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05-26-2024, 02:33 AM | Topic Starter |
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How do you guys feel about eventually dying?
I have these random I guess you can call “episodes” where i have this almost out of body experience where i start saying to myself, you’re just you, you’re literally just you, and start thinking about how minuscule i am and then it eventually leads to how i am so fearful of dying one day. I understand I wasn’t around for the Korean War, or world war 2, or the Roman Empire, and that makes sense, since I simply wasnt existing, but now that I exist, the thought of me not existing, and quite frankly never being able to exist again terrifies me. I went to a religious school for a few years and went to church etc, but science tells me that my body make up is unique, and just being born is winning the lottery in its own right. As nice as it is to think my body protrudes this soul is going to rise up and say what up Jesus am I in? or my very unique dna that can profile me as a murderer is going to somehow leak out of my dead composing body, and makes its way into some other woman’s vagina to again try to fight off another 1 million other contestants (assuming dad didn’t jerk off that day) just really gets to me that I have this one chance and this limited, aka very limited time to live a good life. I have a good life mind you. Great wife, supportive family, 2 kids now, great house, but this whole death thing just makes me say sometimes like, wtf man, I want to experience this love and life forever, why does it gotta be so short. Just would like to hear your guys’ thoughts on the manner. Thanks.
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05-26-2024, 03:49 AM | #2 |
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At risk of be dumped off to DC, there is only 1 way to eternal life, & that is through Christ.
If you are up at 3:30 worrying, spend some time in the Bible. Research a church in your area. But you already knew the answer. It is a personal relationship with the One who prepared a place for you in his Father's Mansion. Don't believe that science has all the answers. Take it from a chemical engineer married to an ob/gyn. Science is groping in the dark looking for how things work. Some is right some will change as more data is acquired. Peace comes from your relationship with God. Go back to bed & hug your wife. Hug your kids in the morning then find a church. Community helps, too. |
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05-27-2024, 12:15 AM | #4 | |
Cynical Misanthrope
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Bertrand Russell, hardly a Christian, once said that without God, it is meaningless to talk about the purpose of life. I cannot live a life without purpose. We just ride this rock around the sun and then die? Truly believing that is a good way to go insane. There are also ethical issues that support Christianity. Socrates discussed how we as humans are too subjective (modern language) to be the source of ultimate truth and this is seen in, among other areas, ethics. Without an external source for ethical guidance, at most we get to some kind of utilitarianism. Why do chimpanzees and gorillas and orangutans kill and rape and eat other members of their own species with impunity while such actions are considered unethical, to put it mildly, for human beings? Without an external source of ethical codes, at best we are reduced to “Well, you wouldn’t want that to happen to you.” That may sound fine but it only works until the social utility for it happening to you outweighs the social utility against it happening to you. In either case, there is no philosophical basis to say that such conduct is wrong. There is also historical evidence. Jesus of Nazareth is the single most historically documented individual from the ancient world. The sheer number, consistency and chronological proximity of accounts of Jesus dwarf any other individual from the ancient world. Alexander the Great? We have about half a dozen original documents that discuss him and they are from several centuries after his death. Julius Caesar? Same. Homer? The best info we have about him is from about 7 centuries after his death. The works of Plato are contained in only a few manuscripts, the texts of which vary quite widely. A valid comparison would be if 1000 years from now, the only evidence of Joan of Arc would be from fragments of articles that were written about her now. The entirety of US history is far too recent for this to apply but you could use historical examples like Queen Elizabeth, Henry VIII, or Christopher Columbus. On the other hand, we have over 5000 texts about Jesus of Nazareth written within 100-200 years of his death. We have manuscripts that date to within roughly 40 years of his death. Furthermore, the empty tomb of Christ is the single most attested fact from the ancient world. Again, it is not even close. Scholars today, whether believers or not, largely agree that Christ’s tomb was indeed empty. The question is ‘why’. 11 of the 12 disciples were brutally executed rather than denounce what they saw. We know that mass illusions or mass hysteria is not a legitimate explanation for numerous people seeing the same thing. So what did those disciples see? Why were they willing to die for it? Not just die but their deaths were brutal. Consider St. Bartholomew. He was skinned alive. There is a famous statue of him continuing to preach while holding his own skin. You can see pictures of the statue here: http://onedayinitaly.com/milan-cathe...-flayed-alive/ I don’t know about you but there is no way I am going to die for something that isn’t true, particularly a brutal, painful death. None of the disciples ever made money or were powerful. They were not influential. I mean, while the Romans are nailing the cross together for some of them, all they have to do is say, “That Jesus guy really isn’t God. He didn’t rise from the dead. This has all be a horrible mistake,” and the execution would have been called off. But they all died rather than say that Jesus was not God, that He did not rise from the dead. Why? What would they gain? What did they see that made them so absolutely sure? That, to me, is pretty compelling evidence that they absolutely believed what they saw and they claimed to have seen that Jesus died and rose again from the dead. In the same way, the Bible is the most attested book in the world. The list of manuscripts that we have of the Bible dwarf any other work of literature. Further, their consistency is overwhelming. There is no disagreement about any major point of doctrine. There are some inconsistencies on minor matters, such as some numbers or names. But nobody doubts the Odyssey, the Illiad, Plutarch’s Lives, Marcus Arellius’ Meditations or other major works of literature handed