Today

Re:Verse passage – Ephesians 5:15–17 (day six)

When Paul writes in Ephesians, “Make the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil,” he is not saying that the day itself is morally bad. He is not condemning time, work, or ordinary life. Rather, Paul is naming a reality we all feel: our days are filled with forces that quietly resist God’s purposes.

In Scripture, “evil” often describes not just overt wickedness, but a shaping pressure. Genesis 6:5 says that “every inclination of the thoughts of the human heart was only evil all the day.” The problem wasn’t that time itself was corrupt, but that the day had become crowded with thoughts, desires, and patterns pulling humanity away from God.

Paul is getting at something similar. The days are “evil” because they are full of distractions that dull our attentiveness, forces that slowly deform our loves, and currents that pull us away from God’s will and the life of His Kingdom. Left unattended, our days do not remain neutral.

That’s why Paul urges us to live wisely. His exhortation is not anxious or frantic, but intentional: fill your day with what is good before something else fills it for you. Live awake. Live sober. Live responsive to God today.


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Author: Danny Panter

Danny is the Associate Pastor for NextGen Marrieds & Community Missions at FBCSA.

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