The Virtual Z Experience | March 29, 2026 | No Time to Waste | Be Holy | #SALTY2026
This powerful message centers on the urgency of our divine assignment and the critical distinction between chronos and kairos time. We're reminded that while chronos represents the ticking clock we all experience equally—24 hours for everyone—kairos represents those divine, opportune moments when God interrupts our ordinary existence with extraordinary purpose. The sermon draws from John 9, where Jesus encounters a man born blind and declares that we must work while it is day, for night is coming when no one can work. What makes this passage remarkable is that Jesus didn't just restore sight to someone who had lost it; He created sight in someone who had never seen. Using mud made from dirt and saliva, Jesus went back to the original creative elements God used to form humanity in Genesis. This wasn't restoration—it was transformation. The blind man's healing required obedience without understanding; he had to walk with mud in his eyes to a pool he couldn't see, trusting completely in words from someone whose face he'd never seen. His testimony afterward was beautifully simple: 'All I know is I once was blind, but now I can see.' We're challenged to examine what we're doing with our limited time on earth. Jesus accomplished world-changing ministry in just three years, yet we often waste our kairos moments on distractions and comfort. The call is clear: we don't have time to waste arguing theology while people remain spiritually blind around us. Our accountability, urgency, and activity must align with the assignment God has placed on our lives.
