Trading Up

May 9th, 2010 — 4:04pm

I’ve been thinking over Jesus’ story of the shrewd manager in Luke chapter 16, and talking to friends about it. I think that story means something worth sharing:

The most basic resources we have are time and energy. These are the cards we hold in our hand at the beginning of the game. Life is a constant barrage of opportunities and choices about what we will trade our time and energy for. We can work an hourly job, trading for money. We can spend our time and energy talking to someone, trading for relationship. Very often we trade money for many other things we need and want.

Most of us will have over 600,000 hours of time and energy in our lives. We will choose to trade every one of them for something. And what we receive for those trades, (money, possessions, knowledge, etc.) we can go on to trade again for something else. We are all constant traders on the giant eBay of life.

One of life’s great, redemptive realities is the universal opportunity and freedom to trade what we have for what we value more. We are not confined to merely trading money for money, or stuff for stuff. We have the opportunity to trade up. We can trade for smiles, for learning, for friendship, for love, for worship, for things of greater and longer-lasting value than the time or money it cost us. Given the compounding effect of day after day of trading up, what an incredible and powerful opportunity a lifetime of trades is.

Last night my wife and I had a wonderful dinner at a great restaurant with new friends. We traded time and money for the treasures of conversation and relationship.

Each month I spend three days, tuition, and travel to attend a leadership coaching program, trading for the treasure of personal character growth.

Too often I trade my time and money for things of little to no value at all.

So what do you value more than the time, energy, and money you currently have available to trade? What will you trade for today? At the end of your life, after all your trades are done, what will you have transformed your lifetime of time and energy into? What do you want to be holding in your hand at the end?