What do you mean it isn't meant for everyone? As a human being, is it possible to find satisfaction apart from the glory of God?
What I mean by not everyone can have as the point of their life "To Glorify God and Enjoy Him Forever," is that God didn't choose everyone/everyone doesn't choose to have Him as the point of their life.
If you define satisfaction as the dictionary does, as "a state of having put away doubt and uncertainty" then no, I think those living with a Postmodern worldview will find it is not possible to find satisfaction, period. Postmodernism boiled down to its essence is a lack of certainty about everything. It's the tendency to dismiss the possibiity of any sure and settled knowledge of the truth. Strong convictions about any point of truth are judged supremely arrogant and hopelessly naive. Certainty is regarded as inherently eletist, intolerant, oppressive and therefore, wrong. Any degree of certainty has begun to sound offensive to people's postmodern ears. Everyone has his own distinct truth. That's one of the reasons Christians are judged so harshly. (some taken from R.C. Sproul, Lifeviews, Revell, 1986.)
What is truth? God and truth are inseparable. Every thought about the essence of truth--what it is, what makes it "true," and how we can possibly know anything for sure, quickly moves us back to God. That is why God incarnate--Jesus Christ--is called the truth (John 14:6). That is also why it is not particularly surprising when someone who repudiates God (the consistent agnostic, the atheist, the humanist) they reject the truth as well. If a person can't tolerate the thought of God, there is simply no comfortable place for the concept of truth in that person's worldview either. Without truth, life becomes meaningless. "Ecclesiastes 12:8-12 says, If what I have written, serve not to convince thee of the vanity of the world, and the necessity of being religious, neither wouldst thou be convinced if I should write ever so much." If the end be not attained in the use of those books of scripture which God has Blessed us with, neither should we obtain the end, if we had twice as many more; nay, if we had so many that the whole world could not contain them (John 21:25), and much study of them would but confound us, and would rather be a weariness to the flesh than any advantage to the soul. We have as much as God saw fit to give us, saw fit for us, and saw us fit for. (from
Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole Bible, PC Study Bible Formatted Electronic Database Copyright 2006 by Biblesoft, Inc.)
The point to life is God. He is the meaning giver. He is the source of truth and reality.
When I first came on this forum I filled out the questionnaire biography you are asked to do when you introduce yourself. I immediately went through all those biographies and looked at "religion" vs "point of life." I would say 95% or more were Godless and 75% or more though there was no point to life. I cried for a long time. Thinking that there was no point to life led me to the point of Major Depression, Severe with Suicidal Ideation, no hope, no reason to go on, for years, years ago. I've been there. Thinking people take the equation of life trapped on this side of the "wall" without God to it's ultimate conclusion that life is meaningless and suicide is the ultimate answer. With God the answer is unity with our diversity. Universals with our particulars. Absolutes and not just relativity. Standards, morals, values, reality, truth, things that really are, logic, rationality. E. pluribus unum instead of E. pluribus pluribus, one nation under God, out of the many, one, not out of the many, many.
God has stepped through the "wall" between the absolute, the universal, the unseen through divine revelation. Revelation through nature about Himself, through our consciences about His truth (and moral code), through His Word, and most especially
by His Son. He has taken the initiative to break into the world on this side of the "wall" and reveal absolute truth to us.
Two thousand years of accumulated Christian scholarship has been basically consistent on all the major issues: The Bible is the authoritative Word of God, containing every spiritual truth essential to God's glory, our salvation, faith, and eternal life. Scripture tells us that all humanity fell in Adam, and our sin is a perfect bondage from which we cannot extricate ourselves. Jesus is God incarnate, having taken on human flesh to pay the price of sin and redeem believing men and women from sin's bondage. Salvation is by grace through faith, and not a result of any works we do. Christ is the only Savior for the whole world and apart from faith in Him there is no hope of redemption for any sinner. (from John MacArthur,
The Truth War, Nelson, 2007.)
Some Christians would tell you that God has a wonderful plan for your life (and He does if you decide to accept His Son as your Lord and Savior), but "wonderful" is misleading. It also costs to be His disciple. But it is worth it. There is abundant hope in this life and especially because of the next. I didn't say the point of life was "To Glorify God and
Enjoy Him Forever" for no reason. The retirement plan for a Christian is out of this world!