College won’t last forever, but how you live during it will shape who you become for eternity. When you truly understand how much Jesus loves you, your greatest goal won’t be grades or popularity—it’ll be to live every day to please Him.
After graduating from college, I began serving as the college pastor at my home church. As we developed a strategy for reaching students, God used a powerful passage of Scripture to shape both my personal convictions and our ministry direction. In 2 Corinthians 5, the Apostle Paul teaches the church in Corinth about the difference between the temporal and the eternal. He reminds them—and us—that this earthly life is not all there is. We will live forever, but not here and not in our current state. And how we live now deeply impacts the life to come.
Whether you’re walking your college campus or navigating adulthood, you must remember: this is not the final reality. There’s more to life than the narrow lens of the here and now. Christians should especially long for what carries eternal weight, not temporary significance (2 Cor. 5:2). While we’re here, we are called to live faithfully for Jesus (2 Cor. 5:6–8).
Then comes a remarkable statement in verse 9:
“So whether we are at home or away, we make it our aim to please Him.”
Did you catch that? Whether in heaven (home) or on earth (away), our singular aim is to please Christ. What drives your decisions? What fuels your ambition? What keeps you awake at night? For the follower of Jesus, our deepest obsession should be to bring Him glory in every area of life.
Why should this be our aim? Because it was His.
Paul continues:
“For the love of Christ controls us… He died for all, that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for Him who for their sake died and was raised” (2 Cor. 5:14–15).
Paul doesn’t say we’re controlled by guilt, fear, or even obligation. It’s Christ’s love that compels us. When we truly grasp that Jesus took our punishment and died in our place, our hearts are transformed. We no longer want to live for ourselves—we want to please Him.
If our sin deserved death (Rom. 6:23), and Jesus took that death upon Himself (Rom. 5:8), how can we not respond with a life lived entirely for Him?
Let your ambition be clear: whether in the classroom or the workplace, in your relationships or your decisions—make it your aim to please Him.


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