"What is the meaning of Life?"

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Hello,

What are the Catholic answers to the following questions?:

“What is the meaning (or purpose) of life?”
“Why did God create man?”


Could anyone recommend any apologetics or theological sources/references which discuss this topic?
 
Hello,

What are the Catholic answers to the following questions?:

“What is the meaning (or purpose) of life?”
“Why did God create man?”


Could anyone recommend any apologetics or theological sources/references which discuss this topic?
I may be dating myself, but this (below) is from the Baltimore Catechism (fondly remembered from my youth).

The Purpose of Man’s Existence

Lesson 1 from the Baltimore Catechism
  1. Who made us?
God made us.

In the beginning, God created heaven and earth. (Genesis 1:1)
  1. Who is God?
God is the Supreme Being, infinitely perfect, who made all things and keeps them in existence.

In him we live and move and have our being. (Acts 17:28)
  1. Why did God make us?
God made us to show forth His goodness and to share with us His everlasting happiness in heaven.

Eye has not seen nor ear heard, nor has it entered into the heart of man, what things God has prepared for those who love him. (I Corinthians 2:9)
  1. What must we do to gain the happiness of heaven?
To gain the happiness of heaven we must know, love, and serve God in this world.

Lay not up to yourselves treasures on earth; where the rust and moth consume and where thieves break through and steal. But lay up to yourselves treasures in heaven; where neither the rust nor moth doth consume, and where thieves do not break through nor steal. (Matthew 6:19-20)
  1. From whom do we learn to know, love, and serve God?
We learn to know, love, and serve God from Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who teaches us through the Catholic Church.

I have come a light into the world that whoever believes in Me may not remain in darkness. (John 12:46)
  1. Where do we find the chief truths taught by Jesus Christ through the Catholic Church?
We find the chief truths taught by Jesus Christ through the Catholic Church in the Apostles’ Creed.

He that heareth you heareth me; and he that despiseth you despiseth me; and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me. (Luke 10:16)
 
The purpose of life is to place God first and foremost in our lives and to Love him with all of our heart, mind, and body and soul and to love our neighbor as we would love ourselves.

God created man in his own image. His reasons are inscrutible.

The answers are in scriputre. Start reading the Bible from the beginning. If there’s anything that doesn’t make sense or you don’t understand ask an apologist or better yet seek answers from good Catholic sources. If, after finishing the whole thing, you still don’t know the answers to your very good questions, start again. It’s kinda like shampooing your hair. Read-discern-repeat. Except, you gotta do it a lot more than twice. Either way, on the last day all will be revealed. Very cool.
 
What is the meaning of life?

42, of course. Gotta love Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy 😉
 
Hello,

What are the Catholic answers to the following questions?:

“What is the meaning (or purpose) of life?”
“Why did God create man?”


Could anyone recommend any apologetics or theological sources/references which discuss this topic?
Love.
 
Hello,

What are the Catholic answers to the following questions?:

“What is the meaning (or purpose) of life?”
“Why did God create man?”


Could anyone recommend any apologetics or theological sources/references which discuss this topic?
In order to confront the qestion “what is the meaning of life?” we first have to settle the question “what does it even mean to say that something means something?”

I assert that “what does this mean?” or “what is this for?,” whether we are talking about the usage of a term or the purpose of a hammer, amounts to asking “how is this used?” So, to ask, “what is the meaning of life?”, is to ask, “how is life used?” Well, life is clearly used in lots of different ways. So many ways that it may be hard to give an answer that is very general. Perhaps the most general thing we could say is that life is used to pursue happiness.

I doubt that we will ever come up with a single one-size-fits-all solution to how this purpose is achieved since people have diverse and changing needs and interests. Some people pursue physical pleasure and manage to avoid physical pain but find that they are still unhappy. Others seem to be succesful in pursuing happiness by denying themselves all physical pleasure and holing up in a cave and meditating alone for years at a time. Some people pursue happiness through a denial of earthly happiness in hope for future happiness after death. Other people seem to find happiness pursuing a middle way that accepts mundane pleasures in moderation taking them for what they are worth while seeking deeper joy in things that result in a happiness through loving others and being loved that can sustain one even through significant pain. I tend to think this middle way is best for me, but we are all always working out our answers to the question of purpose in our lives just by living our lives.

Best,
Leela
 
“What is the meaning (or purpose) of life?”

This is my long and complicated theoretical answer, which may or may not help you and can be skipped for the short, practical answer:

The ultimate purpose of man’s life is his blissful enjoyment of a perfectly loving relationship with God. Blissful enjoyment is the effect of a perfectly loving relationship with God; and a perfectly loving relationship with Him has (a) passive reception of His Infinite Love and also (b) passionate, active loving of Him, both being to the man’s maximum created capacity. Love in general is a strictly spiritual act involving the cooperation of one’s Intellect and Will, meaning love properly entails both knowing and willing on the part of the lover. Spirit is the union of Intellect and Will in the act of love, after the Mind grasps a thing’s truth and goodness and the Will is naturally attracted to that perceived good; love is the actual resulting motion, not just the dispositional draw, of the whole self to the thing loved.

