Show me, LORD, my life’s end and the number of my
days; let me know how fleeting is my life. —
Psalm 39:4
What does the average lifespan look like?
In order to answer that question one individual turned to jellybeans —
28,835 of them. Each jellybean represents a day in the average life. In a video
that teaches us the value of every day, we are given a glimpse of what the
length of our lives may look like as represented in jellybeans.
Next, the video proceeds to take away jellybeans from the great pile
that is our lives. It explains where our days go
477 beans for sleeping;
1,635 beans for eating or drinking-related activities;
3,202 jellybeans for working.
1,099 jellybeans are spent in a car
2,676 are staring at a television
1,576 are designated for household chores.
The video continues until we are left with just under 3,000 jellybeans.
This is the time that we can use to do whatever we want — read, relax, check
Facebook, learn a new skill, help someone in need, and so on and so forth. By
this point, we can appreciate that there isn’t a whole lot of time left, but
substantial enough.
Next, the video asks us how we might spend that precious time if we only
had half of it left. What about half of that, or half of that? Finally, as only
one jellybean is left, we are asked, “what if you only had this day?”
This video is a powerful visual reminder that our days are numbered. If
there is something that we always wanted to do “one day,” we had better get
around to it today! Clarity comes from knowing just how limited our time on
earth really is, and from that understanding, comes strength and power.
In Psalm 39, King David recognized the valued of this knowledge. He
asked: “Show me, LORD, my life’s end and the number of my days; let me
know how fleeting is my life.” David recognized that by knowing how
little time he had left in life, he would be motivated to accomplish as much as
he possibly could.
Translated from the original Hebrew, we find one slight change in this
verse. It reads: “Show me …the measure of my days.” From this
word, and the fact that the word “days” was used as opposed to “years,” the
Sages explain that the length of our lives is not nearly as important as the
quality of our days. God gives us all a job to do here on earth. Our lives will
be judged not by how long we live, but by how much of our job we accomplish. In
getting the job done, each day counts.
So, what will you do with this day that the Lord has given to you?
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