'Making Health the Center of Your Life' and Other Unhelpful Blasphemies

People with healthy habits still become ill. And then, if you have "put health at the center of your life," where are you when your health lets you down? You have no center anymore.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

A health club proudly displays its motto: "Making Health the Center of Your Life."

At first glance, it's a logical claim. After all, they are in the business of keeping people fit and healthy. If you put health at the center of your life, you may put the health club there too. They will appreciate your membership dues.

But "Making Health the Center of Your Life" is actually a terrible motto for living. Because you can go to the gym every day, eat every leafy green and whole grain, focus your entire being on being healthy, and still get sick.

While we can support our own good health, there is absolutely nothing we can do to guarantee it. At some point, every single person's health will deteriorate, right before death, if not much earlier.

People with healthy habits still become ill. And then, if you have "put health at the center of your life," where are you when your health lets you down? You have no center anymore.

It's just another version of the message that we hear everywhere: "Put yourself at the center of your life." When you like yourself and when life is good, it seems to work. But nobody's life is perfect enough to be the center of anything for long. We need a better center.

This season at my church, we are in the middle of a Ten Commandments sermon series. The first four are about making God the center. The next six are about how to treat other people. It's as if God wanted 10 different ways to say: "It's not all about you."

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot