Human beings were made for God (Psalm 100:3, Acts 17:26–27), but something has gone deeply wrong. Sin has cut us off from our Creator and left us out-of-sync with each other and ourselves. Under the curse of sin, we both desire God and resist Him simultaneously (see Romans 1). The consequence of this spiritual tug-of-war is that we often turn to temporal things to fulfill our desperate longings—yet genuine, lifelong meaning and purpose remain elusive and fleeting.

Three Popular Narratives of Life

As a wayward soul for the first half of his own life, St. Augustine of Hippo, one of the greatest Christian thinkers outside the New Testament, illustrates this problem by reflecting on his misspent youth:

But my sin was this, that I looked for pleasure, beauty, and truth not in him but in myself and his other creatures, and the search led me instead to pain, confusion, and error.1

Many of us occupy our life with various diversions (sports, music, knowledge, hedonism, romance, power, wealth, drugs, and so on) in an attempt to fill the haunting void that can only be filled by God. In my late teens, I experienced a restlessness and discontentedness in life that I believed could be satisfied through meeting the right woman or by becoming a rich and famous professional athlete. Christian philosopher David Naugle identifies three practical narratives of life2 that people often pursue when looking for satisfaction or contentment.

  1. Sensualism: pursuit of sex, food, fashion
  2. Materialism: pursuit of money, wealth, possessions
  3. Egotism: pursuit of achievement, prestige, power

These mini-narratives, if you will, are generally more popular than so-called grand narratives (worldviews like theism and naturalism). Naugle states, “Most people live their lives in accordance with one of these three basic plots (or in combination).”3 Part of the challenge is that while the focuses of these pursuits (sex, money, achievement) are actually good things, they were never intended to satisfy a human’s existential needs.

The path toward these pursuits is well travelled. In one fashion or another Augustine pursued all three of these narratives, but to no avail. “In my youth I wandered away,” Augustine confesses to God, “too far from your sustaining hand, and created of myself a barren waste.”4

Many of us can relate to Augustine’s story of pursuit of self only to find a “barren waste.” Maybe Mick Jagger is actually being existentially forthright when he sings, “I can’t get no satisfaction.” Many American youths of the 1960s can now testify that the decade’s mantra—“sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll”—greatly overpromised and deeply under-produced. So it has been since Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit.

Running on Empty

As a Christian, I know that sex, money, power, and achievement cannot fill what Christian thinker Blaise Pascal calls that “infinite abyss” within the human heart. But reading about the broken lives of two of my cherished sports icons (baseball great Ted Williams and basketball star Jerry West) recently brought that message home again with great force.5 These two athletes played their respective sports with sheer greatness. As a youngster I could only dream of playing the way these two superstar athletes routinely performed. Yet both of these men candidly admitted that they lived tortured lives. Achievement, money, and fame ultimately satisfied neither of them. Those who knew them well saw both their greatness and their brokenness. After the cheers of the crowd faded, both men, upon reflection, confessed their unhappiness. Though they seemed to have it all, they were in large measure discontented with life.

Pascal observes, “What else does this craving, and this helplessness, proclaim but that there was once in man a true happiness, of which all that now remains is the empty print and trace?”6 C. S. Lewis also noted humanity’s need to fill the spiritual abyss, likening human beings to car engines, which are built to run on gasoline and nothing else.

Now God designed the human machine to run on Himself. He Himself is the fuel our spirits were designed to burn, or the food our spirits were designed to feed on. There is no other. That is why it is just no good asking God to make us happy in our own way without bothering about religion. God cannot give us a happiness and peace apart from Himself, because it is not there. There is no such thing.7

Quenching the Thirst

The message of historic Christianity is that this God-shaped hole or vacuum inside of human beings can only be filled with the God-shaped person of Jesus Christ. Human beings as bearers of God’s image were made for God, need God, and no other alternative will satisfy this divine thirst or hunger. Augustine’s prayer in Confessions reflects a somewhat existential perspective of this need for God:

Man is one of your creatures, Lord, and his instinct is to praise you. . . . The thought of you stirs him so deeply that he cannot be content unless he praises you, because you made us for yourself and our hearts find no peace until they rest in you.8

The truth is that creatures made in God’s image (human beings) can only find genuine contentment—rest and peace for their souls—through an intimate relationship with their Creator-Redeemer God. In his encounter with the Samaritan woman at the well, Jesus explains, “Whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”

Reflections: Your Turn

What comforts or pursuits do you turn to when you need to find peace? Visit Reflections on Wordpress to comment with your response.

