doodad wrote on Nov 18th, 2015 at 10:29am: Quote:What a person wants and what they are is what they get – all at once.
Whatever delusions and projections a person carries, after death, those delusions and projections become their unhindered reality.
One’s afterlife is the culmination of one’s Earth life.
Being of a fundamentalist Christian background, I have to ask: what kind of reality awaits one who has a very narrow and very strong belief system in their denomination and its rules in order to be "saved' coupled with the subconscious belief that most everybody else is going to hellfire?
There is much good in those I have fellowshipped with, devotion to Christ's teachings, etc. But at the core it is much as I've described above.
Ultimately it is what's in the heart that dictates their afterlife state. The heart is where the foundation body is anchored and where the perceived values/priorities are stored. We can feel our values/priorities/importances in the heart when they are offended and hurt or when they are being re-ordered by circumstance against our resistance.
The condition of the heart underpins the mental-emotional bodies, that is, all habits and inclinations of thought follow one's values and priorities as stored in the heart, and emotions and habitual behaviours follow the patterns of habitual thought.
If someone is a fundamental Christian or any other sort of Christian and is loving from the heart and helpful to others, as Christians generally are, then they go to a pleasant place in the heavens just as Christianity promises.
But if someone is a hypocrite and says they are a Christian but they are cruel and vindictive in the heart and actively or passively inflict harm to others, or wish for harm to come to others, then they will experience an environment corresponding to the hateful wishes in their heart.
But Christianity has a fascinating clause in it, and that is repentance and forgiveness.
Repentance is the presenting of one’s sins/transgressions to God, for forgiveness and dissolution.
Repentance is honesty before God.
Repentance is presenting oneself as one is before God. It makes us transparent before God and enables God’s light to penetrate our entire being, even into the darkest corners.
Repentance is like bringing a cleaner into our house and showing him every dirty room and cupboard, then asking him to forgive us and clean our house, and he does so.
All prayer begins with repentance.