YOUTH: OURS BUT ONCE
Scripture:
Ecclesiastes 11: 9; 12: 1; I Timothy 4: 12
Someone has suggested that it is a shame that youth should
be squandered on young people who have insufficient experience to use it
wisely.
Youth is priceless and golden. It passes all too rapidly. It
is gone before one can appraise
its worth accurately. Then one
looks back with sickening dismay and disappointed ambitions to the one period
in life that could have made a difference in all succeeding stages. Middle age
and old age can never affect youth. But what one is in youth makes all the
difference to middle and old age.
Time travels in one direction. Youth first -- then it is
gone forever; middle age next; finally old age.
Why is youth so all-important?
First, it is the period of habit formation. Psychologists
inform us that 98 per cent of all of
our acts are those of habit. Personal habits are formed
before one is twenty, and professional before one is thirty. These mold and set
the remaining years of our lives. Therefore it is imperative that good habits
be formed.
Second, youth is a period of awakening. Physically one
"grows up." Awkwardness
produces self-consciousness. With
this comes a social awakening -- and a mental stirring which leads to such
questions as: Who am I? Where did I come from? Why am I living? Where am I
going? Following such always comes a spiritual awakening.
To be awake means to be conscious. To be conscious means to
be active -- and to be
active means to make decisions -- and decisions are made in
the light of one's ideals, be they good or bad.
Third, youth is the period of the formation of ideals. We
grow morally to the extent to
which we actualize our ideals. In fact, moral value or one's
character is the degree to which one has turned his ideals into personal
reality.
Nothing is more important in youth than that the proper
heroes and heroines, who are the
embodiment of the highest ideals, are placed before our
young people.
Fourth, youth is the period of vision. The Bible declares,
"Your young men shall see
visions, and your old men shall dream dreams." Here is
the dividing line between youth and old age. Dreams are made up of past
experiences; visions are composed of future possibilities. Age looks backward;
youth looks forward. And it is not always a matter of biology. Some men of
seventy are young; they see bigger and better things ahead. Some men of twenty
are old; they lack vision.
Fifth, youth is a period of creative genius. In every field
of life, masterpieces are either
produced by young men or their foundation is laid in youth.
Great old men have usually been great young men.
Agassiz, the great naturalist, was a professor at Harvard at
twenty-five.
Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone at twenty-five.
Galileo discovered the law of the vibration of the pendulum
at eighteen, was a professor at twenty-five.
Joan of Arc led the armies of France
at eighteen.
William Jennings Bryan became a member of Congress at thirty-one.
Alexander had conquered the world at thirty-two.
Oliver Cromwell became a member of Parliament at
twenty-nine, Gladstone at
twenty-three, and Pitt at twenty-one.
He also became chancellor of the exchequer at twenty-three and prime minister
at twenty-five.
Abraham Lincoln entered the Illinois
legislature at twenty-five and Congress at thirty-eight.
Alexander Hamilton wrote the Constitution at thirty and
became Secretary of the Treasuryat thirty-two.
Napoleon was commander of the armies of Italy
at twenty-seven and emperor of France
at thirty.
Theodore Roosevelt was President at forty-three.
Isaac Newton, professor of mathematics at twenty-seven.
Robert Maynard Hutchins, dean of Yale
Law School
at twenty-five and president of the
University of Chicago at thirty.
Berkeley, the great idealist, wrote his principal work at
twenty-five.
William Cullen Bryant wrote "Thanatopsis" at
nineteen; Robert Burns, his first volume of
poems at twenty-seven; Lord Byron, at
nineteen; Charles Dickens, at twenty-four; Shakespeare, at twenty-nine; and
Tennyson, at eighteen.
Caruso was acclaimed at twenty-five, Galli Curci at twenty,
Fritz Kreisler at thirteen,
Paderewski at eighteen, Schumann-Heink at seventeen.
Raphael frescoed the walls of the Vatican
at twenty-five, and John Singer Sargent exhibited his masterpieces at
twenty-one.
John Calvin wrote his famous Institutes at twenty-seven,
Martin Luther became professor
of philosophy at twenty-five, and David Livingstone began
his career in Africa at twenty-seven.
Henry Dunster became president of Harvard at twenty-eight;
Elisha Williams, of Yale at
thirty-two.
Disraeli published "Vivian Grey" at twenty-two;
and Shelley, "Queen Mab" at twenty-one.
Macaulay, Carlyle, Scott, Webster, Bok, Westinghouse,
Burbank, Eastman, Ford, Edison,
Wright brothers, Woolworth, Rockefeller, Schwab, Heinz, and
Gilbert all did the work for which
they are remembered before they were thirty-five.
Youth is a time for preparation, for good habit formation,
for visions, and for creative
genius.
Don't squander it. Don't waste it.
Mold it.
Train it.
Cultivate it.
Use it.
James Allen said pertinently and pointedly: "You are
today where your thoughts have
brought you; you will be tomorrow where your thoughts take
you. You will become as small as your controlling desire; as great as your
dominant aspiration."
Give yourself to the best.
Give your best to Christ, the Ideal of the Ideals.
He said, "Come, follow Me, and I'll make you."
Use your youth so that your middle age can be useful and
your old age can be blissful.