
Heathens like me, and you dear reader, are gambling how we’ll spend eternity by rejecting Jesus. We’re turning down everlasting life to live in the mire of our own sin. Or so we’re told by evangelicals and other religious zealots.
So convinced am I that the claims of Christianity are wrong in every respect that I know I’m not gambling anything. Like everyone else who has ever lived, I will not survive my death. This is the nature of death – extinction, obliteration, oblivion. It is absurd to believe it is anything other when we know it is not.
I would not be averse to existence, particularly my own, continuing after death. I’d definitely go for it if that were available; I like being around, all sentient and self-aware and such. This is the sentiment to which Christianity appeals; most people do not want to think their existence is finite and that this often challenging life is really all there is. But life patently does not continue post mortem, except in works of fiction: fantasy, science fiction, the gospels.
Everlasting life is not the only promise Christianity makes, of course. There’s the whole ‘getting right with God’ shtick, forgiveness of sins and Life in all its fullness. Eternal life is the big one though, Christianity’s most miraculous, death-defying special offer.
Those doing the gambling are not atheists or sceptics. It’s Christians themselves doing that, succumbing to the false, utterly worthless promise of life after death. Those fully committed to Christianity spend their lives enslaved to its cultish demands, desperately trying to convince others they should surrender to its preposterous claims.
I value this life too much to squander any more of it on such nonsense. Yes, I did once, but I saw the light and stepped into it. Life is what you make it and needs to be lived before you die. There is zero chance you’ll be able to once it’s over.
Burst the bubble, those of you trapped within it. Your one and only life awaits you here on Earth. The clock is ticking.
Every follower of a religion is gambling that they’ve got the right one, and that all the other ones are wrong. They’re spending a whole lifetime of pointless grovelling, maybe even many lifetimes if the Hindus are right. And when they are stranded at the edge of the river Styx without a coin, or facing the weighing of their heart in front of Osiris, or locked out of the feasting in Valhalla, then they will be sorry. And since some of those religions contradict some of the others, it’s not possible to follow them all. “The only way to win is not to play”.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Fear of death has been around a VERY long time — and from the very “beginning,” religions have capitalized on it (and preachers have “benefited” from it.)
LikeLiked by 2 people
I would say fear of death is what gave birth to religion. Evolution spins out a creature that can understand death. Those creatures use that same processing power to create, necessarily, a belief that lets them deny its finality.
LikeLike