Psalm 90 – God’s Time
January 24, 2022 | Balance, Christian Living | No Comments

“So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom” ~ Psalm 90:12
Time, what a mystery. Always fleeing from us yet ever pursuing after us. Easily measurable yet nearly indefinable. The title of this post is “God’s Time”, which, in and of itself sounds mysterious as it is. The concept to be discussed here is: what should I do with God’s time? There is a rather rudimentary foundation that is to be understood when delving into this question, and that is: all is God’s. All of creation. The visible and the invisible (Colossians 1:16). Even time itself, as we understand it would have begun when God said, “let there be light.” (Genesis 1:3) So, if time is indeed God’s, then we have a responsibility to God regarding His time.
Human responsibility is a discussion all to itself, but Scripture presents a clear case that there is some expectation of man to respond to God in some way pertaining to His creation. 1 Corinthians 4:2 states that “it is required in stewards that a man be found faithful.” This is contextually speaking to the mysteries of the wisdom of God compared to the wisdom of the world. In that context, I do think that you could make a case that time management would eventually fit in here, but I am looking mostly at the principle that Paul is referencing here—stewards (managers) are to be faithful. Few people would argue with this concept. If you trust someone to do something, whether it is for hire or voluntarily, you expect that it is done well.
This brings us to our main text, Psalm 90:12. Here, we find one of, if not the, oldest Psalms in all of the Hebrew songbook. Moses being the author, we get a prayer from the man that God took from a life-shattering sin and seclusion to speaking on God’s behalf to the most prominent man in all of the known world at the time—Pharaoh. However, this Psalm appears to take place in Moses’s later years. It seems that he is recounting all that he has seen and beheld at the hand of God over his lifespan. Don’t miss this, this is one of those times where the authorship REALLY contributes to the contextual compliments of a text.
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Authorship
Moses had lived forty years in Egypt, forty years on the backside of the desert, and another forty years in the wilderness wanderings of the Israelites. He had a resumé of life experience that exceeded most biblical characters. School of hard-knocks?—Graduated. He knew what it was like to see God’s hand of providence as his mother put him in a basket and sent him down the mighty Nile only to find him back in her arms shortly thereafter. He knew what it was like to be raised in the house of Pharaoh with wealth and splendor at his fingertips. He knew what it was like to sin big (forgive the terrible theological terminology there) when he murdered a man and fled from all that he knew and loved. He knew what it was like to see life seemingly waste away as he stood in a desert as a shepherd working for his father-in-law, Jethro. He knew what it was like to see God shatter the laws of nature with a bush that was on fire yet never consumed. He knew what it was like to feel a call and purpose of God on his life as God took Moses in spite of Moses and used him to change the course of history and the world through the Exodus of the Hebrew nation. He knew what it was like to lead from the top and fail like you’re at the bottom. Lastly, he knew what it was like to watch an entire generation, who gave their hearts over to faithless rebellion die off, one by one, as they wandered in circles for forty years. Moses. A man of God.
{Deuteronomy 33:1}
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Application
This man now pens a prayer and as he builds toward what we now call verse ten, covers God’s provision and protection (verse 1); His eternality (verses 2,4); His judgment and wrath (verses 3,7,9,11); and His superiority over man (verses 5,6,8,10). All of these points that Moses addresses about God would humble any sincere believer. Then comes verse twelve—the application. “So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom.” The first half of this verse is literally, “teach us how to count our days (time). This seems like a strange concept when thought of this way, but most people are familiar with counting, or budgeting, their time. We call this making a schedule or keeping a calendar, by why should we do this? The second half of the verse reveals the answer to this question—to apply our hearts to wisdom.
Why take the time to manage your time? Well, it is because God has given only so much time to you in your life, and you need to spend it in a way that is pleasing unto Him (applying your heart to wisdom). All thoughts, feeling, desires and choices should be directed toward the One Who grants us every second. One man said this, “Procrastination is the arrogant assumption that God owes you another opportunity to do what you had time to do.” Ecclesiastes 12:1 sums this principle up well. Beyond that reality, we truly never know when time will run out. In the last year of ministry, I have experienced the passing of two fourteen-year-old boys within our church family. No one expected this, but the reality of death struck, and their time was no more. I believe William Shakespeare understood the reality of time when he penned these words:
“Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore,
So do our miniutes hasten to their end;
Each changing place with that which goes before,
In sequent toil all forwards do contend.”
(Shakespeare, Sonnet 60)
So, next time you are challenged with laziness or procrastination, and you don’t want to take the time to manage your time, remember: Moses, a man of God, under inspiration of God, charges you to number, count, manage your days and time so that you can apply your heart unto wisdom.
Until we write again…..
In, for, and because of Christ,
Hunter V.S. See