Proverbs 16:1-33 · Proverbs of Solomon
Why Me?
Proverbs 16:4, Colossians 1:16
Sermon
by James Merritt
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A survey that was recently taken in USA Today asks the question, "If you had the opportunity to get a direct and clear response from God, what one question would you ask Him?" By an almost 2 to 1 margin, over the number two answer, the number one question people would ask God was this, "Why am I here on earth?"

Let's face it more than ever before, life, the meaning of it, the purpose of it, the reason for it, gets more and more complicated. I am convinced that the overwhelming majority of people on this Earth go through life searching for purpose and meaning, but never really find it. I was never one to read the comic section of the newspaper, but I can tell you my all-time favorite cartoon was Charlie Brown. Charles Schultz had a way of capturing just exactly what most of us feel and go through in life with his famous cartoon. I remember one where Lucy is philosophizing (as always) and Charlie is listening. As usual, Lucy has the floor and she is delivering one of those classic dogmatic lectures.

She says, "Charlie Brown, life is a lot like a deck chair. Some place it so they can see where they are going. Others place it to see where they have been, and some put it to see where they are."

The last caption shows Charlie with a big sigh saying, "I can't even get my chair unfolded!"

There are a lot of us who can identify with Charlie. When it comes to finding real meaning in life, we just can't seem to get the chair unfolded.

Today we are going to begin a forty-day journey that is going to rock your world and change your life. We are going to help you get that chair not only unfolded, but placed in such a way that you will be able to see clearly what the purpose of your life is and we are going to begin that journey today by asking and answering life's three greatest questions. Only after answering these three questions correctly can you be on the road to finding your purpose in life.

I. The Question Of Existence: "Why Am I Alive?"

That question is not really a new question. In fact, it was asked thousands of years ago. In Jeremiah 20:18 the Prophet Jeremiah said, "Why was I born? Was it only to have trouble and sorrow, to end my life in disgrace?" (Jeremiah 20:18, TEV) That one question has stumped the greatest of philosophers for thousands and thousands of years. Even Shakespeare had to ask it this way, "To be or not to be, that is the question."

The saddest thing in this world is to go through life never understanding its purpose because life without purpose really isn't a life worth living. If you think about it, regardless of what other underlying reasons there are, there can only be one bottom line reason why people would commit suicide and that is they really think there is no other purpose in their life. I want to go ahead and give you the punch line. If you take God out of the question, you will never be able to answer it. If you take God out of the equation, you will never be able to solve it.

I love to go into bookstores and just browse. I would ask you to go into a bookstore sometime in the next week and just see how many books have been written on somehow helping yourself to find out who you are, to be what you should be, or to do what you should do. If you go into any bookstore, you will find hundreds of books that talk about discovering purpose in life. People are getting rich trying to help others find their purpose.

Now some books will tell you what the survivalist will tell you and that is - the purpose of life is just to stay alive. Just to live as long as you can. Some books will take the approach of the hedonist which basically says, "The purpose of life is pleasure" or like the famous beer commercial used to say, "Grab all the gusto you can." In other words, life is just one big party. Enjoy it while you are here. Some take the approach of the materialist that says, "Life is about getting, buying, acquiring." It is just like the bumper sticker that said, "He who dies with the most toys wins." The only problem with that is, the person who dies with the most toys still dies!

Basically, they all say the same thing. Go after your goals, dream big, aim high, believe you can achieve, have faith, or never give up.

Let me be fair here. These books have a lot of good advice. If you will do a lot of the things these books tell you, you will be by the world's definition a success in life. Being a success and knowing your purpose in life are not the same thing. You can be ultra-successful in life and still never know, "What on earth am I here for?"

This bears repeating over and over. You were made by God. You were made for God. You were put here for His purpose. Until you understand that, life will never make any sense.

Proverbs 16:4 says, "The Lord has made everything for His own purpose."  (Proverbs 16:4a, GW)

That tells me two things:

  • God has made me for a purpose and knows what it is.
  • God wants to reveal that purpose to me and fulfill it.

Over the next forty days we are going to be talking about the five purposes for your life. Right now, I want you to see God's motive for creating us to begin with. Ephesians 1:4 says, "Long before He laid down earth's foundations, He had us in mind, and settled on us as the focus of His love, to be made whole and holy by His love. (Ephesians 1:4, MSG)

You were created to be loved by God. God wants to focus His love on you like a laser beam. Put simply and as a good starting point, just remember this, "Why am I on this earth?" I am on this Earth to be loved by God.

II. The Question Of Significance: "Does My Life Matter?"

Once again this is not a new question. The Prophet Isaiah asked this question in Isaiah 49:4, "My work all seems so useless! I have spent my strength for nothing and for no purpose at all." (Isaiah 49:4a NLT)

Isaiah expressed the ultimate frustration which is the thought that your life has no meaning, no purpose and really doesn't matter. During World War II, there were prisoners in a Nazi concentration camp in Hungary, that were processing human sewage in a factory. The allies came along, bombed that factory and blew it apart. So the prisoners had nothing to do. The Nazi soldiers had the prisoners take all the rubble of that factory and move it to another field. The next day, they had them take that same rubble and move it back in reverse. The next day, they had to take that stuff and move it back and day after day they had no meaning, no purpose. It was just work doing the same thing over and over with no meaning and no purpose. Then something strange began to happen. The prisoners began to go crazy. They began to lose their will to live because there was no meaning, no purpose in their work. They were just moving bricks back and forth, back and forth. Many of them began to throw themselves in front of the guards trying to get shot in essence, trying to commit suicide. Without meaning and purpose the will to live dies.