It is his loving spirituality that ultimately and completely unifies (or, if directed at the wrong thing, internally divorces and dissolves) a man’s basic components, as he depends on a loving bond with God for his very soul’s being. [Intellect and Will (in harmony = spirit) make up the formal, immaterial principle of the soul; the Body is the material principle. A man’s soul *is his form (= a rational animal; a mind and volition inhering in a bodily substance), whereas the actual man himself is the body ensouled by that formal principle.] So a man is by nature a complex of parts, of aspects of existence, soul and body, which he cannot entirely sustain or create himself, since, for one, that would be like his creating and causing his own existence. God’s Love is what unifies our parts into one individual substance. Our external unity, which is our existence as selves, can only be grounded, in the end, in Him. Our partial internal unity, and happiness and goodness, has been to a degree Divinely left in our own hands, to our free will, i.e., our capacity to self-determine, to drastically shape our own souls and choose what to love and to what extent.

Short:

What the other posters said. Love God fully.

Except, you were born with original sin and a fallen, corrupted nature, so you’re thus doomed to whimsically flail around in the darkness, unable to adequately see and know He Whom you need to love. Unless you find Christ, listen to Him faithfully, and follow Him hopefully. You should do so as best you can in this fallen world, where you will not achieve perfect happiness. Actually, if you do it right, you’ll suffer extremely, grow uprooted from this life, and be widely treated like dirt, like He did. So join with Christ’s other followers, His Church, the Catholic Church, and be sure to participate in any means to grace you can reach, and often, meaning through the sacraments. Eventually, don’t stop to check on your own progress or vainly check yourself out in the “spiritual mirror,” since your gaze must become only focused on one thing, God, your only care being Him, all your worldly cares merely flowing prudently as the effects of your love for His created order and command.

“Why did God create man?”

Slightly tougher. The following is from New Advent’s online Catholic Encyclopedia: newadvent.org/cathen/04470a.htm
 
Perhaps the most general thing we could say is that life is used to pursue happiness.
So the meaning of life is to be found in the pursuit of happiness - which entails the pursuit of truth, goodness, justice, beauty, freedom and love… 🙂
 
Hello,

What are the Catholic answers to the following questions?:

“What is the meaning (or purpose) of life?”
“Why did God create man?”


Could anyone recommend any apologetics or theological sources/references which discuss this topic?
42
 
So the meaning of life is to be found in the pursuit of happiness - which entails the pursuit of truth, goodness, justice, beauty, freedom and love… 🙂
Sure. All that and more like brushing your teeth and walking the dog.

People who think it it so deep and natural to ask about the meaning of life as if life were a puzzle that has a verbal answer rarely have any ideas about the meaning of “meaning.” Since “meaning” amounts to “use” for a pragmatist, when people ask questions about life itself I think what they really want is more and better uses for life. They want to enrich the experience of being alive. I think that is what we want from art, literature, religion, and any kind of inquiry. More life. Better forms of life.

Best,
Leela
 
Sure. All that and more like brushing your teeth and walking the dog.

People who think it it so deep and natural to ask about the meaning of life as if life were a puzzle that has a verbal answer rarely have any ideas about the meaning of “meaning.” Since “meaning” amounts to “use” for a pragmatist, when people ask questions about life itself I think what they really want is more and better uses for life. They want to enrich the experience of being alive. I think that is what we want from art, literature, religion, and any kind of inquiry. More life. Better forms of life.

Best,
Leela
Life more abundantly.
 
Since “meaning” amounts to “use” for a pragmatist, when people ask questions about life itself I think what they really want is more and better uses for life. They want to enrich the experience of being alive. I think that is what we want from art, literature, religion, and any kind of inquiry. More life. Better forms of life.
That is true. Use implies purpose - both human and non-human…
 
Hello,

What are the Catholic answers to the following questions?:

“What is the meaning (or purpose) of life?”
“Why did God create man?”


Could anyone recommend any apologetics or theological sources/references which discuss this topic?
Baltimore Catechism
God made me to know, love and serve Him in this world, and to be eternally happy with Him in the next.
 
Hello,

What are the Catholic answers to the following questions?:

“What is the meaning (or purpose) of life?”
“Why did God create man?”


Could anyone recommend any apologetics or theological sources/references which discuss this topic?
People generally assume that it is deep and natural and perhaps required that we ask about the meaning of life as if life were a puzzle that has a verbal answer. I think when people ask this question, what they are seeking is simply more life. They want to enrich
the experience of being alive. I think that is what we want from art, literature, religion, and scientific inquiry. More life. Better forms of life.

The question of the meaning of life is also about the possibility of affirming life as it is now in spite of the sorrows of the world–about finding a way to participate joyfully in this world of sorrows. One way we do that is through our hope that the world can be made better than it now is–that our suffering and the suffering of others can be mitigated in the future and humanity can be more that it has ever been. Meaning is found in the notion that our personal efforts may play some part no matter how small in making such a better world. As Yann Martell wrote, just as music is noises that make sense and art is colors and lines that make sense, so stories are life that makes sense. Having meaning is then a matter of being able to tell a story of progress toward a better world. Some attach themselves to a grand epic offered to them by one of the world’s religions or a down to earth political cause or performing a particular social role or in some other way of having meaning that is offered to us by our societies, and some, the poets of life among us, even eschew such existential comforts and heroically make their own new stories through which perhaps others will later find meaning in unheard of ways that no one before ever imagined. Perhaps the future will not just be better, it will be unimaginably better. This is a hope I share with many of the religious.
 
Douglas Adams again, for once making a serious point. Life is about avoiding God’s Final Message to His Creation:

We are sorry for the inconvenience.
 
Douglas Adams again, for once making a serious point. Life is about avoiding God’s Final Message to His Creation:

We are sorry for the inconvenience.
Can you explain? I’m not sure what the serious point is.
 
The meaning of life is to discover its purpose, which is union with God. Life is God’s great adventure for each one of us. 🙂
 
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