Posts tagged The New Year
“Jesus — The Lord of History” Some Thoughts in Anticipation of the New Year (Ephesians 1:3-14)

The New Year — A Time of New Beginnings?

In the minds of many Americans, New Year’s Day is an occasion for parades and college football—until NIL and CFP ruined the latter. But the first day of the New Year is also a time of new beginnings. It is the first day of 2026 after all. As we enter a new year, it is customary to look back and reflect upon all the significant events of the past year. Various media outlets have spent much of the past week recounting the names and faces of those influential figures and celebrities who died in 2025. Christians lost a number of faithful saints as well. I am always amazed at how many of these people are already largely forgotten within a year of their death. It is a stark reminder that life is fleeting—we are but vapors after all (cf. James 4:14). The calendar keeps rolling on.

And then there are the poignant reminders of significant events of the past year including a host of human tragedies, natural disasters, and significant geopolitical events–including wars, and rumors of wars. But looking back is not all we associate with the new year. As is the custom, we are challenged to make a series of New Year’s resolutions about what we will do better next year or not do, as the case may be. Such resolutions too are but vapors which do not last. Nevertheless, this combination of things makes New Year’s a great time to consider the events of the recent past, as well as the nature of our hope for the future. In fact, this has been the historic practice of Reformed churches. Article 37 of the URCNA Church Order lists New Year’s Day (along with New Year’s Eve, Christmas, Good Friday, Easter, Pentecost, and Ascension Day) as occasions when the consistory may call the congregation together for worship.

Too Many Think Like Henry Ford

As with most things, the Christian take on the events of the past and our expectations for the future stands in sharp contrast to that of non-Christians around us. One place where the contrast between Christian and non-Christian thinking is most striking is in how we as Christians view the importance of history. Most Americans, I think, would agree with Henry Ford (the founder of the automotive company which still bears his name) who is widely quoted to have said, “history is more or less bunk. It’s tradition. We don’t want tradition. We want to live in the present and the only history that is worth a tinker’s ____ is the history we make today.”

If Ford is right, then the past is unimportant and irrelevant. What is important is the present, the here and the now. As a very pragmatic man and quintessential American, this makes perfect sense coming from someone like Henry Ford. Although he died in 1947, Ford’s sentiments still reflect the thinking of many of our contemporaries. This glib dismissal of everything which has gone before helps to explain why many Americans have little regard for tradition and institutions, why everything in this culture must be new and improved, and why so much of American life caters to those who demand instant gratification.

This is surely one reasons why so many of our contemporaries want little to do with serious thought or careful reflection. This anti-historical sentiment is reflected throughout American evangelicalism as well. People who think like Henry Ford will be much more interested in the local mega church with its garage band worship and all the bells and whistles than they will in a confessional Reformed or Presbyterian church. And from the usual comparative size of the these two types of congregations, it is obvious that very many of our contemporaries think like Henry Ford.

History Has No Goal or Purpose? Really?

This thoroughly pragmatic and utilitarian view of the world–all that matters is what works or what is useful–is also apparent when Ford reportedly defined history as “the succession of one ____ thing after another.” History has no goal or purpose. All that matters is the present. But this is where we as Reformed Christians must disagree. Why? Because Christianity is a religion necessarily grounded in history. We base everything we believe about the here and now in light of several very specific things which occurred in the past. As Christians, we see the present as but part of the larger story of redemption. We don’t believe that history is bunk, or the mere succession of one random thing after another. We believe history to be the outworking in time and space of God’s eternal decree–his eternal plan for the ages. Whatever happens in human history is part of God’s purpose, no matter how difficult this is to see in the midst of trial and tribulation.

Therefore, it is vital that we grasp the notion that history is the outworking of the will of God in our world because this is what gives everything that happens—good or bad—meaning and purpose. The events we recall from the past year are not simply random or disconnected events, one after the other. Rather, in these things we witness God working all things according to his will and purpose. He will bring all things to their divinely appointed ends—the telos. This is why “right now counts forever” as one famous Reformed thinker (R. C. Sproul) liked to remind us.

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