My second daughter was baptized in March of 2008. The pastor asked my wife and I to pick a scripture we wanted to read for the day. He said it didn’t have to relate to baptism and it could be more about Stella and our hopes for her life. It proved to be a bigger challenge than we expected. After much looking, thought and prayer, we were led to Psalm 90:12:
Teach us to number our days aright, that we may gain a heart of wisdom. ~ Psalm 90:12
It was an odd choice and I probably didn’t explain the reasoning to the congregation all that well. But I was also trying my best to not turn my daughter’s baptism into an impromptu mini-sermon. As I consider recent events and the road ahead, I want to share some of the reasons for having selected it:
Finding Hope in our Numbered Days
I know it is hard to think about, but our days on this earth are indeed numbered. Nobody really knows what tomorrow brings (or even if we will have tomorrow). However, we can and should look forward to them with optimism and hope. Along the way, today’s experiences – our joys, our sorrows and even the littlest of moments – quickly become lessons of yesterday as our lives progress.
Metaphorically, I like to picture them as pages of a book. We begin each day with a start fresh on a clean page. Just as our sins are wiped clean through Christ, every day is a new day.
And just as a book has chapters, so too do our lives. There are eras or great goodness and prosperity and there are times of massive struggle. Some of those chapters of our lives are shorter and some are longer – but they become part of our fabric as we live them.
They literally form who we are.

Grounded in Christ, no matter what we draft on our clean and fresh pages, we have the assurance we’re performing God’s will and developing books of great wisdom that are worth reading. Image credit: Nkzs via FreeImages.com.
In fact, every day, we write the book. Once it’s written, it’s there so we may go back and refer to it, remember it and reflect. You may have moments of your life that are underlined several times or written in bold print because the stay vivid in your mind. There may be times you want to erase or viciously scratch out with a red pen. But you cannot go back in time and change things.
Likewise, you can’t skip ahead to find out what’s coming.
The only moment you have any potential for controlling is now (psst. Click here to tweet that).
Finding Hope in Wisdom
And here is where a second part of this passage comes in — to have a “heart of wisdom” is to have Christ in your heart.
My daughters are going to carry out her lives. As a parent, I can hope to aim them in an upright direction. I can teach them right from wrong. I can be an example. But ultimately, they are going to write their own pages and chapters. They will live out their own lives.
The greatest hope I have for my children is not wealth, greatness or fame. It’s that latter part of the passage that I hope to see my children adopt into their lives. I pray that my wife and I – with the help of our family and church – can instill hearts of wisdom.
With that framework, no matter what they craft on their clean and fresh pages, I have the assurance that they are performing God’s will. As they write their books, I will gain the assurance they are developing books of great wisdom that are worth reading.
No agents, publishers, media representatives or distributors will be necessary.
If God sees fit, he’ll take care of any and all of that on His own.
What about you?
What about your greatest hopes for the remainder of 2015?
What about beyond that?What are your greatest hopes for your children? For yourself in life, career, passions, service to others, walk with Christ? I’d love to hear about it. Comment on this post or shoot me a message if you prefer I promise I will read it).
Note: This is a repost from late 2014. I thought it would be relevant for today, so I have edited and shared it again.
This is such a beautiful story, Chad. As a dad, I think I understand your reasoning for the verse. It’s amazing how quickly our kiddos grow up. I would always roll my eyes when I would hear someone say, “Children grow up so fast.” As a child, the journey to adulthood felt like an eternity.
As a parent, I am learning to value each and every day my kids are young. I’m learning to number my days, cherish every moment I have to build into the lives of my kiddos, and to enjoy them as kids. I’m right there with you. My hope and prayers are that my children experience life with a heart of wisdom.
“The only moment you have any potential for controlling is now”
I keep coming back to this same comment over the last couple days but I was reading Matthew 6:34, “Therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble.” (ESV).
Verse has been on my heart the last couple days. I think there is a special kind of balance in planning for the future and worrying about tomorrow. God will provide for us and if you read the Scripture leading up to Matthew 6:34 you find that it puts much into perspective.
I do realize that what I visualize for my life may not be in line with God’s plan. Sometimes he redirects us like he has for me many times. If it was up to me I’d be catching for the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series right now. Unfortunately I didn’t make the team this year and the Cardinals were removed from the playoffs. Though he is providing for me by allowing me to work with young men and umpiring high school and travel baseball. Which fills me up with joy to work with young men and be on the field of a game I love.
All being said, Chad you have given me some things to think about. We have yet to set a date for my 10 week old son’s Baptism. Which we will be doing here shortly.
Thanks Kirby. I can’t believe the Cards did come calling for you after Molina went down. Ah well, I am sure God has bigger and better things in store. 🙂
Thanks Kirby. Can’t believe the Cards didn’t come calling for you when Molina when down at the end of the season! Ah well. I am sure God has bigger and better things in store for you!
I hear ya. Watching my kids grow up has been a blessing and a joy – though it has also reminded me how often of how many moments we miss because we don’t truly appreciate them when they happen.
Hi Chad,
Thanks for pointing me to this post. I like how the book metaphor gives us a model of how to live one day at a time, and with each day we add to our story.
On a similar line of thinking I wrote a post last year titled “Why Your Life Story Has Enormous Power.” The gist of the post is that we each play a role in God’s story. Sharing it here: http://www.jonbeaty.com/why-your-life-story-has-enormous-power/
Thanks again!