like a day." (2 Peter 3:8) God deals with eternity, & therefore time is not an important factor with Him.
But time is important to us because we live in a limited time frame. We begin with infancy, then go on to
adolescence, adulthood, middle age, old age, & to everything that follows. We measure life in segments
of time.
B. Now, what makes something valuable ? Oftentimes it is scarcity. If there is a scarcity, then that
product quickly escalates in value.
So, if something is rare, it is usually valuable. But if we have a lot of it, it loses its value. Now, the same
is true with time.
APPL. Maybe that helps explain the generation gap. Young people feel that they have plenty of time,
therefore time loses its value, & they aren’t too concerned about wasting or squandering it.
On the other hand, as we get up in years a bit, we begin to realize that our time is becoming rare &
therefore more valuable.
So those of us over 60 tend to look at those under 20 & say, "Don’t squander time, because it’s
valuable." They reply, "No, it’s not. We have lots of time. So we can waste it any way we want."
And the wider the age gap, the wider the generation gap because of the different values that we place
on time.
C . The Bible often speaks of the brevity of life. It compares life to the weaver’s shuttle rapidly going
back & forth to the shadows of summer that quickly disappear to grass which grows up, dies, & then is
burned.
No wonder the Psalmist asks God, "What is man that you are mindful of him?" (Psalm 8:4)
ILL. Statisticians tell us that the average life span is now around 76 years. If you’re under 30 then you
think that is a long time. But if you’re nearing that age, you’re beginning to realize that’s not really very
long at all.
ILL. I ran across some interesting statistics a few years ago. Someone went to the trouble to research
what people do with their time, & came up with these results:
If we live to be 75, most of us will have spent 3 solid years, 24 hours a day, acquiring an education
grade school, high school & college.
We’ll have spent 7 years eating, 24 hours a day, some less, & some more, obviously. We’ll h ave spent
14 years, day & night, working. We’ll have spent 5 years riding in automobiles or airplanes.
We’ll have spent 5 years talking with each other again some more & some less. We’ll have spent 1 year
sick or recovering from sickness. And get this, we’ll have spent 24 years of our life sleeping!
We’ll have spent 3 years reading books, magazines & newspapers. And 12 years amusing ourselves
watching TV, going to the movies, fishing, etc.
That totals up to 75 years & that is what the researchers say, on the average, most of us will have done
with our lives.
APPL. As I looked at these statistics I began thinking. Let’s suppose that you spent every Sunday of your
life, for 75 years through infancy, childhood, adulthood, old age in God’s house worshiping during the
C hurch Service.
Now if you did that, how much time would you have spent worshiping God? Figure it out the answer is
less than 5 1/2 months.
But let’s double that, because you’ve always attended S.S. You’ve never missed Sunday School in all
your life. That makes it 11 months.
Think about that 5 years in an automobile & just 11 months in C hurch & S.S.! Twelve years amusing
ourselves in front of a TV, & just 11 months in C hurch & S.S. And that is just if you always attended S.S.
& C hurch, & never missed!