What is the meaning of life? How can purpose, fulfillment,
and satisfaction in life be found? How can something of lasting significance be
achieved? Many people have never stopped to consider these important questions.
They look back years later and wonder why their relationships have fallen apart
and why they feel so empty, even though they may have achieved what they set
out to accomplish. An athlete who had reached the pinnacle of his sport was
once asked what he wished someone would have told him when he first started
playing his sport. He replied, “I wish that someone would have told me that
when you reach the top, there’s nothing there.” Many goals reveal their
emptiness only after years have been wasted in their pursuit.
In our humanistic culture, people lose sight of the meaning
of life. They pursue many things, thinking that in them they will find meaning
and purpose. Some of these pursuits include business success, wealth, good
relationships, sex, entertainment, and doing good to others. People have
testified that, while they achieved their goals of wealth, relationships, and
pleasure, there was still a deep void inside, a feeling of emptiness that
nothing seemed to fill.
The author of the book of Ecclesiastes looked for the
meaning of life in many vain pursuits. He describes the feeling of emptiness he
felt: “Meaningless! Meaningless! . . . Utterly meaningless! Everything is
meaningless” (Ecclesiastes 1:2). King Solomon, the writer of Ecclesiastes, had
wealth beyond measure, wisdom beyond any man of his time or ours, hundreds of
women, palaces and gardens that were the envy of kingdoms, the best food and
wine, and every form of entertainment available. He said at one point that
anything his heart wanted, he pursued (Ecclesiastes 2:10). And yet he summed up
life “under the sun”—life lived as though all there is to life is what we can
see with our eyes and experience with our senses—is meaningless. What explains
this void? God created us for something beyond what we can experience in the
here-and-now. Solomon said of God, “He has also set eternity in the hearts of
men” (Ecclesiastes 3:11). In our hearts we are aware that the “here-and-now” is
not all that there is.
In the book of Genesis, we find a clue to the meaning of
life in the fact that God created mankind in His image (Genesis 1:26). This
means that we are more like God than we are like anything else. We also find
that, before mankind fell and the curse of sin came upon the earth, the
following things were true: 1) God made man a social creature (Genesis
2:18–25); 2) God gave man work (Genesis 2:15); 3) God had fellowship with man
(Genesis 3:8); and 4) God gave man dominion over the earth (Genesis 1:26).
These facts have significance related to the meaning of life. God intended
mankind to have fulfillment in life, but our condition (especially touching our
fellowship with God) was adversely affected by the fall into sin and the
resulting curse upon the earth (Genesis 3).
The book of Revelation shows that God is concerned with
restoring the meaning of life to us. God reveals that He will destroy this
present creation and create a new heaven and a new earth. At that time, He will
restore full fellowship with redeemed mankind, while the unredeemed will have
been judged unworthy and cast into the lake of fire (Revelation 20:11–15). The
curse of sin will be done away with; there will be no more sin, sorrow,
sickness, death, or pain (Revelation 21:4). God will dwell with mankind, and
they shall be His children (Revelation 21:7). Thus, we come full circle: God
created us to have fellowship with Him; man sinned, breaking that fellowship;
God restores that fellowship fully in the eternal state.
To go through life achieving everything we set out to
achieve only to die separated from God for eternity would be worse than futile!
But God has made a way to not only make eternal bliss possible (Luke 23:43) but
also life on earth satisfying and meaningful. How is this eternal bliss and
“heaven on earth” obtained?
The meaning of life
restored through Jesus Christ
The real meaning of life, both now and in eternity, is found
in the restoration of our relationship with God. This restoration is only
possible through God’s Son, Jesus Christ, who reconciles us to God (Romans
5:10; Acts 4:12; John 1:12; 14:6). Salvation and eternal life are gained when
we trust in Jesus Christ as Savior. Once that salvation is received by grace
through faith, Christ makes us new creations, and we begin the progressive
journey of growing closer to Him and learning to rely on Him.
God wants us to know the meaning of life. Jesus said, “I
have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10). A
“full” life is logically one that is meaningful and devoid of aimless
wandering.
The meaning of life is wrapped up in the glory of God. In
calling His elect, God says, “Bring all who claim me as their God, for I have
made them for my glory. It was I who created them” (Isaiah 43:7, ESV). The
reason we were made is for God’s glory. Any time we substitute our own glory
for God’s; we miss the meaning of life. “If anyone would come after me, he must
deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever wants to save his
life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will find it” (Matthew
16:24–25). “Delight yourself in the LORD and he will give you the desires of
your heart” (Psalm 37:4).
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