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If so, what was that reason.

2007-07-15 08:08:23 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

12 answers

my purpose in life is to help other people. Im not a social butterfly, but I cant stand being away from others for a long time. I have to help. Even when I have nothing else, im there for anyone. Even people i hate, i pity and/or try and help.

2007-07-15 08:52:14 · answer #1 · answered by AuthorGirl 3 · 0 0

The reason for life is the same for everyone. Yes we all accomplish different things through out our life that alter the world in a small, almost insignificant way. But in the end we all face reality, we will be replaced as well as whatever has been left behind. It will be improved and dissected into an unrecognizable form. We all return to the same ash from which we are born and we realize that our whole life we were living for someone else, and yet we die alone. We die without any effect on the world other than a boost in flower sales and a couple of tears. We are insignificant, we have one destiny and that is to die.

2007-07-15 08:19:16 · answer #2 · answered by iamjustbored10 3 · 0 0

I need to get this right before I get to go back home.

A long time ago I thought that love was something that you reserved for some special set of people that you had judged worthy of it.

After a while I got to thinking about what Jesus had said about turning the other cheek and loving our neighbor I put the two together and realized that he had made no exceptions in these statements. It became obvious to me that he intended that we exclude no one from the love that we are supposed to be giving. I started thinking about my idea of love and suddenly realized that I had not been loving anyone at all. I had simply been judging everyone and every thing.

Judging someone worthy of love is not love, it is only judgment. I actually started to cry when I realized this. I saw just how much of my life I had wasted being judgmental, thinking of myself as a Christian, when I was actually doing just the opposite of what Jesus had asked us to do.

I thought about the verse judge not lest ye be judged, and I understood it for the first time.

I realized that I have a lot of catching up to do. So many opportunities were wasted. I now try to apply the love that I have for the world in a universal way like Jesus asks us to do.

If I start to feel afraid and think that I see someone that I should not love because of something I have thought or heard I try to catch my mistake as soon as possible. I tell myself that I have forgot the truth and have fallen for the same old trick that had cost me so many opportunities to be loving in the past. The horror of this realization is often all that is necessary to bring me back to my senses and make me drop the judgmental nonsense I was thinking.

I still have a lot to learn about love, but at least I’m making progress.

Love and blessings

Your brother
don

2007-07-15 09:05:20 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

for sure, atheism isn't a rational worldview. that's self-refuting because of the fact the atheist might desire to first assume the choice of what he's attempting to coach with a view to have the skill to coach something. If the strategies is merely the end results of mindless evolutionary techniques that conveyed some form of survival fee interior the previous, why might desire to we have confidence its conclusions? If the universe and our minds are merely the end results of time and hazard, because of the fact the atheist contends, why might we expect that the strategies could make experience of the universe? How might desire to technology and technologies be attainable? the subject between Christianity and atheism is that the prospect and life of technology, good judgment, and ethics a minimum of is clever in a international created by a completely rational, actual ethical God; while a worldview wherein the universe is ultimately desperate by impersonal, amoral, non-rational count number can not make experience of technology, good judgment, and ethics.

2016-10-03 21:08:26 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There are only two possibilities.
1) We are created by a Creator. Our reason to live (purpose in life) has to stem from our Creator. If we are created beings, our only recourse is to seek God.

2) We are not created, i.e. we are an accident. In this case, there is no reason to live and no purpose for our lives. Nothing is of importance, not love, nor compassion, nor friendship nor anything else. If we reject our Creator, our only recourse is to invent something that makes us feel better and then deceive ourselves that it is real.

So my course is to seek God for the other path is the path of the walking dead.

2007-07-15 09:08:39 · answer #5 · answered by Matthew T 7 · 0 0

12 years ago I found my reason to live, my son was born. Now everyday I strive to live a righteous life through positive interactions and encounters with others (teaching him that life is as fulfilling as one makes it).

2007-07-15 10:06:25 · answer #6 · answered by Louise E 2 · 0 0

My reason to live is to have fun, you have one life to live and you've got to make the most of it....My religion teacher told me that the point of life is to serve god....and i think that's what I'm doing as well as having fun.

2007-07-15 16:12:55 · answer #7 · answered by insane_genius 2 · 0 0

i believe in god and i have experience things that most 75 year old men haven't I'm 39 years old. in my toughest times i turned to my higher power for help and he has helped me. their for my reason to be here is to help others who's life put them trough the same road i have been in.

2007-07-15 14:49:16 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

not really. right now i just want to get into an Ivy league. some reason to live, huh?

2007-07-15 08:40:19 · answer #9 · answered by My Lovee 3 · 0 0

It beats the hell out of the alternatives.

2007-07-15 08:29:58 · answer #10 · answered by lcraesharbor 7 · 0 0

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