He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end
– Ecclesiastes 3:11 (NIV)
It is truly amazing that God placed eternity inside the hearts of mortal men. Fragile, limited, time-bound humans who yet carrying within them the capacity to know the Eternal One. Scripture says, “He has set eternity in their hearts” (Ecclesiastes 3:11), and Jesus defines eternal life not as endless existence, but as knowing God (John 17:3).
Eternal life is a relationship, not just a destination.
From the moment of creation, man was crafted for this purpose. God formed a being (Adam) who could reflect Him, commune with Him, and walk with Him in unbroken fellowship (Genesis 1:26-27). What sustained man in the beginning was not merely food or intellect, it was the pure knowledge of God. His identity, purpose, strength, and wisdom all flowed from divine communion.
But when man’s knowledge became corrupt, something deeper than disobedience occurred. Man stepped out of God’s reality into another timeline, one marked by fear instead of faith, toil instead of rest, and mortality instead of unending life (Romans 5:12). Mortality became a reminder that something precious had been lost. Instead of living from God, man began living away from God.
This leads us to a profound question:
Is Mortality a Curse to Man?
Mortality feels like a curse. Our bodies weaken, our days expire, opportunities close, and life ends whether we are ready or not. How can beings with eternity in their hearts be trapped in fading bodies?
Biblically, mortality is not the curse itself but death is the curse of sin. But for the believer, mortality now serves a redemptive purpose:
1. Mortality reminds us that we are not self-sufficient.
It dismantles the illusion that man can be his own god. Paul said, “We have this treasure in earthen vessels” (2 Corinthians 4:7). Our limits push us toward grace.
2. Mortality becomes the doorway into true life.
Because of Christ, death is no longer a wall but a gateway. “To live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Philippians 1:21).
3. Mortality protects us from living forever in a fallen state.
After the fall, God barred Adam from the tree of life so he would not live eternally in corruption (Genesis 3:22–24). Mortality was mercy — a temporary state until redemption came.
4. Mortality gives our choices weight and urgency.
When time is limited, purpose becomes meaningful. “Teach us to number our days” (Psalms 90:12). Mortality sharpens obedience and deepens love.
5. Mortality reveals the hope of immortality through Christ.
In Jesus, mortality is swallowed by immortality. “Death is swallowed up in victory” (1 Corinthians 15:54). The gospel does not ignore mortality instead it transforms it.
The Beautiful Mystery of Christ’s Mortality
Jesus Himself put on mortality. He took on flesh (John 1:14) so He could open the way for all men to receive eternal life. He entered our limitation so we could inherit His endless life.
Mortality, then, is not God’s punishment but God’s escape plan a temporary condition ensuring humanity would not remain forever broken. Through Christ, mortality becomes the cocoon from which immortality emerges.
Lastly
You have an eternal calling as a mortal man. A transient body with an eternal aim. A delicate container that holds God’s life. So, live with eternity in mind. Stroll alongside God. Seek His wisdom.





