MAN AND OPPORTUNITY

Make the Best Use of Life

PUBLIUS SYRUS was a Latin writer of the first century BC. The following sentence is attributed to him: “A good opportunity is seldom presented and is easily lost.” An observation that may well be taken out of the Roman context and universally applied. For it is a matter of common circumstance that chances to make progress in this world do not conveniently present themselves at every juncture. They are few and far between. But most people, unconvinced of how imperative it is to realize their special importance, fail to grasp them in time. Thus, golden opportunities are lost forever, and all that remains is regret at having so foolishly missed them.


Everyone in this world should behave as a morally responsible servant of God and everyone is given equal opportunities to do so. Yet, in the Hereafter, there will be some who will flounder on the question of missed opportunities.

The same is true of the Hereafter but on a scale barely appreciable by human beings. There are wholly different dimensions of eternal bliss or eternal damnation to be taken into consideration. Everyone, of course, has been given opportunities in the present world to act in the interest of his salvation in life after death. But these are opportunities that are very seldom realized. And then death— the great cut-off point—comes and puts an end to opportunities for all time.

After death, when man’s eyes are opened, he will receive a severe shock. He will find himself doomed to eternal regret at having squandered unparalleled opportunities, owing to his ignorance, foolishness, and lack of any sense of timeliness.

Everyone in this world should behave as a morally responsible servant of God and everyone is given equal opportunities to do so. Yet, in the Hereafter, there will be some who will flounder on the question of missed opportunities, while there will be others who will pass the divine test because of opportunities seized and turned to good advantage. It will be obvious on that Day which of God’s servants availed of opportunities to serve Him, and which of them did not.

This ultimate reckoning should make us examine our lives with greater earnestness. As we are sufficiently aware of the fact—considering that none of us are immortal—that we cannot go through life allowing one opportunity after another to slip through our fingers. We cannot surely expect to be offered unlimited chances for our salvation. And once death intervenes, looking for alternative possibilities beyond the grave becomes meaningless. There we are ineluctably faced with an eternity of success or an eternity of failure.