Use It or Lose It
"Through love serve one  another."1
I have read how "the  Roman Aqueduct at Segovia, Spain was built in A.D.109. For eighteen hundred years it carried cool water from the mountains  to the hot and thirsty city. Nearly sixty generations of men drank from its  flow. Then came another generation, a recent one, who said, 'This aqueduct is  so great a marvel that it ought to be preserved for our children as a museum  piece. We shall relieve it of its centuries-long labor.' They did and they  ruined it. They laid modern iron pipes to carry the water. They gave the  ancient bricks and mortar a rest. And the aqueduct began to fall apart. The sun  beating on the dry mortar caused it to crumble. The bricks and stone sagged and  threatened to fall."2
      
    The same principle applies to one's personal and family life, to his business,  and/or to his or her church. When the Roman Aqueduct stopped serving others, it  slowly fell apart. When a business or a church stops serving others, it too  begins to fall apart. When family members ignore family responsibilities, the  family rapidly falls apart. And as individuals when we stop using our God-given  gifts—both natural and spiritual gifts—and fail to fulfill our God-given life  purpose, little by little, what we once had in golden opportunities to serve we  lose.
  
    It's an old adage but there's a lot of truth in it: If you don't use it, you  will lose it!
  
    Suggested prayer: "Dear God, please help me to use the gifts and talents  you have given me to serve you by serving others in the endless opportunities  you give me every day. Grant that when I come to the end of life's journey I  won't be among those who have nothing but 'dry bricks' to offer you. Thank you  for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus' name, amen." 
  
    1. Galatians 5:13 (NKJV).
    2. Cited on KneEmail #774, http://www.forthright.net/kneemail/ 
    
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All articles on this website are written by 
            Richard (Dick) Innes unless otherwise stated.