Life is Short
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My dear  brother,
  Life has been compared to the flight of swift ships, and also to an eagle hastening  to the prey. It is a moment, a hand's breadth, a dream. This is the account  which the Scriptures give of human life, and if you will consider it, you will  see much in it to make you alter your present course of conduct. When a youth  looks forward, he almost always thinks of long life. He thinks somewhat in this  way—"I am now thirteen, or fifteen, or seventeen years old, (as the case  may be). In so many years more I shall be of age. Then I shall be my own  master. I will do so and so; I will try such and such schemes; I shall be  happy."
  Mistaken  boy! How different from this does life seem to the old man! He looks back, and  says to himself—"It was but the other day that I was a boy. I was then  full of hope. Life seemed a long and flowery path. I have mistaken it. It is a  short journey, through a valley of tears."
  From  this, we all learn to say with Moses  in the ninetieth psalm—"So teach us to number our days, that we may apply  our hearts unto wisdom.'
  Is life  short? Then, my dear brother, whatever you have to do in life—ought to be done  soon. You ought to begin at once. If you were put to a hard task, and an  hour-glass were put by you, and you were told, "This sand runs out exactly  in an hour, and at the end of the hour I will come to see whether you have done  your task,"—how anxious would you be not to lose a moment! Just as anxious  should you now be to make a good use of your time. If the whole of life is but  a span, then the little portions of it—which we call childhood, youth, middle  age, old age—are short indeed. The little portion of youth will soon be over;  yet in this very season you are laying a foundation for all the rest of your  days. If the young twig grows crooked, the full grown bough will have  the same direction fixed. Think of this.
  Youth is  the gathering time. You must now be busy in laying up useful knowledge for time  to come. Youth is the seed-time. If the farmer lets the time of sowing pass by,  he will have no harvest in summer, and must starve. If you do not fix in your  mind the seeds of truth and wisdom now, you will be ignorant and foolish when  you grow to be a man, if you ever do become a man. For you must never forget  that multitudes never reach manhood.
  Everything  you do, however trifling it may seem, has its bearing upon your future life.  You will reap as you sow, and every moment you are sowing some good or some  evil. It seems to you no great matter to trifle away an afternoon; but you are  thereby getting a habit of idleness—you are losing just so much of your  life—you are letting just so much sand run down without attending to your  assigned task.
  The great  thing for which you were made is, to please God, and to enjoy his love. Life is  short; therefore, do not put off the service of God until tomorrow. If life is  so short, you ought to give God the whole of it. Surely, you will not rob him  of the spring of your days—the very best part of them. He has as much right to  this day as to the morrow; he demands your youth as well as your old age.  Follow the example of our adorable Redeemer, who said, "I must work the  works of him who sent me while it is day; the night comes when no man can  work." This is what few boys think much of; but those who do are wiser and  happier when they become older; and none enjoy life so much as those who have early  given their affections to Jesus Christ the Lord.
Your affectionate brother, 
James
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