Sometimes the words of Solomon ring painfully true. In the book of Ecclesiastes he sighs that everything is “vanity of vanities.” Many of us have had days that seem to prove his point. The lawn mower refuses to start, the laundry multiplies like rabbits, and the toaster burns breakfast just to remind us who appears to be in charge. Job struggled with a similar frustration. He looked around and saw that both good people and wicked people suffered. At times it seemed that doing what was right offered no clear advantage. Elihu addresses this concern directly when he quotes Job’s question: “What advantage will it be to you? What profit shall I have, more than if I had sinned?” That question still echoes in modern life. If everyone eventually reaches the same finish line, why try so hard to live rightly? Old advertisements once encouraged people to “Go for the Gusto,” squeezing every drop of pleasure from life. Job’s struggle sounds surprisingly modern.
Yet the question misses something important. It assumes that goodness is simply a deal we make with God, a trade where good behavior earns blessings in return. In that view, righteousness becomes a transaction. If the rewards disappear, the motivation disappears as well. This idea actually echoes the accusation made by Satan earlier in Job’s story. He suggested that Job served God only because God protected and blessed him. Remove the benefits, Satan argued, and Job would abandon God faster than a shopper leaving a checkout line after spotting the sign that reads “Cash Only.” That kind of faith does not last long. When following God becomes difficult, a reward-based faith quickly runs out of steam. Real faith grows from a different place. It recognizes that obedience may bring hardship and sacrifice. Scripture does teach that wise living often leads to a healthier life, but mature faith moves beyond calculating personal gain. It seeks God because of love rather than profit.
The New Testament explains that the center of faith is not a religious system but a relationship through Jesus Christ. Religion tends to focus on what people do, while the gospel focuses on what God has done. Jesus said, “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son” (John 3:16). That statement reveals the heart behind everything. God acts first in love. Jesus did not come merely to establish another set of rules. He came to restore a relationship between God and humanity. In John 17:3, Jesus describes eternal life this way: “This is eternal life, that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent.” Knowing God changes the question entirely. Life is no longer about calculating benefits or measuring rewards. Instead, it becomes about knowing the One who created us and discovering that goodness flows naturally from that relationship. When Christ stands at the center, righteousness stops feeling pointless and begins to look like love in action.
