Whe Were Humans Created For?

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The beginning of the Bible paints a picture of God creating humans for relationship with him and others. Humans were created to live in the perfect state of the Garden of Eden. God instilled within humans freewill. It is difficult for one to wrap one’s mind around the idea that the God who created everything desires relationship with humans on an individual basis. Freewill was necessary for intimate relationship. Sin entered through the choice exercised by Eve in Genesis. This upset the balance of perfection. It is for this reason that there is a constant unrest in the soul of the one who has not reconciled self with the creator. Furthermore, the ones who has reconciled self with the creator sometimes is still discontent because one does not realize the contention between the perfection in which one was created to live and the broken fallen world one must occupy. Creation silently screams a Creator exists and the soul of human’s cry for relationship with the Creator. The fact that one has not connected with this truth does not negate the need. Rather, one attempts to fill this legitimate need in illegitimate ways that many times lead one to need professional help.
Maslow’s theory of basic human needs supports the biblical idea that humans are created for relationship. Maslow proposed a theory pyramid of human needs. Third place on the pyramid is the need for love and a sense of belonging and at the very top of the pyramid is self-actualization. (Maslow, 1943). This theory leads one to understand that one needs to feel important to others, know that one is a part of something bigger than self, and believe one has contributed something that makes the world a better place.
The client who is a 69 year-old man who is struggling with ...

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...n any faith foundation that one exhibits regardless of how minimal the foundation may seem. However, biblical truth applied in the life of a person who lacks faith in God will still yield positive outcomes because truth applied works across all barriers.

Works Cited

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Maslow, A. H. (1943). A theory of human motivation. Psychological review, 50(4), 370.
Torges, C. M., Stewart, A. J., & Nolen-Hoeksema, S. (2008). Regret resolution, aging, and adapting to loss. Psychology and aging, 23(1), 169.

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