Journal 22 – Argument for Tragedy’s Sake about Heaven
UncategorizedI have serious doubts that heaven is a retirement home where you can do as you wish as if you just recently turned 65 years of age. The notion of when someone perishes close to them, on why they should assume they can responsibly say the most unending cliché expressions, such as the first one, “He is in a much better place now,” or “May such and such rest in peace” makes me wonder why someone would make that assumption. What if it’s not heaven, but rather your next existence that no one has ever been able to come back to this world and give us the ins and outs of what it’s like in the afterlife. It stuns me that heaven is a destination rather than a mindset. Heaven I think can be achieved here as well, and if not there, only here alone, if what I think is more than likely to be the swift realization. I don’t like to predict the weather during any season unless you’re in San Diego, California.
Just like a rational scientist who only uses the scientific method to verify empirical knowledge, I also think it’s important not to jump to conclusions if you have any creative ideas of your own interpretation about what the afterlife is like. If I were to be truly married to the scientific method about the afterlife, I wouldn’t be an exorcist with the things that I have seen. If I took an atheist to one of my exorcisms, they would immediately change their mind in one second. I do not want to convince people to stray away from their beliefs of what heaven is like. Maybe that’s what they need in order to make them feel comfortable. But for this person, I think that’s leaving a window of possible reality where disappointment could be a general possibility. I don’t count my chickens before the eggs even hatch, the same as my dislike for predicting the weather.
I’ve seen plenty of people live a life of crime and extreme immorality, believing that their friends, birds of a feather, and themselves after they pass too, are going to a better place or are also foolishly expressing the often mentioned clichés “May he rest in peace” as if God does not bother to swiftly punish them for their immoral behavior or even worse, corruption or violent behavior on instinct. Just as people commit crimes and must be thrown away in prison here, I believe the same holds true in the afterlife if God decides they need to do more hard time for their acts and misdeeds. I would never put torture out of the equation. Again, if you are aware of the Old Testament, he has a highly violent temperament.
And what of those people who lost their loved ones or were thrown out on the street or were beaten or mugged by someone? Do they not get justice for their loss in the afterlife? Jesus never said the wicked could rampage to their heart’s content and that all their rampages would be forgiven, just because he died on the cross. I think it should have been assumed that their sins they commit would be much less heartless. Maybe they thought they could have carté blanché to do what they wished. Again, people who are corrupt, violent and the like, should never assume they will be in a retirement home after they perish. Assumption is the mother of all you know what to put next. Put what I just said into consideration if you rush to conclusions. Adopt the scientific method in the case of this matter if you are a strong person of faith. You might be happier that way if it ends up not being what you expected.
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