Nimos
Well-Known Member
Might be, I didn't understand any of it and fail to see how that relate to what I wroteCommon human sense really.
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Might be, I didn't understand any of it and fail to see how that relate to what I wroteCommon human sense really.
This question is for believers and nonbelievers.
If God exists/existed would God welcome everyone into heaven as soon as they died, regardless of the kind of life they had lived on earth? For example, would God welcome a mass murderer into heaven and treat him the same way as a person who had lived a noble life serving others and worshiping God?
If you think God would welcome everyone into heaven, why would God do that?
If you think God would not welcome everyone into heaven why wouldn’t God do that?
I agree, that is why I would assume that a state of limbo exists, if we go anywhere in the first place. Which I would not assume, what would be the purpose for keeping our souls, either in a Heaven or in a state of limbo for that matter?My first question is why you would think that Heaven would serve the purpose related to the way a God would design us, for some to be favored over others. I do not believe that is why Heaven exists. I believe Heaven exists because we all have immortal souls so they have to continue to exist somewhere after our bodies die. I do not believe that God 'favors' some souls over others but rather we reap in Heaven what we sow in this life.
The reason being that free will doesn't really explain anything. Whether we have free will or not, makes not difference, as we wouldn't be able to know the difference anyway.Why would it mean God is incompetent if we had bad behavior? I believe that God gave us free will so we could choose between good and bad behavior.
It might be, im purely talking about this from what we can see in the world and what we at least know up until now.Again, you are viewing Heaven as a 'place' God sends people to get their reward for good behavior.
I believe Heaven exists simply because God created Heaven, just as God created Earth, since we need both as part of our total existence.
God did make us as He wanted us to be, but then we made choices after which will determine if we go to Heaven or.... the other place.
Depending what your view of heaven is, I would say that no one is living there, as long as you have suffering, there can't be one. At least not in my understanding of it.You raised some good points. It is a Baha'i belief that we can be in Heaven or Hell in this life as well as in the afterlife, since Heaven is nearness to God and Hell is separation from God. Some people are already living in Hell. Haven't you ever heard the expression "this is hell" ? Hell is a state of the soul that is in misery and conversely Heaven is a state of the soul that is blissful.. Nobody has to wait till they die to be in these states.
Taking into account what I wrote above, How do you see this being expressed in the world, keep in mind that God loves all humans? (At least I assume he does)I agree with that in part. God is a creator God who is interested in His creation as a whole, but I believe that God is more interested in humans than any other part of His creation.
This is because you do not know Eastern religions. The punishment is calibrated to the sin. Moreover, if there is some serious torture in some cases, its effects do not show in the next birth. Karma in Hinduism - Wikipedia gives you some details.Now there are some purgatory concepts already out there but in my opinion they tend to be utterly excessive and ill-suited to teaching life lessons. Some of the temporary hell concepts in Eastern religions involve extreme torture (burning, mutilation, boiling, etc) that lasts for billions of years. I honestly don't see how that accomplishes anything.
This is because you do not know Eastern religions. The punishment is calibrated to the sin. Moreover, if there is some serious torture in some cases, its effects do not show in the next birth. Karma in Hinduism - Wikipedia gives you some details..
Kindly know that this is not the only kind of belief in Hinduism. I am an atheist Hindu believing in non-duality. So, there is no one to judge my actions (karmas) other than society and myself. Society will take cognizance of my actions if it knows about them. For actions that the society does not come to know about, I am my own judge. One cannot fool the judge, if a person himself is the judge for his/her actions. I know if I fault somewhere. I try to eradicate that fault because it may have a wrong effect on the society. After death, there is nothing other than recycling and what constitutes me will go to become part of millions of other living and non-living things
This question is for believers and nonbelievers.
If God exists/existed would God welcome everyone into heaven as soon as they died, regardless of the kind of life they had lived on earth? For example, would God welcome a mass murderer into heaven and treat him the same way as a person who had lived a noble life serving others and worshiping God?
If you think God would welcome everyone into heaven, why would God do that?
If you think God would not welcome everyone into heaven why wouldn’t God do that?
Thanks for sharing. I did not know that about Catholicism. This is very similar to my Baha'i beliefs. We choose self or we choose God, and when we choose God we choose to love others more than ourselves. Baha'u'llah enjoined us to 'prefer' our brother to ourselves. He also taught that the greatest prison is the prison of self.
40: O MY SERVANT! Free thyself from the fetters of this world, and loose thy soul from the prison of self. Seize thy chance, for it will come to thee no more. The Hidden Words of Bahá’u’lláh, p. 36
I am a firm believer in free will and that it is always our choice to choose self or God.
I believe that heaven is nearness to God and hell is distance from God, so we determine where we will end up by the choices we make.
Very nice way that you have put here. A like for that. The two examples that you have mentioned are very noble and fair. No harm to trees and sharing of food. A Hindu child who harms shrubs or trees will be admonished by his elders.Serious torture would be one such example of what I'm talking about. A quick search for Naraka gives the following image
A couple of examples:
Asipatravana/Asipatrakanana (forest of sword leaves): The Bhagavata Purana and the Devi Bhagavata Purana reserve this hell for a person who digresses from the religious teachings of the Vedas and indulges in heresy. The Vishnu Purana states that wanton tree-felling leads to this hell. Yamadutas beat them with whips as they try to run away in the forest where palm trees have swords as leaves. Afflicted with injury of whips and swords, they faint and cry out for help in vain.
Krimibhojana/Krimibhaksha (worm-food): As per the Bhagavata Purana and the Devi Bhagavata Purana, it is where a person who does not share his food with guests, elders, children or the gods, and selfishly eats it alone, and he who eats without performing the five yajnas (panchayajna) is chastised. The Vishnu Purana states that one who loathes his father, Brahmins or the gods and who destroys jewels is punished here. This hell is a 100,000 yojana lake filled with worms. The sinful person is reduced to a worm, who feeds on other worms, who in turn devour his body for 100,000 years.
