).
- Jesus gladly endured the cross for joy at God’s right hand (Ps 16:8-11; Heb 12:1-3).
The BAD EXAMPLES
- Esau sacrificed lifelong blessings for hunger for food (Gen 25:29-34; Heb 12:16-17).
- Achan sacrificed his life and his family for clothing and some cash (Joshua 7:20-21).
- Samson sacrificed most everything for sex with a wicked woman (Judges 16:15-17).
- Saul sacrificed his office as king for foolish fear and impatience (I Samuel 13:8-14).
- David sacrificed his future for present sex with Bathsheba (II Sam 11:1-5; 12:7-14).
- Gehazi sacrificed his health and his family’s for clothing and cash (II Kings 5:20-27).
- Regathered Israel sacrificed financial success for selfish impatience (Haggai 1:4-11).
The APPLICATION
- It is far better to sacrifice the present on the altar of the future for your future blessing.
- Let us progress in our consideration of this rule of righteousness from least to greatest.
Body weight: a present choice and then another for food results in weight gain difficult to lose, for the future is your proper weight, which is sacrificed for present tempting food.
Exercise: a choice and then another to skip a workout result in not working out at all.
Late to bed: late pleasures of the night lead to painful rising and groggy performance.
Productivity: diligent perseverance in any pursuit is sacrificed for a little extra sleep or pacing jobs, as procrastination is culprit here – putting off today’s duties until tomorrow.
Athletics: a future champion is sacrificed for extra sleep, favorite foods, or less training.
School work: a choice to play or sleep leads to painful cramming and/or poor grades.
Academic choices: the decision to skip semesters or put off school leads to greater pain.
Tobacco: a healthy future without addiction is sacrificed by peer pressure to be cool.
Drunkenness: constant sobriety in reputation is sacrificed for carelessness or peers.
Driving: safety, low insurance, and a good name are sacrificed for being cool or tough.
X-Sports: a healthy and safe future for yourself and others is sacrificed for cheap thrills.
Auto care: the future is a long-lasting engine sacrificed for playing instead of changing the oil: Fram wisely advertised for many years, You can pay me now … or pay me later.
Transferable skill: often sacrificed for short-term cash of slothfulness leads to poverty.
Employment: consistent progression and rewards are sacrificed for comfort and sloth.
Honoring parents: a long and blessed life is sacrificed to disrespect them today in retorts.
Giving: the commandment for God and your own good is sacrificed for foolish spending.
Savings: this commandment for your own wellbeing is sacrificed to spend it all quickly.
Credit: strong credit takes time to establish but is sacrificed one late payment at a time.
Debt: no one plans to be a net or foolish debtor but it occurs with one loan at a time.
Business: management sacrificed their long-term existence for short-term financial gain.
Television: the future joy in the Holy Ghost is sacrificed for vegetating or fear of men.
Friends: a holy, profitable, and productive life is sacrificed for peer popularity with the wrong crowd; remember that friends will make your future (Pr 13:20; I Kgs 12:12-15).
Dating: purity and a happy marriage are sacrificed for lustful temptations or popularity, or dating without regard to the possibility of marriage gets you locked into a bad one.
Virginity: the honor and value of this gift from God is often sacrificed foolishly for lust.
Marriage: the failproof measure of the fear of the Lord is sacrificed for beauty or favors.
Children: exceptionally wise and godly children are sacrificed for home peace and ease, because either the parent cannot or will not discipline them or starts the process too late.
Birth control: you sacrifice your carefree life and many other things by thoughtless acts.
Bitterness: blessings of peace and joy are sacrificed for one unresolved offence at a time.
Speech: being gracious and a friend of kings is sacrificed for emotional, impulsive talk, so the Bible rules of reducing speech and being swifter to hear than talk are excellent.
Wisdom: accumulating true knowledge is sacrificed for play, work, or sleep (Pr 18:1).
Reputation: unless you are careful, a little folly can sacrifice your good name (Ec 10:1).
Death and hell: you can sacrifice your future in this world and the next with a woman.
Church: a body full of vitality and blessing is sacrificed for mere convenience and ease, for you miss whenever there is an opportunity to do so, and you neglect church duties.
Spirituality: fatness and fruitfulness are sacrificed by daily carnality and slothfulness.
Eternity: standing confidently before God with assurance and evidence to enter heaven is sacrificed for selfish, sensual slothfulness here on earth with its fleeting pleasures.
The CONCLUSION
- We must prove all things and be circumspect (I Thess 5:21; Eph 5:15-17; Pr 4:4-13).
- Sin’s pleasure lasts but a season; a hypocrite’s joy is short (Heb 11:24-26; Job 20:4-5).
- Jesus clearly saw this rule and chose future joy over present deliverance (Heb 12:2).
- You must learn the perspective to always ask, What will this choice cost me later?
- It is far better to sacrifice the present on the altar of the future for your future blessing.