You may have heard that the world is ending tomorrow. Given, a quick search reveals that people expect a cataclysm every September 23rd and Hollywood movies have made allusions about that specific date for years. Back in 1977 William S. Burroughs suggested that the number 23 itself is meaningful, and people have run with it ever since.
There’s even a Jim Carrey movie about it!
Side note: back in college a couple in married housing had some of us over for dinner and a movie, and we watched The Number 23. Part way through I said, “Hey guys, you realize the date?” Our host quietly swore, while his wife was confused. “What are you talking about? It’s the twelfth.” I answered quietly, “The twelfth day of the eleventh month.” Then she yelled at me and told me shut up.
Or try this date: 9/11/2001
9+11+2+0+0+1 = 23
Play with any set of numbers long enough and you can probably make it work. Even my birthday (5/25/83) converts to that weird number with no effort at all. But this year is special. I guess? You know, because it ends in 23. Of course, when you get down to it our system of dating is arbitrary in the cosmological sense. Remember when the Mayan calendar said the world would end in 2012? If not, I’m here to let you know that it didn’t (as far as I can tell).
And yet, and yet…
Things do seem to be getting weirder. Even people who aren’t in the conspiracy space, the “normies,” are looking around waiting for something big to happen. We can’t trust the news anymore, and perhaps we’ve always trusted it more than we should. Now it’s almost a given that the government is constantly misleading us. So when we hear reports about the military having extraterrestrial craft, or see a video of woman getting off a plane because TMFIR, or are told that a highly experimental vaccine will save humanity, the automatic response is, “Mayyybee?”
So I can’t tell that the world isn’t going to end tomorrow. Mayybee it will.
What I can say with some certainty is that eventually every individual’s life will end, which on a personal level is about the same as the world ending.
And when that day comes, it will probably be connected to the number 23.
Because of course it will.
Where does that leave me? I think of Ecclesiastes, which reminds us that we work or take our pleasures, and in the end we die. Life is toilsome and uncertain, though it’s better for us if we openly fear God (8:12). Still, all our grand achievements or banal indulgences are meaningless after we’re dead and gone. “So I commend pleasure, for there is nothing good for a man under the sun except to eat and to drink and to be merry, and this will stand by him in his toils throughout the days of his life which God has given him under the sun (8:15).”
If the world ends to tomorrow, or just my life ends, I intend to enjoy my work today and the pleasures of life.