โ๏ธ CAN MAN LIVE WITHOUT GOD?
๐AS THE SAVIOR, GOD GIVES ETERNAL LIFE TO THOSE WHO BELIEVE.
๐๐ผ In Christ is life, which is the light of men (John 1:4). Jesus came that we may have life โand have it to the fullโ (John 10:10). All who place their trust in Him are promised eternity with Him (John 3:15-16). For man to liveโtruly liveโhe must know Christ (John 17:3).
๐WITHOUT GOD, MAN HAS PHYSICAL LIFE ONLY.
๐๐ผ God warned Adam and Eve that on the day they rejected Him they would โsurely dieโ (Genesis 2:17). As we know, they did disobey, but they did not die physically that day; rather, they died spiritually. Something inside them diedโthe spiritual life they had known, the communion with God, the freedom to enjoy Him, the innocence and purity of their soulโit was all gone.
๐๐ผ Adam, who had been created to live and fellowship with God, was cursed with a completely carnal existence. What God had intended to go from dust to glory now was to go from dust to dust. Just like Adam, the man without God today still functions in an earthly existence. Such a person may seem to be happy; after all, there is enjoyment and pleasure to be had in this life. But even those enjoyments and pleasures cannot be fully received without a relationship with God.
๐๐ผ Some who reject God live lives of diversion and merriment. Their fleshly pursuits seem to yield a carefree and gratified existence. The Bible says there is a certain measure of delight to be had in sin (Hebrews 11:25). The problem is that it is temporary; life in this world is short (Psalm 90:3-12). Sooner or later, the hedonist, like the prodigal son in the parable, finds that worldly pleasure is unsustainable (Luke 15:13-15).
๐๐ผ Not everyone who rejects God is an empty pleasure-seeker, however. There are many unsaved people who live disciplined, sober livesโhappy and fulfilled lives, even. The Bible presents certain moral principles which will benefit anyone in this worldโfidelity, honesty, self-control, etc. But, again, without God man has only this world. Getting smoothly through this life is no guarantee that we are ready for the afterlife. See the parable of the rich farmer in Luke 12:16-21 and Jesusโ exchange with the rich (but very moral) young man in Matthew 19:16-23.
๐WITHOUT GOD, MAN IS UNFULFILLED, EVEN IN HIS MORTAL LIFE.
๐๐ผ Man is not at peace with his fellow man because he is not at peace with himself. Man is restless with himself because he has no peace with God. The pursuit of pleasure for pleasureโs sake is a sign of inner turmoil. Pleasure seekers throughout history have found over and over that the temporary diversions of life give way to a deeper despair. The nagging feeling that โsomething is wrongโ is hard to shake off. King Solomon gave himself to a pursuit of all this world has to offer, and he recorded his findings in the book of Ecclesiastes.
๐๐ผ Solomon discovered that knowledge, in and of itself, is futile (Ecclesiastes 1:12-18). He found that pleasure and wealth are futile (2:1-11), materialism is folly (2:12-23), and riches are fleeting (chapter 6).
๐๐ผ Solomon concludes that life is Godโs gift (3:12-13) and the only wise way to live is to fear God: โLet us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, and keep His commandments: for this is the whole duty of man. For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evilโ (12:13-14).
๐๐ผ In other words, there is more to life than the physical dimension. Jesus stresses this point when He says, โMan does not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of Godโ (Matthew 4:4). Not bread (the physical) but Godโs Word (the spiritual) keeps us alive. It is useless for us to search within ourselves for the cure to all our miseries. Man can only find life and fulfillment when he acknowledges God.
๐WITHOUT GOD, MANโS DESTINY IS HELL.
๐๐ผ The man without God is spiritually dead; when his physical life is over, he faces eternal separation from God. In Jesusโ narrative of the rich man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19-31), the rich man lives a pleasurable life of ease without a thought of God, while Lazarus suffers through his life but knows God. It is after their deaths that both men truly comprehend the gravity of the choices they made in life. The rich man realized, too late, that there is more to life than the pursuit of wealth. Meanwhile, Lazarus is comforted in paradise. For both men, the short duration of their earthly existence paled in comparison to the permanent state of their souls.
๐๐ผ Man is a unique creation. God has set a sense of eternity in our hearts (Ecclesiastes 3:11), and that sense of timeless destiny can only find its fulfillment in God Himself.
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