S
SHW
Guest
Relevancy:Even here, though their may seem to be only two choices, we can still ask why we are being asked this particular question and not some other one? Is this really a good question or does it have some faulty premises behind it such as questions like “do you still beat your wife”? Or what is the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything?
Personally, I asked the question about the existence or nonexistence of God a lot in my twenties and tried to figure out what a transcendent God must be like if such a God existed. And in thinking, reading, and writing, about the question, the question itself went away. It does not really seem like a question to me anymore. It’s just not a question that I even have. I now wonder if I ever would have even asked the question if I hadn’t been born into a culture where this question is pre-supposed to be meaningful and important. I no longer think it is.
Best,
Leela
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If there is a God**, then every person needs to find out for what purpose this God created us and also what does He expect of us. He is the potter, we are but the clay, and so we need to find out what the consequence(s) or reward(s), if any, are for acknowledging Him as God our Creator, and also the consequence(s) or punishment(s), if any, for not acknowledging Him as God our Creator.
We can then each make our own choice to either know Him, love Him, and serve/obey Him until we die and inherit eternal life as our reward or else we can choose to reject/deny Him either outright or reject Him by disobeying His commandments and not repenting before death and therefore spend eternity condemned in a lake of fire. Our individual choices will indeed have eternal consequences.
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If there is no God**, then we can live for “today’s pleasures” without thought or regard for any eternal consequences for our actions.
Our choices better be based upon what we can live with for eternity or else we will be very unhappy if we find out after we die that we were wrong and God does exist and He does truly judge all of us either worthy for eternal life or worthy of being cast into a lake of fire.