EXPLORING CHRISTIANITY - PURPOSE

THE BIBLE
Can we trust a book written 2000 years ago?

EYEWITNESS
Did the writers of the New Testament get their picture of Jesus right?

GOD - MAN
Is Jesus really God?

RESURRECTION
Did Jesus really rise from the dead?

RELIGIONS
With so many religions, why Christianity?

SUFFERING
If there is a God, why is there so much suffering?

TRINITY
Understanding the Trinity.

SCIENCE
The complementary nature of Science & Christianity.

FORGIVENESS
What it is and why it matters?

GUIDANCE
How does God guide?

REPENTANCE
What it is and why you can't get to heaven without it.

BORN AGAIN
What does it mean to be converted and born again?

SAVING FAITH
The kind of faith that will get you to heaven

ASSURANCE
Can I know for sure that I am going to heaven?

TRUTH
What is truth and does it matter?

MORALITY
Does it matter how we live? A Christian view of morality.

THE CHURCH
God's vision for his family, the Church. A call to the churches of the new millennium.

PURPOSE
How can I find a great purpose for living?

IDENTITY
Who am I; Finding my true identity as a human being and as a child of God.

SELF-ESTEEM
How can I feel good about my self? The Christian basis for proper sel-esteem.

LIFE AFTER DEATHChristianity's Hope & Challenge.

THE CROSS
Why did Jesus Die? What the Bible says about the Cross.

Grace
The importance of grace in the New Testament.

 

Life with no meaning

Of course, if you deny that there is any creative intelligence behind this universe, that created it for some meaningful purpose, you may decide that life cannot have any meaning anyway, except for what we choose to give it in our own little world. Many settle for this option. A leading modern painter, Francis Bacon, said:

"Man now realises that he is an accident, a completely futile thing, that he has to play out the game without reason"
Francis Bacon

Life itself is a tragic thing. We watch ourselves from the cradle, performing into decay. Man now realises that he is an accident, a completely futile thing, that he has to play out the game without reason...Man can now only attempt to beguile himself for a time by prolonging his life—by buying a kind of immortality through the doctors...The artist must really deepen the game to be any good at all, so that he can make life a bit more exciting.

Jean-Paul Sarte, in his book Being and Nothingness, summarised the thoughts of many leading existential thinkers like this: "Man is a useless passion. It is meaningless that we live and it is meaningless that we die." Douglas Adams wrote four science fiction novels, the first being The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. They tell the story of four time travellers who hitchhike across the universe from the Big Bang to its destruction. They build a giant computer designed to answer "The Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe and Everything." The answers it comes up with are meaningless.

"Man is a useless passion. It is meaningless that we live and it is meaningless that we die" Colin Wilson

Ultimately, if you rule out any intelligent and creative mind behind this amazing universe, you are left with no alternative. Peter Kreeft, in his very thoughtful book Making Sense Out of Suffering, sums up the two options we face very well. He writes:

Make this issue simple and concrete. Look at anything. I'm looking now at a late spring snowstorm. A surprise, a gift. Is there a giver? Is it part of anybody's plan? Is it - ultimately, finally, in the long run - really meaningfully, a part of the plot of our life's story, part of a gift or task or a work? Is anybody there? Is the whole world, including every snowstorm and every star and every headache and every bug and every death and every cancer - is it all between God the storyteller and ourselves, so that this material universe is only the stage setting of the story? Or is the universe a meaningless darkness in which we desperately erect little artificial theatres, light them up with little artificial lights (our reasons), and put on little artificial plays (our lives), whose sole meanings are assigned by their sole authors (ourselves)? The really ultimate question, much more important than the scientific question, is: Who's there? That's why myth is more important than science. Myth is an answer, though an unsatisfactory one, to the deeper question, Who's there? Science only answers the question, How does it work? Or at the most, What's there? Science asks what and how, philosophy asks why, myth and religion ask who. Who's in charge here? Who's the author? That's what we really long to know.

 

 

Foreword

How can I find a great purpose for living?

Life with no meaning

Purposes that are too small

A purpose that fits with reality

A purpose that satisfies the deepest longing of the heart

A purpose that enables us to face life's greatest difficulties

A purpose with lasting consequences

A purpose that involves a choice

Conclusion

 



Home

Copyright

About the Author

E-mail

Links

 

This article is not available
as a printed booklet.
BUY RESOURCE MATERIAL

 


Site design by ttdesign.com