“Lately I've felt like there is no point to living life. Everyone I talk
to says, ‘Well, that's just how life is.’ I understand it's going to be
difficult, but my question is, why bother? People also say, find what
makes me happy, but nothing makes me truly happy.”Let’s cut to the
chase: However you might currently be seeking them, we all want love,
peace, freedom, fulfillment and contentment in every moment. But that
doesn’t happen, does it? You work hard; the payoff is small. We desire
and seek these realities, but they are fleeting.
I spent many years seeking God. Actually, I was really seeking a life
of well-being through God. Among other things, I wanted to get
off the roller-coaster ride of all my misplaced dependencies and futile
attachments for worth, security and happiness, and be free from the
anguish this groping for fulfillment inevitably produced. It was more
than just wanting these nice blissful experiences tossed into my life
here and there to balance out the difficulties and disappointments of
human existence. I wanted these realities to be infused into my very
being—inhaling, exhaling and being love, being peace, being contentment
and being freedom.
My logic was that I could achieve these things through God, and more
specifically by being a “good Christian.” Didn’t work.
Go out and apply every formula for living a happy life: Become
wealthy, accomplish great success, be devoutly religious, achieve the
perfect body, save the rain forests, find Mr. or Mrs. Right, climb Mount
Everest, purchase a Yamaha R6, double your Facebook friends—whatever
floats your boat. Do it all! Doesn’t work. Won’t satisfy. It will never
produce the life you want.
The life not worth living is about seeking happiness out
there—in people, places and things. Even religion places God
somewhere out there (technically, up there) to be sought
through a system of rules, rituals, precepts, principles and practices.
As the emailer said, “Nothing makes me truly happy.” That’s a truth to
wake up to—nothing or no-thing outside yourself (as in stuff, people,
circumstances, religion) can make you truly happy. Happiness is
the temporary satisfaction of a felt need, and is dependent on all kinds
of conditions or circumstances.
Just as life circumstances can produce temporary bouts of happiness,
they can also produce experiences of pain. But there is a difference
between “pain” and “suffering.” Pain is a natural response to life
circumstances; suffering stems from depending upon these circumstances
as our source for well-being. For example, if you don’t get the record
deal, you will naturally be painfully disappointed because it’s
something you desired. However, if you are depending upon getting the
record deal as the source of your happiness in life, you will be utterly
devastated. See the difference?
The life of Jesus is the most compelling example. Few people will
ever endure the extent of physical pain inflicted upon Jesus or be so
utterly rejected and despised as Jesus. And yet Jesus was always at
peace. Why? Because the source of Jesus’ peace was not His human
circumstances but eternal reality. Until recently, I didn’t realize that
I could have this peace, too—and not only that, but it is within me and
has been within me all along.
Do you realize you have this peace within you, too?
When Jesus said that the peace He gives “is not as the world gives,”
He was seeking to awaken people to a whole other dimension of life,
which, by the way, is worth living. Life circumstances or bargaining
with God through religion or whatever won't work! Jesus laid out all the
essential truth by saying, “The Kingdom of God is within you.” Jesus
identified the only source for abundant or eternal life, the “Kingdom of
God,” and then showed us its location: “within.” His point is not that
eternal reality is like a magic ball floating somewhere inside our human
body. He’s saying that the frequency of eternal reality is an immaterial
and invisible energy or life that flows within us.
Can you be at peace in a room where nobody gives you the time of day?
Yes, because the source of peace is not whether people ignore or dismiss
you. The source of peace is on another frequency, which you can tune
into if you want to. You can choose to be at peace no matter the
circumstance, but it’s a choice you have to make for yourself. We each
have free will to participate in the present reality of God’s Kingdom.
You say, “It can’t be that simple.” But why should God, eternal
reality, truth and the life worth living that Jesus came to give be
complicated, difficult and only attainable by a few highly knowledgeable
and enlightened people?
The Bible says, “God is love.” Would Love make peace, contentment and
well-being a carrot for you to chase and never catch? Or, would Love
make peace, contentment and well-being available to you in every moment?
I chased the carrot for many years through theological knowledge,
ministry success, a daily regimen of spiritual disciplines, church
commitments and social activism. It’s not that any of these things were
wrong, or that they had no value, but what I was seeking to gain through
them was still searching for eternal reality on the wrong frequency. A
lot of people are trying to squeeze God into their current way of doing
life through religion. God wants you to experience another life
altogether.