You are going to go through life living at one of three levels. The first level and the lowest level where most people live is the survival level. That is exactly where most people are today. They are just "getting by". They are just existing. They move from job to job, house to house, paycheck to paycheck, put in their time, live for the weekend and die without ever finding their purpose.

The second level which is a step up and a better way to live is the success level. This is probably where most of us are. By the world's standards, we have it made. Most of us live comfortably. Compared to the rest of the world, we are extremely wealthy. We have possessions. We have freedom. Most of us have good health. We go and come as we choose. Quite frankly, give it enough time and you will find out that success alone does not give you the satisfaction and fulfillment of knowing your purpose.

What we really need to do is go to the third and highest level of living which is the significance level. How do you know when you have really reached this level? When you understand and know three things.

  1. You matter to God
  2. You can make a difference in the lives of others.
  3. You make that difference by finding God's purpose for your life and fulfilling it.

In case you doubt that you matter to God, listen to these two verses.

"I am your Creator. You were in My care, even before you were born." (Isaiah 44:2, CEV) Think about it. Before you even came into this world, God was caring for you. You were put on God's priority list. Listen to this verse, "You …scheduled each day of my life before I began to breathe. Every day was recorded in your book!" (Psalm 139:16, LB)

You matter so much to God that every detail of your life was recorded in His book before you even took a breath.

In fact, God values you so much that He not only wants you to have a life that has meaning on this Earth, but a life that has meaning and purpose for all eternity. God's purposes are eternal. When you die, your heart may stop beating and your lungs may stop breathing and that will be the end of your body, but it won't be the end of you. Your body was made to last a short time. You were made to last forever. Psalm 33:11 says, "His purposes last eternally" (Psalm 33:11, GN)

I want you to think about this. You are going to spend far more time on the other side of death than you do on this side of death. On this side, seventy, eighty, ninety, maybe a few over a hundred years, but what is that compared to eternity? You were made for eternity and life is simply preparation for eternity. That answers the question of significance.

III. The Question of Relevance: "What Is My Purpose?"

In Psalm 89:47 David asks this question, "Why did you create us? For nothing?" (Psalm 89:47, NCV) David asked the only one that could answer that question which is God. He understood what Bertrand Russell, perhaps the greatest atheistic philosopher of the twentieth century said, and at least he was intellectually honest enough to say it, "Unless you assume the existence of God, the question of life's meaning and purpose is totally irrelevant." That is absolutely true.

I want you to think about something. The only way you can ever know the purpose of something is either: a.) talk to the one who invented it or built it. b.) read the owner's manual. That is so very true about your own life. The good news is you can both talk to the one who created your life and He has also given us the owner's manual called the Bible which shows us what the purpose of our life is. In Proverbs 9:10 it says this, "Knowing God results in every other kind of understanding." (Proverbs 9:10b, LB)

You find your purpose in life by getting to know God. My text for the day has been Colossians 1:16, "For everything, absolutely everything, above and below, visible and invisible…everything got started in Him and finds its purpose in Him." (Colossians 1:16, MSG)

Then we read in Ephesians 1: "It's in Christ that we find out who we are and what we are living for...part of the overall purpose he is working out in everything and everyone." (Ephesians 1:11, MSG) If God created you for a purpose and He wants you to know that purpose, then the only way you can get to know that purpose is to get to know Him. The more you get to know God, the more you are going to understanding everything else, because as we just read knowing God results in every other kind of understanding.

Believing that God created me for His purposes and that the best use of my life is to fulfill those purposes, I commit the next 40 days to better understanding of God's five purposes for me.

  • I will participate in a 40 days of Purpose small group.
  • I will read each day's chapter from the Purpose Driven Life book.
  • I will do my best to hear all 7 messages in this series, The Purpose Driven Life.

The fact is, if you added up what time it would take you to do all those things - I took the time to add it all up and I was real generous. It would still be less that 48 hours total. So here's my question - is the rest of your life and is all of the rest of your eternity worth 48 hours of your time, now?

The wonderful thing about this forty days of purpose is this. It really doesn't matter where you are in your spiritual journey. You may be an unbeliever and you really don't have a lot of interest in God or you may be an unbeliever and you are beginning to develop a real strong sense of wanting to know the truth about God. You may be a believer, but you have gotten away from God. You may be a strong believer, but you want to go deeper with God. No matter where you are, listen to this last verse. "It makes no difference who you are or where you're from - if you want God and are ready to do as he says, the door is open." (Acts 10:35, MSG) It is never too late to live a purpose driven life and it is too important not to.

In 1983, John Sculley quit his post at PepsiCo to become the president of Apple Computer. He took a big risk leaving his prestigious position with a well established company to join ranks with an unproven little outfit that offered no guarantees, only the excitement of one man's transforming vision. When someone asked him why he made the risky move, he said it was when Apple co-founder, Steve Jobs, asked him this question, "Do you want to spend the rest of your life selling sugared water or do you want a chance to change the world?"

I close with this question to you, "Do you want to live your life as usual or do you want to live a changed life that can change the lives of others?" You can do that when you find your purpose through a personal relationship with God through His Son, Jesus Christ and you can begin to live the true purpose driven life.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt