The paradox of our time in history is that we have taller buildings,
but shorter tempers;
We buy more,
but enjoy it less;
We have bigger houses,
and smaller families;
More conveniences,
but less time;
We have more degrees,
but less sense;
More knowledge,
but less judgment;
We drink too much,
smoke too much,
spend too recklessly,
laugh too little,
drive too fast,
get too angry too quickly,
stay up too late,
get up too tired,
read too little,
watch TV too much,
and pray too seldom;
We have multiplied our possessions,
but reduced our values;
We talk too much,
love too seldom,
and hate too often;
We've learned how to make a living,
but not a life;
We've added years to life,
not life to years;
We've been all the way to the moon and back,
but have trouble crossing the street to meet the new neighbor;
We've cleaned up the air,
but polluted the soul;
We plan more,
but accomplish less;
We have higher incomes,
but lower morals;
We've become long on quantity,
but short on quality;
These are the times of fast foods
and slow digestion;
More leisure,
but less fun;
More kinds of food,
but less nutrition;
These are days of two incomes,
but more divorce;
Of fancier houses,
but broken homes;
These are days of quick trips,
disposable diapers,
throw away morality,
one-night stands,
overweight bodies,
and pills that do everything from cheer
to quiet, to kill;
We are called to make many choices,
that affect many people
and we live with the consequences.
Let our choices be the type that lift up God
and bring glory to His name.