There's much more meaning in life once you know your purpose.
Consider a hammer. It's designed to hit nails. That's
what it was created to do. Now imagine that the hammer never gets used. It just
sits in the toolbox. The hammer doesn't care.
But now imagine that same hammer with a soul, a
self-consciousness. Days and days go by with him remaining in the toolbox. He
feels funny inside, but he's not sure exactly why. Something is missing, but he
doesn't know what it is.
Then one day someone pulls him out of the toolbox and
uses him to break some branches for the fireplace. The hammer is exhilarated.
Being held, being wielded, hitting the branches -- the hammer loves it. At the
end of the day, though, he is still unfulfilled. Hitting the branches was fun,
but it wasn't enough. Something is still missing.
In the days that follow, he's used often. He reshapes
a hubcap, blasts through some sheet rock, knocks a table leg back into place.
Still, he's left unfulfilled. So he longs for more action. He wants to be used
as much as possible to knock things around, to break things, to blast things,
to dent things. He figures that he just hasn't had enough of these events to
satisfy him. More of the same, he believes, is the solution to his lack of
fulfillment.
purpose in life, meaning in life Then one day someone
uses him on a nail. Suddenly, the lights come on in his hammer soul. He now
understands what he was truly designed for. He was meant to hit nails. All the
other things he hit pale in comparison. Now he knows what his hammer soul was
searching for all along.
We are created in God's image for relationship with
him. Being in that relationship is the only thing that will ultimately satisfy
our souls. Until we come to know God, we've had many wonderful experiences, but
we haven't hit a nail. We've been used for some noble purposes, but not the one
we were ultimately designed for, not the one through which we will find the
most fulfillment. Augustine summarized it this way: "You [God] have made
us for yourself and our hearts are restless until they find their rest in
Thee."
A relationship with God is the only thing that will
quench our soul's longing. Jesus Christ said, "I am the bread of life. He
who comes to me will never go hungry, and he who believes in me will never be
thirsty." Until we come to know God, we are hungry and thirsty in life. We
try to "eat" and "drink" all kinds of things to satisfy our
hunger and thirst, but yet they remain.
We are like the hammer. We don't realize what will end
the emptiness, the lack of fulfillment, in our lives. Even in the midst of a Nazi
prison camp, Corri Ten Boom found God to be wholly satisfying: "The
foundation of our happiness was that we knew ourselves hidden with Christ in
God. We could have faith in God's love...our Rock who is stronger than the
deepest darkness."
Usually when we keep God out, we try to find
fulfillment in something other than God, but we can never get enough of that
thing. We keep "eating" or "drinking" more and more,
erroneously thinking that 'more' is the answer to the problem, yet we are never
ultimately satisfied.
Our greatest desire is to know God, to have a
relationship with God. Why? Because that's how we've been designed. Have you
hit a nail yet?
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