If life has no meaning beyond the present, beyond what one can consume, amass, and feel physically, no matter how much time one devotes to the fleeting pleasures of this world, hoping they will suffice as a substitute for the hollowness within, then we should all be equally miserable, despondent, and unhinged from reality. If there is no hope beyond the now and no meaning to life other than to glut ourselves and drown ourselves in wine, then nothing would matter enough to animate us in any fashion or bring us any semblance of joy. It’s why I believe atheists to be the most pitiable, saddest people walking the earth, because to them, this is all there is, and it’s not that grand, and when it’s over, lights out, you’re done, adios and arrivederci. Make sure you have enough in your bank account to cover cremation, and hope some distant relative will take time out of their busy day to spread your ashes somewhere other than the drain.
I get it; if all someone’s got to show for a lived life is a
handful of STDs, a once shiny, now rusty convertible, and that one story about
when they think they ate blowfish in Japan but suspect it was tuna, the regret
they feel is justified. What isn’t justified is their insistence that their
life is as good as it gets rather than being the vapid thing it was. It may be
the only way they have of coping with their reality, but I don’t have to be
party to it. Sorry, Sparky, your life story isn’t aspirational; it’s a
cautionary tale. You wasted the life you were gifted pursuing things that left
you just as empty after acquiring them as before, and now the end is near, and
you’re starting to rethink all the snarky things you said and the mockery you
heaped upon those who tried to tell you about a Savior that forgives and
restores. Who needs Jesus when you’ve got Jim Beam? Remember that one? You came
up with that zinger it all by yourself.
The truth is that people have tried to drown out the still,
small voice whispering memento mori, mute it, or smother it with every sin and
vice under the sun, but eventually, they lose their appeal and their ability to
distract from the ever-present reality of the individual’s mortality. Save for
the Lord returning, one day I will die, as will you, and each of us will have
to contend with the eternity that follows.
Some have come to terms with their eventual demise. Even so,
they try to convince others of their happiness by insisting that they should
eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow they will die, not realizing that at
some point, there will be no tomorrow and that judgment awaits beyond the veil.
If money were a valid substitute for meaning and purpose, then no rich people
would have a double portion of buckshot for lunch, ever. Yet, they do. Either
that, or they leap from bridges and buildings, walk into traffic, take a
fistful of pills, hoping it’s the last thing they’ll do, and the list goes on
because we grow ever more inventive regarding the means of our own destruction.
While some struggle to survive and claw at the dirt in the hope they don’t starve,
others who’ve made money their defacto god and surrogate purpose in life can’t
wait to leave it all behind and be done with it.
If the things the grinning faces on television telling you
will make you happy really did, why are they all so miserable? If there is
genuine contentment in fame or fortune, why are they constantly in rehab, on
suicide watch, or descending into such debauchery or hedonism as to make a
Roman senator during the peak of the empire blush? That fake, plastic smile
does nothing to take away from their dead eyes, and you can tell without really
trying that the depth of their misery knows no bounds.
It’s not working anymore. The playbook is tattered and worn
from overuse, and the minions the enemy employs to drive the narrative that
hedonism is the only true joy in life can no longer bring themselves to fake
sincerity. We’ve seen previous iterations of Satan’s ambassadors spiral into
despair too often to believe anything that comes out of their mouths anymore. Their
influence is waning; they’ve lost their grip on being able to construct a
believable narrative, and they know it. Those insisting most stringently that
they’re happy, they really are, are, in point of fact, the most miserable souls
among us.
Money can’t buy you love or sincere affection. It can’t crawl
up on your lap and kiss you on the cheek even though your beard is scruffy, and
they scrunch up their nose because it tickles. Fancy as it may be, a car can’t
crawl into bed next to you for a snuggle and a bedtime story.
The things that matter most in life, the things that bring
purpose and joy, meaning and fulfillment, are free not because they’re
worthless but because they’re priceless. You can’t put a price on holding your
newborn or growing old with the person you love. Conversely, you can’t put a
price on salvation either. That’s why God offers it for free to those who
receive His Son, believe in Him, and surrender their lives.
When people with no hope mock your hope, all you can do is
shrug your shoulders and move on. There are only so many times someone can slap
your hand away as you’re trying to pull them from the mire before you realize
they don’t want out. They just want to be told the quicksand they find
themselves in will not be harmful to their existence, and they get angry when
you insist that it will kill them. I’ve been called unloving more times than I
can count for doing nothing more untoward than calling sin by name and pointing
to the Scriptures as proof and validation of my assertions.
We cannot discount the Word of God just to appease someone’s bruised ego or feelings, just as we can’t call light dark because it’s too bright and makes another squint. The truth of Scripture will win out, and those who trust in the God of the Bible have a sure foundation upon which they can build their spiritual man.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.