Maybe you’re like me. At times pushed to the point of torment with the burden of trying to make sense out of life. Most of the time the puzzle seems absurd. I know that I don’t have all the pieces, but still, the gaps can be overwhelming. Yet I know that somehow it all fits together. So I fumble along, trying to gain perspective into the purpose of my life.
Although I’m accustomed to this struggle, lately I do not feel qualified to ask such questions. I think of Stephen Hawking, debatably the greatest mind of the day. His conclusion to my questions is that we are indeed created by design, but because there is no possible way to know what purpose are creator designed us for, we might as well be an evolutionary accident without meaning. I feel if there is any genius within me, it cannot compare to his. Therefore, who am I to believe that I can possibly come to any other conclusion?
Yet I am pressed to believe differently. I wonder if Hawking has fallen in to the same curse as Herman Hess’s Siddhartha. A brilliant mind, that set out to satisfy a seemingly insatiable desire for wholeness. His mind was sharp, and the intensity of his searching could not be matched by any other. He spent most of his life in vain, building both treasure and understanding, in attempts to satisfy his craving. He boasted about how his life was like a rock falling through the water, always finding the fastest way, while others drift slowly to the bottom. In the end, it was through walking away from all he had gained to find his nirvana. When another pilgrim searching for peace found him, and asked him secret to his peace, his response was something like this, “your problem is exactly what you are doing, searching. When you search intently for something, you are only looking for one thing.” The reality is that it doesn’t matter how fast you can go, if you’re going in the wrong direction, it is the slower people who are in the lead. I can’t say for sure, maybe Hawking will find his nirvana through exhaustive calculations and quantum physics in the end, but I think he might have to walk away from his current path and pursue a new direction to find his peace.
I think it is amazing how great minds are humbled in their lack of wholeness. How men like Stephen Hawking feel the need to embark on a spiritual journey. In doing so, that admit that even though they have learned most things, but they have not learned what is most important. They have gained their world and now face losing their soul, so they change course.
What presses me forward is the invested dignity in being called to sonship. I feel like this is my only qualifier for attempting these thoughts. I believe with Hawking that we were created by design, but I also believe we were created in His image. When an artist creates something in his image, we can say it is like him, but not identical. However, I believe that the creator was not satisfied for us to be merely in his likeness, so he sent us his identical. For what is created by the artists hands cannot be identical, only what is begotten can be identical. The creator sent His son. Although our side of the offer was weakened, the covenant was strengthened, and dignity was extended.
Although I feel almost completely ignorant of these things, and I don’t know exactly what my purpose of being here is, I know I am created with love and intent. Although I can’t fully know him, I know He is good, and in His likeness good satisfies me more than evil. I also know that I betray His image and likeness with evil, and yet He extends me sonship, He extends me grace. What is more, I know that I need my creator, and even though He created me with purpose, He does not need me as I need Him. In fact, I can’t be sure He needs me at all. He is with me. Why is He with me? The grace involved is staggering, and He pursues further. Knowing this unreciprocated relationship is based entirely on grace, it makes it easy for me to love my creator. I truly hope I have something of value to give to Him.
So I think. My consciousness slurred by both arrogance and inadequacy. There is another voice. One that tells me that the answers I seek are not in consciousness alone, and that consciousness stems from the heart. Just as I must intellectually deduct meaning from breaking down my reality, so my heart must also be broken. For the voice told me a secret, that the answers I seek lie both outside, and within. The outside demands you understand the world, while all the inside requires a humble, soft heart that sets out to understand oneself. I’m not sure what is more difficult. Like Kant, I want those two things to consume me. I want that to be my fascination – The stary host above, and the moral code within.
I know that my nirvana doesn’t lie in one thing, but a dynamic of my world around me, and all that is within me, moving in perfect harmony in relation to my creator. Although this sounds unachievable, and it might very well be, I get these moments that tell me differently. These moments are so rich, that it seems like the whole universe is conspiring together to tell me that I am loved and that everything makes sense. These moments can seem fleeting, but I found the link between them. The task of making sense of all things is impossible, however, there is one name that encompasses all things. One name that brings order to the disarray of my universe. One name that brings me peace.
Thank you Jesus.
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2 comments:
I can't wait to hang out and have wise God talks with you once again.
Tj. Interesting article. I was particulairly struck by this statement: "They have gained their world and now face losing their soul, so they change course." ...I just wrote down what I thought about it and decided this: we might as well speak about it face to face. You might just have to remind me.
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