When is the right time?

Rev Knox Jones

29.10.2022 | Mission in Ireland, Farming & Rural Life


In the early hours of tomorrow morning British Summer Time comes to an end as we move the clocks back an hour in that time honoured fashion. It is something the Rev Knox Jones points out that we have actually been doing for 108 years now, but it can still catch people out.  In his blog, he warns of being caught out in a different way, as time is short to turn in repentance to Christ ‘and risk losing out on a home in heaven...’

A man who faithfully attended his church was surprised by the absence of stewards in the foyer one Sunday. Nevertheless, coat removed, he stood joining in the singing of the opening hymn. As it ended he was just about to sit down when the minister pronounced the benediction. It was the last hymn! Then it suddenly hit him that this was the last weekend in October and he had forgotten to put his clocks back.

Tonight I hope you will remember to make the required adjustment and not get confused. If you are a dairy farmer you can be sure the milk tanker driver will have adjusted their time of collection for tomorrow morning!

Clocks may change, but the work on the farm continues

The UK began putting its clocks forward in 1916 as a wartime measure, and it has stayed with us – with two hours forward and one hour back (Double British Summer Time) between 1941 and 1945. The merits of moving clocks forward each spring and back in the autumn however, have been widely debated. For the farmer what is termed ‘outside work’ in the fields has finished and the changing of the clocks at the end of October usually coincides with a fair portion of the heavier stock being housed for the winter. The nature of the farmer’s work may change somewhat, but there is no let-up in the demands.

In the Bible we find many references to time. The opening verses of Ecclesiastes 3 are often quoted in happy and sad times. “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens...” it says. In many churches harvest thanksgiving services have just concluded, reminding us that God has appointed a time of harvest in the physical realm, and the spiritual too. In Jesus’ Parable of the Sower in Matthew 13, He makes it clear that a time is coming, the end of the age, which will bring judgement upon those who reject God.

Jesus is coming again

Today, we might well look at a world in turmoil and wonder how many more times will we carry out this time-honoured custom of resetting the clocks, before the present world comes to an end? The Bible informs us that this world will pass away with Jesus coming again, ushering in a new heaven and earth, yet ‘…about that day or hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father. Be on guard! Be alert! You do not know when that time will come’ (Mark 13 32-33.)

If you are a Christian, the fact you and I do not know the time of the return of Jesus should not concern us, but rather encourage us to serve Him while there is still the opportunity. However, we cannot serve Jesus before we first know Him as our personal Saviour. For me the most crucial reference to time in the Bible is found in 2 Corinthians 6:2. The Apostle Paul declares“…behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation” (KJV.)

It would be unwise to ignore the practice of putting the clocks back tonight, as you would be out of sync with everyone else. However, to put off turning in repentance to Christ is far more serious. You risk far more than a little inconvenience – you risk losing out on a home in heaven, reserved for those who know Jesus as Saviour, and friend. Clock’s ticking.


Having grown up in rural Tyrone, after leaving school at the age of 16, Knox worked for over 20 years on the family dairy farm near Aughnacloy. Having felt the call of God to full-time ministry, he was ordained in 2005 serving as minister of two Presbyterian congregations for 14 years.

In 2019 he was called to be minister of Aghadowey and Crossgar Presbyterian Churches in County Londonderry.

You can look at other blogs in this series here. If you would like to talk to someone about any of the issues raised in this article, please email Rev Kenny Hanna, PCI’s Rural Chaplain at ruralchaplain@presbyterianireland.org or call him on 07938 488 372.

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