There’s something irresistible about a new year. The fireworks fade and the diet starts again. We stare at the clean page of a brand-new calendar, full of empty squares and endless possibility. Time is one of life’s great mysteries. We can’t see it, touch it, stop it or store it. We can only spend it and, once it’s gone, there’s no refund policy!

If life were a notebook, every year would be a page. Some are colourful, some are coffee-stained, and some we’d rather tear out entirely. Yet each January God hands us a fresh page and whispers, ‘You can’t rewrite the old one but, with my help, you can start a new one.’

Let’s turn that page together and reflect on three tenses of time: the past, the present and the future.

1. The Past – Forgiven, Not Forgotten

By the time December rolls around, the page of the past year can look rather messy with scribbles, scrawls and the occasional ‘what was I thinking?’ doodle. Many love the idea of tearing it out, scrunching it up and tossing it in the bin marked ‘Good Riddance’.

But the past has a habit of resurfacing. We can’t simply delete it like an old email. Time may be a healer, but it’s not a miracle worker. Wounds unhealed by grace tend to reopen. The only way to deal with the past is not to bury it, but to bring it to the cross of Christ.

At the cross, Jesus offers the one gift that truly wipes the slate clean: forgiveness. As the psalmist said, ‘He has removed our sins as far from us as the east is from the west’ (Psalm 103:12 NLT). That’s not amnesia, that’s redemption.

We can’t rewrite the past, but Christ can redeem it.

2. The Present – The Gift of Now

Have you noticed that each year seems to speed up? It’s like shrinkflation in time – the year looks the same size, but somehow it contains less! Were there really 365 days in 2025?

Someone once said, ‘The bad news is time flies. The good news is you’re the pilot.’ True, but as Christians we know we’re not flying solo. God has given us the present moment as a sacred gift – that’s why it’s called the present.

Job once said to God, ‘You have decided the length of our lives. You know how many months we will live, and we are not given a minute longer’ (Job 14:5 NLT). Our days are numbered but our decisions can make those days count.

We can’t add more time to our life, but we can add more life to our time.

Don’t just count the days – make the days count. Time, like money or talent, is meant to be invested wisely. So before we rush into the year ahead with our to-do lists and travel plans, pause long enough to thank God for the miracle of today. After all, it’s the only day we’ve actually got!

3. The Future – A Blank Page with God’s Pen

Every January, gyms are crowded and diaries are hopeful. We love the idea of a fresh start but by mid-February we are wilting – and so is our motivation.

New Year’s resolutions often evaporate faster than leftover champagne. Why? Because determination can only take us so far. Real transformation comes through divine renovation. Left to itself, the future is like a wonky supermarket trolley: it never goes in a straight line! We need someone stronger than willpower to steer us. That’s why Paul could write, ‘Anyone who belongs to Christ has become a new person. The old life is gone; a new life has begun!’ (2 Corinthians 5:17 NLT).

The best resolution we’ll ever make isn’t to try harder but to walk closer – closer to Jesus, the Good Shepherd who leads us safely into every new season.

New Year’s resolutions may fade, but a daily relationship with Jesus never expires.

A Closing Thought

So as we turn the page into a new year let’s . . .

  • look back and give the past to God for forgiveness and healing,
  • look around and live the present for God’s glory and others’ good,
  • look ahead and trust the future to God for guidance and hope.

Calendars may change, but Christ doesn’t. He’s the same yesterday, today and forever, and he promises not just a new year, but a new you.

A New Year Prayer

Lord, thank you for the gift of time; for the days behind me and the days ahead. Heal the hurts of my past, fill the moments of my present, and guide me into the future with faith and joy.

Teach me to number my days that I may gain a heart of wisdom. And as I turn the page into a new year, help me to write it with grace, gratitude and goodness, with you at the centre of every line.

In Jesus’ name. Amen.

J.John