ChatterBank63 mins ago
Heaven
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No best answer has yet been selected by l_h_kings. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hmm - I'm not sure about this one. By saying "if heaven did not exist" you seem to imply that you believe it does (or perhaps you need to have the concept) ;)
I'm not sure if some would invent the concept - maybe they would - but I don't know how much comfort they would get from something they had knowingly invented. The reason that so many people get so much comfort�is because they actually believe it exists (whether rightly or wrongly).
Heaven is not something we can prove with any certainty - and I think it means different things to different people. For some it is a physical place, for others it is a state of being and for others probably something else. I happen to believe that life exists in some form after death but I'm not so aware of needing a concept of heaven just to comfort me.
No we won't know because when we're dead, we are incapable of knowing anything as we have ceased functioning.
In accordance with Clanad's post, I must add a sub-clause to my post, indicating that the views and ideas expressed in the above post are, however obviously, my own beliefs and no-one else's.
however, just because in our modern age we are able to pick holes in organised religion, & maybe even prove religious texts as nonesense, is it not possible that there is some kind of creator or god, and heaven, that is far beyond human comprehension? something so abstract and above our intellect that we have no possibility of ever understanding it. there is an inifinite universe of possibility we have no concept of, & for someone to categorically state that there is no god or heaven is a touch arrogant & definate -although i accept that heaven and god could be human inventions. i also accept that existence of a creator may not neccessarily mean the existence of an afterlife.
Dependable in what sense tho Clanad? The more detailed, the more believable a story is generally. Or do you think the ancient church would simply say heaven good hell bad and leave it at that? No there is no heaven. This is based on empirical observation of the known universe subject to self regulated testing and criticism. Yes there is a heaven. This is based on an old book, just one of many to have appeared throughout the past and offering its own subjective interpretation of the world.
I know which one is logical, rational, and infinitely more likely. However, there is no accounting for taste nor personal weakness.
Before you decide about heaven you have to decide about the soul. If you believe in heaven, reincarnation or any religion you need a soul to survive death.
If you believe in a soul you should then ask where does this soul live - is it physically part of you? can it get damaged? where did it come from? Does a baby have one? does an animal have one? Does my soul have memories of my life experience and if so what does my brain do?
When you start to think about it in these terms it becomes quite hard to believe that there is such a thing as an immortal soul which makes the concept of heaven rather pointless.
But then consider the traditional question of what God was doing before the creation of the universe and the traditional response "Creating an extra special Hell for those who ask awkward questions" :c)
Heaven is a name for an imaginery utopia where we can believe if we like that our soul carries on. Egyptians called it the Underworld (eternal life with the gods), Babylonians called it 'Descent of Inanna'
The ancient pagan Greek view, later adopted by the Romans, was that heaven was a physical place up in the sky. The word for heaven is used interchangeably with the location of the objects of the sky, as in "heavenly bodies", and for the dwelling place of the gods. That is why the Greek word for heaven and sky is the same; there was no distinction made between them in the earliest writings, but eventually they were also understood to be more as a metaphor for the spiritual heaven.
For the ancient pagan Greeks, Hades was a place. The physical place was where all humans go when they die, a site located at the center of the earth.
So you could conclude that heaven was invented by man. Whether it exists or not is personal choice, I like to think it does. People who say, you just die and that is it, really have no imagination.
I don't think belief in heaven necessarily leads to belief in hell. It would, of course, depend on the definition of heaven. I, for example, believe in some sort of spiritual state after death that I suppose I could define as heaven, but I have no concept of hell as a place. I do find the word "hell" or "hellish" useful to describe the living conditions of some people here on earth - eg people living in any subhuman conditions, those who are oppressed, abused, unuustly treated, those who face constant suffering, heartache etc
Felt the presence of God? Save it. You didn't . You felt something funny, and you feel a lot better if you go 'hmm, might be God, hope it is, if it is, then I'll feel a lot better about these doubts I've been having' and so you ascribe it to God. You don't know it's God. It's like me saying, ooh, I feel queer today, must be the donut maker in the shop down the road sending signals over the airwaves.
And you build a life around these feelings? And you convince others, including ignorant children, that they're all the truth,and that God is there, and that he is behind the feeling, whereas you should be actually saying is 'Kids, I'M GUESSING'.
Disgraceful.
In the supernatural, religious, biblical sense:
There is no heaven, hell, god, devil, sin, redemption etc etc.
This cosmos can be explained quite rationally without any requirement for those things. They are concepts invented by an ignorant mankind and developed and exploited by religious organisations.
If anyone would care to convince me otherwise, please go ahead - where are any of these things?
RevShirls
Are you, as your name suggests, a woman of the cloth? If so then I am surprised, although I shouldn't be, that your responses are so non-commital and woolly.