AJ: You say: "But you and I will find out who's right. I'm content to wait. However, I don't think you can afford to".
These are very old hooks and manipulative apologetic strategies...
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jun 02, 2022 8:40 pmThis is just the truth. It has nothing to do with strategy.
But if you don't like the truth, why don't you "visualize and conceptualize" something you do like...and see if it comes true.
I recognize and accept that you cannot understand what I am talking about. Again it appears that fanaticism has you in its grip.
If you asked me to comment on the *afterworld* or
worlds beyond or continuing life after this terrestrial life has ended, I do not think I could respond through conventional concepts. But the notions that dominate your assertions are, of course, derived from strict Biblical reading.
You have misunderstood once again! If I refer to
visualization and conceptualization I am referring to what you (for example) visualize and conceptualize when you yourself imagine a world beyond this one (either a hell-realm or a heaven-realm since, it would appear, you cannot or do not conceive of a purification process like purgatory). When you do this you are entertaining a conceptual image in your mind and imagination.
It may be that what you *see* is real, but it may also be that it is a) incomplete, b) a distortion of what will be, and also c) simply wrong in other ways. Yet you have no alternative except to hold to the notion that you do have. To believe that it is *absolutely real*.
What I do, if anything, is to suspend the visualization. Even if I suppose there may be a continuation, on one plane or another, of my self, I do not think it is something that
I can visualize.
In your visualized ideology however you actually (and sincerely) believe that I am many other you try to preach to and convince, because we do not or cannot accept your assertions, will wind up in a hell-realm (what you refer to as a state, I assume permanent of 'alienation' from God.)
Personally, and perhaps it
could be said to be a different visualization (you mean a creative fantasy of course), I cannot logically, rationally and fairly conceive of an absolute and eternal hell-realm. We have covered this in the past! It would seem to me that if a God exists within the schema of strict and traditional Christianity, that instead of 'eternal punishment' he would simply cease the existence of those errant souls. They would be annulled. That is, soul who could not be reached or who had committed so many wrongs that they could not be forgiven, would simply be eliminated. What is the advantage of creating a place of permanent punishment with no possibility of redemption? It is a sick vengeance phantasy if looked at in a certain way.
So the sort of terrible God
that you visualize (the one who would relegate a soul to perpetual punishment) is in my view a
mistaken perception. It is likely that these visualizations (seeing reality in this way) is part of social and cultural functions, but not necessarily absolutely true. But this does not negate the possibility of after-existence.
So I do tend to believe in purgatorial realms in which a soul processes their life, what they did, what they didn't do, where they did right and where they did wrong, just as we all do this now: by being subject to our own conscience. By being forced to 'realize things' even when we do not want to. You know, the sort of thoughts (often remorseful) that show up at 3 AM when one cannot sleep or at other surpising moments when thoughts just enter one's consciousness and one goes back over events long past.
Similarly, I imagine that if consciousness goes on after this life ends there will be -- indeed there must be -- purgatorial-like experiences through which one burns off the dross (as it were).
But absolute and eternal condemnation?
Too Jewish . . . (reminding me of
this scene in Blazing Saddles).