Resources

For more on the Christian claim of human beings finding rest and peace uniquely in God, see my book A World of Difference.

 

Check out  more from Reasons to Believe @ Reasons.org

About The Author

Kenneth R. Samples

I believe deeply that "all truth is God’s truth." That historic affirmation means that when we discover and grasp truth in the world and in life we move closer to its divine Author. This approach relies on the Christian idea of God’s two revelatory books - the metaphorical book of nature and the literal book of Scripture. As an RTB scholar I have a great passion to help people understand and see the truth and relevance of Christianity's truth-claims. My writings and lectures at RTB focus on showing how the great doctrinal truths of the faith (the Trinity, the Incarnation, the Atonement, creation ex nihilo, salvation by grace, etc.) are uniquely compatible with reason. This approach reflects the historic Christian apologetics statement - "faith seeking understanding." I work to help myself and others fulfill Peter's words in 2 Peter 3:18: "But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To him be glory both now and forever! Amen." As an RTB scholar I have a great passion to help people understand and see the truth and relevance of Christianity's truth-claims. • Biography • Resources • Upcoming Events • Promotional Items Kenneth Richard Samples began voraciously studying Christian philosophy and theology when his thirst for purpose found relief in the Bible. He earned his undergraduate degree in philosophy and social science from Concordia University and his MA in theological studies from Talbot School of Theology. For seven years, Kenneth worked as Senior Research Consultant and Correspondence Editor at the Christian Research Institute (CRI) and regularly cohosted the popular call-in radio program, The Bible Answer Man, with Dr. Walter Martin. As a youth, Kenneth wrestled with "unsettling feelings of meaninglessness and boredom," driving him to seek answers to life's big questions. An encounter with Christian philosophy in Mere Christianity by C. S. Lewis led Kenneth to examine the New Testament and "finally believe that Jesus Christ is the divine Son of God, the Lord and Savior of the world." From then on, he pursued an intellectually satisfying faith. Today, as senior research scholar at Reasons to Believe (RTB), Kenneth uses what he's learned to help others find the answers to life's questions. He encourages believers to develop a logically defensible faith and challenges skeptics to engage Christianity at a philosophical level. He is the author of Without a Doubt and A World of Difference, and has contributed to numerous other books, including: Lights in the Sky and Little Green Men, The Cult of the Virgin, and Prophets of the Apocalypse. He has written articles for Christianity Today and The Christian Research Journal, and regularly participates in RTB's podcasts, including Straight Thinking, a podcast dedicated to encouraging Christians to utilize sound reasoning in their apologetics. He also writes for the ministry's daily blog, Today’s New Reason to Believe. An avid speaker and debater, Kenneth has appeared on numerous radio programs such as Voice America Radio, Newsmakers, The Frank Pastore Show, Stand to Reason, White Horse Inn, Talk New York, and Issues Etc., as well as participated in debates and dialogues on topics relating to Christian doctrine and apologetics. He currently lectures for the Master of Arts program in Christian Apologetics at Biola University. Kenneth also teaches adult classes at Christ Reformed Church in Southern California. Over the years Kenneth has held memberships in the American Philosophical Association, the Evangelical Philosophical Society, the Evangelical Theological Society, and the Evangelical Press Association. The son of a decorated World War II veteran, Kenneth is an enthusiastic student of American history, particularly the Civil War and WWII. His favorite Christian thinkers include Athanasius, Augustine, Pascal, and C. S. Lewis. He greatly enjoys the music of the Beatles and is a die-hard Los Angeles Lakers fan. Kenneth lives in Southern California with his wife, Joan, and their three children.



Email Sign-up

Sign up for the TWR360 Newsletter

Access updates, news, Biblical teaching and inspirational messages from powerful Christian voices.

Thank you for signing up to receive updates from TWR360.

Required information missing

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA, and the Google Privacy Policy & Terms of Use apply.