down from ancient times yet we only have a few copies of those documents. Plutarch’s Lives, for example, is the best source of information we have about Alexander the Great. it was written centuries after Alexander’s death and we only have a handful of copies of that book that date from about 100 A.D., roughly 450 years after Alexander’s death. Plutarch’s Lives is the only or primary source of information we have about a number of famous people from the ancient world. That is not true about the Bible. We have thousands of manuscripts of various parts of the Bible and they date to within a comparatively short time after they were written. And when the Dead Sea Scrolls were found in 1948, they were the oldest known copies of biblical manuscripts containing portions of many Old Testament books. The consistency between those scrolls and the biblical scrolls we had at the time were astonishing for ancient manuscripts. You can say that it is not real but the evidence for my God requires you to literally shut your eyes. As biochemistry teaches us more about genetics, biologists and mathematicians are realizing that there simply is not enough material in the universe to explain the origin of life by random mutation. There has not been enough time to explain how life as we know it got here. David Gelernter, a professor of computer technology at Yale, wrote about the impossibility of life arising from random chance based solely upon math. You can read about it here: https://claremontreviewofbooks.com/giving-up-darwin/ Glernter, by the way, is not religious from what I can tell. Indeed, he laments the death of Darwin’s theory in the article because, according to him, Darwin’s theory is simple, elegant, and beautiful. It is also impossible. Don’t believe me? Research it yourself. Look at the evidence. Paul said that if Christ did not rise from the dead, we (Christians) of all men are to be most pitied. 1 Corinthians 15:19. I know what I believe and why I believe it. My faith is not irrational. There is no gap between my faith and reason. My faith is defensible philosophically, historically, and empirically. I know what I believe and what I believe is absolutely real. To OP, I do think about death, as do most people. The Bible says that God has put eternity in man’s heart so it is no surprise that we contemplate death. Death makes an absurdity of our lives. But my God has triumphed over death. “Oh death, where is thy sting? Oh grave, where is thy victory?” I hope my death is quick and painless. I really don’t want to be crucified or eaten by a bear or drowned. Drowning really scares me. But while I have some trepidation about various methods of dying, I do not fear death. I will be united with my Savior and I will be without sin. I do not look forward to the process of dying but I long for the day when I can meet my Savior face to face. OP, if you want a good place to start, this is a good place: https://www.truthforlife.org/thestory/#wherestart And if you, or anyone else reading this, do check this out and have more questions, PM me. As I said, I know what I believe and why and I’m not afraid of any question. I mean that. You may not agree with me but I’ll give you the best answer I can because as much as I love Chiefs football, this question is far, far, far more important. |
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05-27-2024, 01:14 AM | #5 | |
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05-28-2024, 03:29 AM | #6 | ||
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"Unless you assume a God, the question of life’s purpose is meaningless, and like Laplace, ‘I have no need of that hypothesis.'” Now for some context... Who was Laplace? He was a physicist who, when asked by Napoleon Bonaparte... Quote:
Now, this post isn't to made to refute your belief system, dissuade you from it, or even get into a theological discussion in the Lounge. I have thoughts about other parts of your post but this isn't the forum for them thus they were not quoted. The only reason this post is being made is to highlight the importance of a full quote and context. Russell wasn't advocating the idea of intelligent creation by God in that statement nor was he acknowledging a deity at all. It wasn't an admission that life is meaningless without God. He was replying to a letter in a sharp and sarcastic manner in the same way that Laplace did to Napoleon. The fact he quoted Laplace makes that evident. |
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05-28-2024, 12:42 PM | #7 | |
Cynical Misanthrope
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Sartre had a similar opinion, arguing that there is no inherent meaning to life but that we can give meaning when we make moral choices. For Sartre, there was no objective morality or moral standards but rather that we make our own independent choices. Of course, Sartre was not consistent, denouncing French colonialism and actions of the French government later in his life when those were moral choices, albeit choices he apparently disagree with. Anyway, as I said, I appreciate the intelligent and respectful response. I expect we will not see eye to eye but being able to elucidate differing opinions well and politely is rapidly becoming a lost art. Thank you. |
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05-26-2024, 07:51 PM | #8 | |
Replaced by a future HOFer !!
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05-28-2024, 09:05 AM | #9 | |
20 years
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05-28-2024, 09:58 AM | #10 |
Would an idiot do that?
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That's a great stout.
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05-26-2024, 04:02 AM | #11 |
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Charmin advertises Enjoy the Go! How you go out is probably the only concern you can worry about. Only one or two reportedly got out alive
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05-26-2024, 04:12 AM | #12 |
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I am pretty certain you will live longer if you can learn to use paragraphs to break up messages.
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05-26-2024, 06:13 AM | #13 | |
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Per the thread topic, just in the last few years I am no longer worrying or dreading it. Just hope it is not painful or too hard on my loved ones. Looking forward to seeing the grandkids and greats grow up though. |
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05-26-2024, 05:14 AM | #14 |
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I really against dying..
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05-26-2024, 05:16 AM | #15 |
What's up braj?
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I’m eventually dying my pubes
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