Concept of life - philosphy

in ocd •  5 years ago  (edited)

Today perhaps you're in school. Somewhere close to the ages of 18 and 24. In any case, shouldn't something be said about Tomorrow?

You graduate. You find a new line of work. You get hitched. You have kids. You experience a couple of more occupations. You purchase a house. Alright, THEN what?

You go to soccer matches for your children. You attempt to be a decent parent and life partner. You watch your kids go to the prom. Despite the fact that Yesterday they were wearing diapers. You do and express the words your folks did and stated, despite the fact that you promised you never would.

You have an emotional meltdown or two. Your kids move on from school. You become a grandparent. Somebody calls you grandmother or grandpa. You experience your life in recreation, drawing salary from a retirement finance. You go for strolls in the first part of the day. You work in the nursery. You read the paper. You stare at the TV. You converse with your youngsters and grandkids on the telephone. You travel.

Alright, THEN what?

Indeed, at that point, sometime in the future, you kick the bucket. In the event that you are blessed, you carry on with a moderately long life. Seventy to 90 years. On the off chance that you don't escape rashly by malignancy or a fender bender. However, consistently, inevitably, beyond words. Demise is the Tomorrow that anticipates every one of us, the unavoidable Then that none of us can get away.

Yet, is that it? Is there much else?

Some time or another you'll be only a body. They'll cover your body in the ground. Or on the other hand consume your body and put your fiery debris in a urn. The unavoidable issue is, Will I stop after that? Will there still be a cognizant ME some place? Is there truly eternal life?

In truth, we presumably all expectation there is something that comes after. Perhaps in the littlest openings of our brains, we are anticipating it.

What are we anticipating? An eternal life or something to that affect. Some call it heaven. Some call it paradise. Some likewise discuss hellfire.

Another idea that numerous individuals have all through life, frequently subliminally, is: I'm a fundamentally decent individual. Consequently, I will get the chance to go to paradise sometime in the not so distant future.

Is that how it functions?

Numerous individuals think they are "sufficient" for paradise. It's a suspicion we make. On the off chance that we haven't ransacked a bank, or killed anybody, or undermined our charges, we believe we're only the sort of people God is searching for to populate his home. By golly, we are adequate.

At paradise's film industry, we purchased our ticket by being essentially great individuals all for the duration of our lives.

In any case, imagine a scenario in which that reasoning is off base. At that point what? What a thing to have been off-base about! What a discharge failure!

In the event that you believe you're sufficient for paradise, there are two interesting points:

(1) If paradise is a position of perfection1, how might anybody be sufficient?

The greater part of us would state we have a "carefully guarded secret." At least one. Something we trust nobody ever gets some answers concerning us. A mix-up from before. A poor choice. A snapshot of shortcoming or idiocy that we'd preferably not consider.

That is the extraordinary. Be that as it may, there are numerous other increasingly regular things we don't generally need others to know or notice about us. It may be the "innocent embellishments" we tell. Or then again how we talk despite somebody's good faith. Or then again how we duplicate other individuals' schoolwork. Or then again the heartless words we state to individuals. Or then again the cruel contemplations we have about individuals.

Substantially more than a one-time unfortunate occasion, our lives, in the event that we intently examine them, demonstrate an example of bad behavior. We frequently don't do what we accept to be correct. Furthermore, we regularly do what we accept isn't right.

We all, even individuals whom we would call essentially great, are likewise fundamentally egotistical and fundamentally very imperfect.2

All that we do is seen by God.3 So that implies there's no tricking him. He's impeccably mindful of all the great we haven't done (but then could have), just as all the awful we've done. He even knows the majority of our musings and the majority of our thought processes.

Here's the subsequent interesting point in the event that we believe we're "adequate" for paradise: (2) Is it conceivable to be a fundamentally decent individual and still have rejected God?

Consider Ralph. He's a "decent" individual. He was moral in his activity. He never took even a paper cut. He was an unwavering dad and spouse. He accommodated his youngsters. He made penances for them and for his significant other (whom he never undermined). He even offered cash to numerous foundations for an incredible duration.

Be that as it may, Ralph, however great in some sense, never "let God in." Many occasions throughout his life, Ralph detected God's longing to come into his life. Maybe God were thumping on the entryway of Ralph's heart. In any case, Ralph never opened that entryway. He generally thought of some reason not to. Unexpectedly, one of the common reasons was, I've been a decent individual for my entire life. I will go to paradise.

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