As the old year dissolves into the new, I am drawn to the
revolving cycle of life, the hatch, match and dispatch process that all nature
seems bent on. Watching the magnificent BBC series Planet Earth I am struck by the incessant and urgent quest for food,
reproduction, and safeguarding the young.
All
nature, including human nature, lays primary stress on these clearly important
issues—the fight for survival—not just personal, but for each species; the all
important reproduction of the next generation.
Given the importance of the continuation of life on the planet,
I am led to ask: what’s the point? I am sure you have too. Is all this frenzy
just to ensure the next generation? And is that coming generation simply there
to ensure the next?
This begs the question, Why is this important? Which leads
me to another question: Why do we even consider this? It appears only humans
have this dilemma on their minds; dogs and cats and the remaining animal world
seem content with just staying alive, eating and reproducing.
One answer, often given, is that our life here is to ensure we
leave the world a better place than when we came. Certainly, to alleviate
suffering and improve living conditions is a laudable cause. But this simply
means we continue human survival in greater comfort; the question of purpose remains
unanswered.
Reading Genesis 1 on January 1 this year is probably
what half of Christendom does to light the way into the New Year. God created
the heavens and the earth and it was formless, empty and dark. And until we
come to grips with some meaning to all this survival frenzy, our minds remain
the same!
Before order was created out of the chaos, God created light—necessary
for functioning of the world yet to appear. It seems logical that we need some transcendent
light in our souls if we are to find meaning for the life we’ve been given.
Jesus Christ came into the world. His life was the light of
men shining into our darkness. But the darkness mostly seems to reject it. If
we are to have any light on the meaning of life, the only starting place is the
light God brings us by his earthly appearance in Christ
“I said to the man who stood at the Gate of the Year,
‘Give me a light that I may tread safely into the unknown.’
And he replied, ‘Go out into the darkness, and put your hand into the hand of God.’”
Minnie Louise Haskins, 1908
What better way to find meaning in
2013?
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