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How many readers ever gave a moment’s thought to the meaning of life? Not I. However after attending a series of lectures by Richard W. Wetherill decades ago, I embarked on a thoughtful journey, regarding the meaning of life.
Wetherill spoke of an insight he had been given, describing
the true meaning of life explained by a natural law he called the law of absolute right. It specifi es rational, honest action with results that confi rm or deny the rightness or wrongness of the action taken. All natural laws are self-enforcing, and if people disregard
them, even slightly, what results is troublesome. Daily news- casts report a plethora of troublesome results. Obviously, human beings accumulate so many debilitating
results from their decisions of right and wrong that death is just regarded as inevitable. But is death inevitable? Created natural laws caused the action that created this
planet and its people, and when obeyed, applicable natural laws support the planet and its inhabitants. It is people who, over time, have been unknowingly destroying themselves. It is not the giver of life that destroys human life. It is the
receivers of life who do not live in the rational, honest way called for by the creator’s behavioral law. Instead they live as they please and fi nally are forced to depart this life. Wetherill referred to the law of absolute right as the
creator’s moral code for people to obey. We must all respect the fact that only rational, honest behavior assures the life and well-being of both the planet and its people.
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This public-service message is from a self-fi nanced, nonprofi t group of former students of Mr. Wetherill.
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