charity wrote:Sethbag wrote:
No. Life life in obedience to men who tell you they represent God, and you will go to your grave believing that you'll become a God or a Goddess. But you won't. You'll just die and cease to exist, like everyone else. But hey, at least during your life you had the pleasure of imagining how great it would be to be a God or a Goddess, and help create entire new universes to be populated with your very own little spirit babies. Sure would be nice, wouldn't it? It's a pipe dream, Charity. Wishful thinking, fantasy, fiction, mythology, all wrapped into yet one more manmade, untrue church out of the many thousands of them that have arisen on Earth in the last few thousand years.
Okay. Say you are right. This is it. We die. We cease to exist. I have lived a life of service to others, a life of study and contemplation, a life which includes wonderfully uplifting experiences. Was that a loss?
Say I am right. This isn't it. We go on to a greater existence beyond this. You have spent years of doubt and hopelessness and bitterness. To no purpose.
Credible belief or dismissive denial.
So it really is just wishful thinking, and you're OK with that. Ok, well I suppose if you're satisfied living a fantasy just because thinking about it is more pleasant than thinking about annihilation of the self upon death, I suppose that's your prerogative.
Look at this from my perspective for a moment, if you can. If I'm right, we only have this one life to live, and then that's it. I'm trying to live it as best and as happily as I can, while remaining firmly grounded in reality. From my point of view, you're actually
wasting a lot of the opportunities that you might have in this one life of yours by insisting on living in your own fantasy world instead. Thus, when you die, you never lived in "the real", and you still don't become a Goddess in the Celestial Kingdom.
And who says that the alternative to living in the Mormon fiction is living a life of bitterness and hopelessness? That doesn't describe me at all. Ask my wife, I'm actually quite the optimist. Just because I'm not optimistic about what happens to our consciousness after we die doesn't mean I lie around all day thinking that life sucks.
Your belief isn't credible, either. How anyone who knows the kinds of things Joseph Smith did can credibly still believe he was a Prophet of a loving and just and kind God who actually exists, is astonishing. It is a testament to the level of self-deception you not only practice, but continuously seek to improve upon, in the name of "strengthening your testimony".
It's not credible belief or dismissive denial, it's more like wishful thinking and self-deception, or optimistic realism.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen