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Mankind has long desired to live forever, yet finding the fountain of youth has been elusive. While life-expectancy rates have increased greatly in Western nations since the widespread availability of clean water supplies and sanitation facilities, such advances, along with the miracles of modern medicine, seem to be approaching a limit in their effectiveness at lengthening the human lifespan much further.
This is the finding of a recent study published in the highly respected journal Nature Aging (Associated Press, October 7, 2024). Researchers studying life expectancy in eight places in the world where people live longest have concluded, “We are reaching a plateau.” The locations studied were Australia, France, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Spain, and Switzerland. In the last thirty years, the rate of life expectancy increase in these places has slowed from an additional 2.5 years per decade to 1.5 years per decade today. Researchers also noted that although we are seeing more people reach 100 years of age than we used to see, there are also many more people in the earth, and the percentage of the population reaching this age has remained the same. One researcher commented, “We’re squeezing less and less life out of these life-extending technologies. And the reason is, aging gets in the way.”
It appears that God has put a cap on aging that scientists, with all their wisdom and ingenuity, cannot overcome. Living forever is not a gift God intended humanity to bestow on itself—nor is it His plan that we “figure out” some way of achieving it. However, the Bible reveals that God does intend to grant the gift of unending life to those who choose to follow His Son and live according to His way of life (John 3:16). To discover the real purpose of life, be sure to read or listen to What Is the Meaning of Life?