That would be because there are "why's" and "becauses" for everything. That is why people dedicate their lives to the study of such things. It's called medical science. There are a multitude of fields of science that study the "why's" and "becauses" of a whole range of subjects. You don't think we need them?
Why is there God?
If we are meant to die then why hasn't evolution given us what the animals have....no concept of their own death?
Natural trade-off. Either a simple brain, or a complex one able to introspect our own existence. The latter was more useful for our success and got selected. And it gave us spirituality to compensate the associated problems. Those things, including belief in god, are also naturally selected. Someone who believes these things can find purpose until it duplicates. And that was good enough. It worked nicely. At least, until now.
You do know that there is a distinct difference between immortality and everlasting life, don't you?
Yes. i also saw the Highlander (the movie),
Humans were never offered immortality...they were offered unending life in their mortal flesh if they just followed the instructions of their Maker. He had provided the means right there in the garden. This is something science has been working on since time immemorial...the search for the "Fountain of Youth" is legendary. People don't want to get old or sick or die....but once sin entered into the world through the disobedience of one man, that is all there was to look forward to. God provided a rescuer in the form of his son.
The fountain of youth can get you only so far until thermodynamical death. When that strikes, that's it. There is no known escape from the second principle.
Unless you know what God offered humankind in the beginning, his offering of immortal life in heaven to a chosen few, will mean very little.
I know what some humans wrote about God. And that is all you know, too. Pending additional, independent, evidence that the God of the Bible, or any god made up by man, exists.
Would they? Would you undergo an unfair trial that found you guilty of something you did not do knowing it carried the death penalty? Would you willingly submit to whipping with a flagellum, (a whip with fragments of bone) tearing your flesh off your body? Would you volunteer to have opposers spit in your face and force a thorny crown into your scalp? Weakened by all this you are then forced to carry an enormous beam of wood that was going to be used to execute you.
Would you like soldiers to hammer nails through the flesh on your hands and feet and hang you up so that you suffered for hours in agony? The only way to avoid suffocation was to push up with your feet to take a breath, but when they had enjoyed your suffering long enough, they came along and broke your legs so that you couldn't breathe anymore? This was a common form of Roman execution. At least for Jesus, they didn't have to break his legs....he had already died. The criminals hung alongside him had their legs broken.
You think all of that was a piece of cake because you had been promised a resurrection? Seriously?
Yes. Of course. It is like undergoing a very painful operation that you know will make you new. In this case, not only new but it will turn you into the Master of the Universe. Or a third thereof. De facto.
I can think of a couple of politicians who will be happy to suffer a few whipping and a horrible execution unjustly, if that leads to such a certain end result.
In Italy thay say: the last who laughes, laughes better.
So, no big deal, really. I find it puzzling that you consider it a sacrifice at all. I think that jumping into dangerous waters to save a child, without certainty to survive or magically resurrect, is vastly more admirable.
Ciao
- viole