R
rwillenborg
Guest
You are correct, such behavior is not rational. neither It is also irrational for me to eat chocolate cake for desert, knowing that I am trying to lose weight. Neither was it rational for my brother to cheat on his wife, and, as a direct result, lose not only his wife, but his children and his house. Neither was it rational for an employee at my work place to steal an item worth $99 and lose his 80K per year job. Neither was it rational for me to stay out so late on Saturday night, knowing I had to be up at 5 am on Sunday.If I believed that this present life were just a brief test to determine whether I would be admitted after death to another life of eternal bliss, it is inconceivable to me that I would ever commit a sin, since it would simply be foolish. Yet I hear Christians all the time say that they were ‘weak’ or ‘tempted’ on a given occasion to sin, and so did so, thus jeopardizing their own rational best interest in enjoying infinite bliss for the sake of a brief moment of trivial indiscretion. But since sane people are never tempted to bend down and touch the third rail of a subway because they are tempted by a piece of candy they spot lying there, I would assume that no sane Christian would ever be tempted to sin. Since they so often do sin, however, demonstrates that they don’t really believe in the doctrine they profess.
Similarly, if I believed that my present life were just a brief test prior to a possibly infinite afterlife of heavenly bliss, nothing that goes wrong here could ever seriously bother me. If we were all at a giant garden party given by God, and he imposed a forfeit on someone and made him blind for the duration of the party prior to admission to Heaven at the end of the afternoon, that blindness would be no more distressing than being ‘it’ for a little while in a schoolyard game of tag. So the fact that Christians wail in despair when some serious but mundane tragedy ruins only this life for them makes me again suspect that they don’t really believe what they profess.
I do imagine that Christians seriously think that they believe, but this is only because they have never seriously examined the incongruities of their behavior in the situations I have sketched above.
Indeed, I believe that every action I described above was just as irrational as the sin you cited above. I guess I’d be shocked if people DIDN’T act this way.