Life Worth Living

picturesque-scene-of-roma-street-parkland-in-brisb-2025-02-09-20-10-51-utc

What is “the good life”?

What is “the good life”? What makes human existence meaningful?

In his book, Life Worth Living: A Guide to What Matters Most, Miroslav Volf – Director of the Yale Center for Faith & Ethics – offers this account of the Apostle Peter’s experience.

Before he became known as the first pope, Simon was an ordinary man. He lived in a small house in a small town by a small lake in a small fiefdom at the edge of a very large empire. He had married a woman from the same town and lived near his in-laws.

Like many of his neighbors, he made his living as a fisherman. He spent many of his nights out on the lake with his brother, Andrew, plying their trade, looking for a catch. On the seventh days of the week, as the law of God commanded, he rested and attended services at the local synagogue.

A stable trade, a family, a community. Not a flashy life, but a respectable one filled with ordinary goodness. Until two words turned the whole thing upside down.

Follow Me

“Follow me.” Jesus, the new teacher from Nazareth, stood on the shore and called to Simon and Andrew. Ordinarily, this would be crazy talk. Who walks up to two guys at work and tells them to drop everything and follow him around?

But Jesus spoke with surprising authority. Word around town was that his preaching rang true, that his words carried power, that amazing things happened when he was there.

For some unknown reason, Simon followed. For three years, he listened and tried to understand. Awestruck, he watched miracle after miracle. He learned to call this man not merely “teacher,” but “Lord.” And this lord, in turn, gave him a new name: Peter, which means “rock.”

But time and again, Peter failed to live up to his name. He misunderstood, he got overzealous, and when it counted most, he lost his nerve: when the authorities arrested Jesus, Peter denied even knowing him. He watched helplessly as imperial soldiers crucified his Lord. Everything would have been lost, all of his following come to nothing.

Raised From The Dead

Except that on the third day, astonishingly, he encountered his Lord, raised from the dead.

From then on, Peter’s whole life was devoted to living as Jesus directed and spreading the good news about him.

Simon Peter: a wrecked life or a real life? What makes life worth living?

Curt Grice

Curt Grice

Recent Posts

God’s Plan is Greater Than Our Own

By Tara Tomes | October 27, 2022
God's Plans are Greater Than our Own

I wish that I could sit here and tell you that life is easy, but that would just be a lieI’ve faced more challenges in my life than…

A Place to Belong

By Preschool Ministry | October 27, 2022
A Place to Belong

After graduating from college, I moved to a new city, with a new job, and no friends nearby. It felt like I was new to everything. I was…

Lessons from the Garden

By Charlie Pannell | October 26, 2022
Lessons from the Garden

In 2020 you would have never guessed that the Pannell family would begin to take care of and obsess about keeping a garden. We did not have green…

The Night Cometh

By Tanner Watson | October 26, 2022
The Night Cometh

Howdy!  If you are walking around outside of Truett Theological Seminary you will likely pass the clock tower at the North-East corner of the building.  On that clock…