If you don't believe in the torments I illustrated above then my criticism doesn't apply to you any more than my criticism of eternal hellfire applies to all Christians.
Since I've got church soon, I'll just answer the last two questions as one question.
Everyone is welcome into Heaven. But not everyone wants to go there.
I also believe we have to 'earn' the right to be in Heaven.
Currently I believe that evil people go to hell but they are supplied their happiness by non-violent cop-doctors. In order to be happy with out becoming sadsiticated God must help everyone.
Assuming Hell exists and people are cast down into it, I think the first thing that happens to someone in Hell is they are given omnipotent powers.
Now at first this may sound like a good thing. But after having sex with two chicks two million times you will become bored.
Your mind has a very limited capacity for imagination. Very quickly you will exhaust all your own personal creativity.
You will then be seeking out God with humility begging him to let you into the gates of Heaven so you can experience eternal bliss and put an end to your suffering from boredom. And God will let you in because God is not a sadist even though the sadists prefer God to be one.
Hell doesn't need to be real to serve its purpose of getting people to not "sin" against the rules of which ever religion or which ever God. It is the threat of living beyond this life and having to suffer the consequences for having lived an "evil" life. But, where is the line where a person is too evil to go to the good place, the heavenly realm, or to be sent to the bad place? I've heard the stories of having to walk the razors edge or having your good deeds put on a scale and weighed against your bad deeds. Whatever it is, the message to people is to do, mostly, good deeds in this life.Assuming Hell exists and people are cast down into it, I think the first thing that happens to someone in Hell is they are given omnipotent powers. Now at first this may sound like a good thing. But after having sex with two chicks two million times you will become bored. Your mind has a very limited capacity for imagination. Very quickly you will exhaust all your own personal creativity. You will then be seeking out God with humility begging him to let you into the gates of Heaven so you can experience eternal bliss and put an end to your suffering from boredom. And God will let you in because God is not a sadist even though the sadists prefer God to be one.
I just love that verse....
Thanks for the full disclosure. I am certain there is an afterlife, and I believe that based upon what my religion teaches as well as other books I have read on the afterlife. However, like you, I cannot claim any specifics about the afterlife.Full disclosure, I don't believe in capital G God and my stance on the afterlife is that we just don't know. I'm inclined towards belief in something rather than nothing but this is based only on gut feeling rather than anything rational and I can't claim firm belief in any specifics.
I do appreciate that you have answered the question I asked because most people didn't. However, that is par for the course on these forums.With that in mind, I'm going to treat this as a hypothetical.
I believe that God is able to prevent suffering since God is All-Powerful, but God does not prevent it for two reasons: (1) Free will decisions people make causes much of the suffering and God does not interfere with free will, and (2) People can benefit from suffering.This is going to be what I personally think a just God would do. Based on how the world is, I'm also going to assume that this God isn't able to prevent suffering but instead attempts to make something positive out of it.
I believe that God is Loving and Just and that God wants people to be happy. However, it is not Loving to allow some people to do horrific things to other people and it is not Just to not punish them for their acts. How that punishment is doled out is another matter, that would be God's call, not ours.I imagine that a just God would want people to be happy in the afterlife but would also want them to learn their lessons. Eternal torment wouldn't achieve this, though a temporary purgatory state might.
According to some afterlife accounts I have read that come from those who claim to have experienced the afterlife or those who have communicated with departed spirits, there is a kind of purgatory where people go before they go to Heaven or Hell, kind of like a waiting room. In that place, souls from higher levels come to help those who are confused and want help. Not everyone wants help, so some souls will eventually go to Hell, which is a choice. I do not believe that Heaven and Hell are 'places' we go to but rather they are states of the soul, and they exist in this earthly life as well as in the afterlife.That purgatory would probably teach best by making its inhabitants experience for themselves the suffering that they caused in life. So a plantation owner from the 1800's might experience what it was like to be a slave. The more brutally the plantation owner treated their slaves in life, the more brutal their purgatory would be. A billionaire who made his money by exploiting his workforce may have to experience what it's like to be at the bottom of that company. A serial killer may have to experience the pain and terror of his victims as well as the grief of their families.
I do not believe in anything like that and I agree such punishments are inappropriate and unnecessary.Now there are some purgatory concepts already out there but in my opinion they tend to be utterly excessive and ill-suited to teaching life lessons. Some of the temporary hell concepts in Eastern religions involve extreme torture (burning, mutilation, boiling, etc) that lasts for billions of years. I honestly don't see how that accomplishes anything.
I also do not believe that any soul is 'doomed' to eternal torment, but I am not sure if there are any 'second chances' either. I believe that we reap what we sowed in this life in the sense that after we die, we will be whoever we became in this life; no more or no less. Thus if we do not acquire spiritual qualities (which just means good character) in this life, we won't be able to acquire them after we die. That does not mean we cannot make progress in the afterlife, but I believe we will only progress by the mercy of God and the prayers of others, not by our free will choices and actions that ensue.Eventually, a soul would have learned its lessons and be fit for entry into heaven or perhaps another shot at life on earth. For some souls, those lessons may take longer and be harsher than for others. Ultimately though, no soul would be doomed to eternal torment.
Well said.Everyone is welcome into Heaven. But not everyone wants to go there.
Well said.
Why would a Loving God force people to go where they do not want to go?
I believe we all make our own choices.
Not just the God of Bible but any Abrahamic God. You don't have the choice of not believing.The unbelieving don't want God, but neither do they want to be in the Lake of Fire. The 'loving God' of the Bible will force them there.