If I may quietly jump into this thread ...
First of all, why do you think that everything is nothing, and what does nothing mean in that respect?
Wait, did I say everything is nothing
I am unsure, actually. I am just trying to figure this all out. I actually don't really think anything like that, I was just presenting an angle.
The world is ephemeral inasmuch that our lifetime is limited and knowledge of an afterlife does not exist, including the question whether there is one. So the conclusion would be that it is reasonable to make the most of the things we can be certain of, i.e. that very limited span of time at our disposal.
Of course this doesn't answer the question of what everything is. (At this point I want to quietly add that ontology has always been fairly obscure to me).
It's a really interesting question to ask though ... Suffice it to say for the beginning that our world is more than nothing (not very creative or insightful, I admit), but let me ask you another question:
Can you imagine true nothingness?
Yeah, I suppose it is more than nothing, otherwise it wouldn't exist. But nothing is a something, I suppose. I don't know. By our definition, it is a something.
And if I could imagine true nothingness, I wouldn't be here. I really can't. I don't understand what nothing means.
Understanding the universe?
It's great being in the company of ENTP's, I love how you guys attack life, full on, at a million miles an hour and are well developed critical thinkers. Hey yo!
Hey, thanks! I may be a critical thinker, but I seem to be having problems being articulate
Everyone has touched on the problems in finding truth, and I'll just summarize the four questions that have come up so far; origin (where did we come from; cosmology), meaning (for what purpose did we come into existence), morality (how to live justly between people), and finding hope to give us a continued assurance; in keeping with the previous questions.
I'm not a relativist, so the answers to those questions have to be correspondingly true, and as a whole, coherent. Like Liquid Laser has said though, you have to experience it, and as some of my friends have suggested, you have to identify with truth itself.
Gotta find the truth first, though. But let's tackle what you have to say, which I am about to read next!
I have experienced the truth of unity in diversity through my faith relationship with Christ.
Curious, how did this come to be? Your faith and the truth you have experienced.
Existentially, Christ offers the answers to our origin, meaning, morality, and gives hope that assures a destiny, for me. In practicality it sounds like this: I was made by God (origin)
And to God you will return for judging, one day, as it is written at least.
I was made to live in a covenant relationship with God (meaning), I was made to exist within the boundaries of that relationship (morality), and Christ came to earth to live within us and give us a hope that assures an eternal destiny.
How do you know all this is true? I know what it says, and the basic reasons. I know Christianity offers reasons and answers, but how do you know?
Everything about it, to me, represents love and what a gift it is to be alive. Unsettling questions like what is this earth, this time, and our ultimate purpose, just dissolve away, in light of what I've experienced through knowing Christ in my life.
It is a gift. Whoever/whatever created me, it certainly has been a great life. But I was created to question and challenge, even that which created me.
I can't just accept that I will die one day, and not know, just follow blindly until I have met my judging. I think of time, space, how we were created, things that make the normal human's mind spin and spin for hours. And yet, as much as I hate it, I can't not ask the questions. I want to see if I can put into some boundaries some truth, some ideas.
Even if I don't know everything, having such a relationship doesn't make it all go away for me. In fact, if I were to follow strongly in such a relationship, the guarantee of such a passage one day would make me question it all the more. I suppose I will experience the finding of some kind of truth one day, or accept some of Christianity. But I have to read the Bible, figure out what I think is true, what ideas have been manipulated (that is the thing, there are so many interpretations and manipulations. I don't think you go to hell for every little thing. One lie you don't regret, homosexuality, being of another religion, etc)
Not knowing where this question is leading (sounds rather sinister) I will add my 3cents. Yes it is possible to confuse spirituality with pleasure of the body and many MANY people throughout the ages have known this. It's not a great SECRET or anything.

yours truly...the undercover lover
Haha, thank you undercover lover!
*shrugs*
Maybe there is something to spirituality and pleasure though.