Dr. M. P Manahan, Sr.

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The Great Contest: Why a Lifetime of Achievement Means Nothing Without God

By conventional measures, Dr. M. P. Manahan, Sr. achieved everything.

Five graduate and undergraduate degrees. A doctorate from MIT. 45 years leading pioneering nuclear research. Founder of a successful engineering firm. Respected, published, accomplished.

By the world’s standard, this is the life most people dream of.

Yet after decades of achievement, Dr. Manahan discovered something that changed everything: All of it was worth nothing.

Not because achievement is evil. But because achievement without God is hollow.

The Trap of Worldly Success

Our culture teaches us that fulfillment comes through:

  • Accomplishment. Achieve great things, and you’ll be happy.
  • Acquisition. Gain wealth, status, possessions, and you’ll be satisfied.
  • Achievement. Excel in your field, and you’ll find meaning.

And these aren’t wrong, exactly. Achievement does bring a certain satisfaction. Success does provide comfort.

But they don’t provide purpose.

A man can hold every credential, build every empire, and still wake in the night haunted by the question: “Is this all there is?”

Because achievement is finite. A career eventually ends. Possessions eventually rust. Status eventually fades. And then what?

Why Prison Ministry Changed Everything

In 1987, Dr. Manahan began volunteer prison chaplaincy at Rockview State Correctional Institution. He served for 36 years.

Prison isn’t a place where the world’s achievement happens. It’s a place where achievement is irrelevant.

Inside those walls, credentials don’t matter. Wealth means nothing. Status is powerless.

What matters is: Do you know Jesus? Will you surrender to Him? Is your life pointing toward eternity or away from it?

For 36 years, Dr. Manahan walked alongside men who’d lost everything the world values. And in that loss, he discovered something the world never teaches: Freedom.

True freedom isn’t the freedom to do whatever you want. It’s the freedom to know your purpose and live it.

These men—many of them broken, guilty, hopeless—found something that all his degrees never gave him: peace with God.

The Great Contest Reframes Everything

In prison, Dr. Manahan witnessed the Great Contest—the cosmic battle between God’s truth and Satan’s deception—in its rawest form.

He saw men who’d sold their souls to sin discover redemption in Christ. He saw faith arise in the darkest places. He saw purpose emerge in men who’d been told they were worthless.

And he realized: The Great Contest isn’t happening in boardrooms or laboratories. It’s happening in human hearts.

While the world obsesses over promotions and accolades, an eternal conflict rages for the soul. Moment by moment, choice by choice, we’re choosing between:

  • God’s truth (that we’re made in His image, loved by Him, called to worship Him), or
  • Satan’s deception (that we’re accidents, that power is what matters, that we are our own gods)

The man with five degrees can be deceived. The billionaire can miss the truth. The famous can be spiritually blind.

And the prisoner can have the faith that moves mountains.

What Achievement Without God Produces

The Book of Ecclesiastes is written by a man who achieved everything and then asked: “What’s the point?”

The writer—traditionally understood as Solomon, the wisest and wealthiest king in history—tested every earthly pursuit:

  • Pleasure: He sought it, and it was empty.
  • Work: He labored, and it was meaningless.
  • Knowledge: He pursued wisdom, and it left him grieving.
  • Wealth: He accumulated riches, and they couldn’t fill his soul.

His conclusion: “Vanity of vanities. All is vanity.”

This isn’t pessimism. It’s honesty.

And it leads to one conclusion: “Fear God and keep his commandments, for this is the whole duty of man.”

Everything else—achievement, acquisition, advancement—finds meaning only in the context of relationship with God. Apart from Him, it’s all smoke.

Why This Matters for You

You might not be an MIT-educated engineer. But you’re probably chasing some version of worldly success.

Maybe it’s:

  • Career advancement
  • Financial security
  • Respect and status
  • Achievement in your field
  • The approval of others

And there’s nothing wrong with these pursuits, in themselves. Work is noble. Providing for your family is good. Excellence honors God.

But if these are your ultimate goals, you will be disappointed.

Because none of them answer the fundamental question of human existence: “Why am I here? What is my purpose? Where is my life heading?”

Those questions can only be answered in relationship to God.

The Inversion of Values

Here’s what Dr. Manahan discovered: The values that matter most are the opposite of what the world teaches.

The world says: Be strong. God says: Be humble.

The world says: Look out for yourself. God says: Deny yourself.

The world says: Accumulate power. God says: Serve others.

The world says: Climb higher. God says: Become smaller so I can become larger.

Most of us spend our lives pursuing what the world values and then wonder why we’re empty.

The invitation of The Great Contest is simple: Stop chasing the world’s prizes and start pursuing God’s truth.

Not because achievement is bad. But because achievement finds its proper place only when it’s submitted to God’s purpose.

Your work becomes worship. Your success becomes stewardship. Your achievement becomes service.

And suddenly, life has meaning that no promotion could provide.

The Only Truly Satisfying Life

After 45 years in engineering and 36 years in prison ministry, Dr. Manahan’s life wasn’t defined by his degrees or his discoveries.

It was defined by one thing: His surrender to Christ.

That’s not a diminishment. That’s the fullest possible life.

Because he’s discovered what the world never teaches: Meaning doesn’t come from doing great things. It comes from knowing the God who is Great.

If you’re climbing the ladder of worldly success and something whispers that it’s not enough—trust that whisper. It’s the voice of God calling you to something infinitely greater.

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