Gjallarhorn
N'yog-Sothep
Heaven has always been explained to me as a place where sin cannot exist. Sin is (as I have been told by many many Christians) part of human nature. In fact it is one of the defining pieces of what Christians call "human nature". When worthy/saved souls enter heaven, something happens to eliminate their sinful nature, thereby altering their human nature.
This all sums up to my question: if you remove a fundamental piece of our inner nature, are you still you? What I mean by that is, people have defined their entire lives by certain things. If sin is a piece of human nature, and that piece is removed, are Christians going to have the same sort of euphoria upon entering Heaven as someone who still knows sin? Would they even care? If lack of sin is all you know and all you can know (after all knowledge of sin is removed, of course), would being in Heaven mean anything at all?
This all sums up to my question: if you remove a fundamental piece of our inner nature, are you still you? What I mean by that is, people have defined their entire lives by certain things. If sin is a piece of human nature, and that piece is removed, are Christians going to have the same sort of euphoria upon entering Heaven as someone who still knows sin? Would they even care? If lack of sin is all you know and all you can know (after all knowledge of sin is removed, of course), would being in Heaven mean anything at all?