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Heaven, Hell & Afterlife

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Can you get to heaven by being good?

Results so far:

Yes
32% 591 votes Total: 1854 votes
No
68% 1263 votes
Yes

A man named Mathew once wrote: "If it is possible for a man to deserve forgiveness (and salvation) on his own merit, where is the need for Jesus Christ?"



Upon full consideration, it would seem that there isn't one at least, not for that. What good, after all, is a God who does not distinguish between Good and Evil acts, but only considers blind obedience as worthy? That does not sound like a "Savior" god to this thinking person, and especially unlike a god who is supposed to enforce morality. That's why it is so important to understand the Sins of Irrationality and willful Ignorance: faith is valuable, but it must be for the right reasons, else it is meaningless.



It seems to me that Jesus serves a number of purposes in the Christian faith, but it is an extension of his role, an overstepping of bounds, to suggest that the singular act of praising his name is the sole gateway into Paradise. Were that the case, then we would see, as many have suggested, that a serial killer who confesses before being put to death would be spared eternal torment, and a person who, for whatever reason, had never heard of Christ's name would be sent into the lake of fire, regardless of the deeds of his life. If this were true, then Christianity would be a faith that holds morality, and even the potential of a human life, as irrelevant. Why strive to do good, or even to do anything, if Praise for the Savior is all that is required, or even all that matters?



Jesus serves as a teacher, a moral guide, and a teller of stories. He is a bringer of wisdom, in his parables and his acts. And he is granted credibility, not by God, but by his followers, who see his Miracles as proof of Divine approval.



But most of all, Jesus serves as a surrogate forgiver, there to accept a person's earnest apology for a misdeed at those times in life when a person cannot, or will not, forgive him or her self. So, there IS a need for Jesus in Christianity, but it is as a Redeemer, not an amoral Idol.



Yet, as many have noted, the Bible is quite clear in stating that ONLY through worshiping Jesus's name not following The Way, as he taught and through no personal worthiness alone, can a person achieve a state of Grace and be granted an eternal reward. Clearly, this message is in direct conflict with Christ's own philosophy.



Even the story of Jesus itself stands in stark contrast to the rhetoric that has subsumed Christianity for nearly 2,000 years. Had Jesus not died on the cross, then risen again, would anyone hail his name today?
It is for his deeds that we honor his name, not the other way around. Jesus shows us that our acts, not the names we praise, are what matter most in the eyes of God.



What moral guide is this faith, after all, if the worth of our actions becomes inconsequential when compared to what amounts to lip service? When reason conflicts with scripture, surely we must side with reason, lest our faith become Irrational and meaningless. Such conundrums illustrate why recognizing Blind Faith as a cardinal sin is necessary.



But there is a deeper flaw in Christianity that needs addressing here. The key phrase, added to the Bible by St. Augustine hundreds of years after the mortal life of Jesus had come to an end, is the infamous passage from Romans: "All men have sinned, and fall short of the glory of God."



While it is true that all people have done wrong in their lives, it is also true that all people have done right as well. If God is to condemn us for our errors, and utterly neglect our redeeming qualities, then God Himself apparently does not value the Good in each of us, or in life itself. Clearly, this cannot be true if God is the benevolent entity that the Bible claims.



That passage puts the lie to "God's Word", showing us that even while God blames us for the deeds of our ancestors actions that we ourselves had no part in He will not credit us for the deeds of our own lives, no matter how richly deserved.
This concept of Irredeemable Sin is antithetical to Jesus's message.



What the Bible is asking of us is not to accept God's forgiveness for our sins, but to accept the very sin that it itself claims we are guilty of.



What's more, Christianity tells us that Jesus has already paid a blood price for all the sins of humanity. That is why he is so celebrated, is it not? So isn't the declaration of one's self as an unforgiven sinner a rejection of Christ's sacrifice?



By using the ability to reason, which was endowed in each of us by our Creator, we can see that Life should be a celebration of God's gift to us. It was never meant to be a ritualized forsaking of that greatest of gifts, just to live in perpetual atonement for a sin we never committed, and in spite of a forgiveness that has already been granted.



To throw God's Love back into His teeth, and willfully choose to embrace a life of suffering, is to reject all that Jesus stood for. It is the worst Sin imaginable: to forsake Christ's teachings, to forsake his Way, and to forsake his sacrifice, all in order to justify the praising of his name.



Anyone who earnestly believes that that is what Christ really wanted, that life should be shrouded in bleak agony, and gotten over with as quickly as possible so that joy can be found in the next life, is guilty of the Sin of Justification. As Mathew put it, "Because God is perfectly just, He will give every man what he deserves." Truer words were never written.
Surely, every person who searches for salvation in the rejection of Joy, in the rejection of God's Love, in the rejection of God's wishes for peace and happiness in this one life, and in the rejection of God's Forgiveness for all our mistakes, will surely find exactly what they seek in that longed-for hereafter: an eternity graced by none of those things.



For the rest of us, who hold that Jesus should be praised not for Who he was, but for What he did: ensuring that each of us is aware of our potential to earn a Way into Paradise by the way we live our lives, life is itself a constant joy.
For us, Paradise has, in some way, already been achieved.



When one embraces Jesus's core message, that Love is the key to happiness, both in this life and the next, then one comes to understand the greatest wisdom of all: This is YOUR life; rise up and live it.

Learn more about this author, Bryan Belrad.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.

No


Can a person go to heaven by being good? Absolutely not! According to the Word of God that would be a total impossibility, for man has an inherent problem that keeps him from heaven - his sin.

In Romans 5:12 we are told that "by one man (Adam) sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned." Then again in Romans chapter three verse twenty-three it says, "for all have sinned and come short of the glory of God." God is perfect and cannot tolerate sin in his presence, so one's sin keeps him out of heaven.

Many people are hoping that when they reach heaven God will simply feel sorry for them and will allow them into heaven instead of sending them to hell for all eternity. Matthew chapter seven verses 21 through 23 say, "Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven. Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? And in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity." God is very clear that not even those who have worked in their own way to serve Him will be allowed into heaven.

Others believe they can solve their sin problem and, therefore, reach heaven by being good or by being "neighborly". They have a list of actions they think will make the scales balance out in their favor and allow them to enter heaven. If they are baptized into a certain religion and attempt to follow all the dogma of that church, give money to their favorite charity or help people in need, then surely they will make it.

Again Gods Word says a clear and resounding "NO". In Ephesians chapter two verses 8 and 9, God tells us, "for by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of ourselves: it is the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should boast." This verse makes it clear that if anyone goes to heaven it will not be by any good works that they do. No one will be able to boast in heaven.

If a person cannot get to heaven by being good, by doing good works or by being "neighborly", then how can anyone possibly make it into heaven when they pass from this world? Ephesians tells us "by grace are ye saved through faith. . .it is the gift of God. . . ." In Romans 6:23a it also says, "the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord." What is this gift and how can one obtain it?

John chapter three verse 16 tells us that "God so loved the world (you can replace world with your own name) that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever (put your name in the place of whosoever) believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life." One discovers that God has given to all mankind a gift, and that gift is eternal life through Jesus Christ his Son.

How does one become the recipient of that gift? - By simply accepting it and saying a simple thank you. In the book of First John chapter 5 verse 12, God makes it very easy for everyone to understand. He says, "He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life."

All verses taken from the KJV Bible



Learn more about this author, Connie Earl Robertson.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.

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