The Meaning Of Life

8 May 2002


”Dave” asks: Is business the purpose of our civilization, or does civilization have some other purpose that business supports? Do our lives have any meaning beyond that which we produce for sale, and that which we purchase for consumption?

Who is really qualified to answer such questions for other than themselves?
G.K. Chesterton said, ”We are not human beings having a spiritual experience, we are spiritual beings having a human experience.” Victor Frankl wrote Man’s Search for Meaning to explain meaning when you become a number. His dehumanizing experience at Auschwitz gave him the answers.
Does the woman living in a cave in Afghanistan and sleeping in the dirt have the same life purpose as the woman who woke up in a 10,000 square foot home in the American suburbs, drove her SUV to drop her kids at private school, grabbed a $3.85 cup of coffee at the drive-thru window and rushed to her desk to work at ’getting more’ today? Is daily survival a different life purpose from daily achievement or daily accumulation? Should the person waking to a shopping list for a week’s worth of groceries have the same life meaning as the person who awoke hungry, but driven to find sustenance before dark?
Different people must answer Dave’s questions in different ways. Influences often drive how we answer the question. Sometimes the answer feels different on different days. The fact is a life of simply earning more, buying more or selling more can get pretty futile.
Surely, at the end of our days, there should be more than the toys, the comfort and the luxury that we’ve accumulated for ourselves and those we care about. I cannot compartmentalize my life in such a way that ’the getting’ is what I do on the job and life’s meaning is something that happens at a different place, with other people or at a different time.
Regardless of religious background or persuasion, people need a plan, a place and a purpose. More often than not those are found in some area of service. I find that the periods in my life where I have not been serving others are the most miserable periods I’ve faced.
If civilization is to be defined as ’life as we know it,’ then business, in all its forms, is a part of that. To say that our civilization has business as its purpose seems to fall short of ’life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.’ It also falls short of any greater meaning that those who see themselves as spiritual beings might seek.
I’m reminded of the wealthy Texas oil baron who died somewhat unexpectedly in his 60’s. Some weeks following the funeral, one sincere old friend asked his youthful widow, ”how much did he leave?” Her reply was quick, ”all of it.” You just don’t see any Wells Fargo trucks in funeral processions!
There’s got to be something more!

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