framer
Well-Known Member
I'm a bit late to this discussion, but here goes.
IF after this life we are truly facing an eternity, then what incremental advantage we gain in this life by 'living the gospel' can easily be made up over over the eternities. I've not met THAT many Mormons whose understanding of things divine is so far advanced beyond all others that someone else could not, given reasonable time and reasonable intelligence and effort, catch up pretty quickly, with all of eternity to do so.
Also, correct me if I'm wrong, IF we do take the knowledge we've done in this life to the hereafter, what about all the people who died in infancy or otherwise young, or who were mentally challenged etc.? I mean, how does someone with literally NO knowledge (e.g., died at birth) then ever catch up if we accept your reasoning?
So living one's life within a structure that places (IMO very narrow) parameters on what one can believe and learn in this life (at least with regards to 'soft' stuff like spiritual knowledge), who since birth or a young age believes as taught by parents and other authority figures and who has never seriously questioned his/her belief, because, by golly, he/she just KNOWS it's true, gives them an advantage in the hereafter over others because they are just so much more intellectually and spiritually advanced??
Really?
I think this would make sense if everyone just had an epiphany after death, "Hey, it looks like the Mormons were right, I'm signing up!" It doesn't work that way. You will be pretty much the same person in the afterlife that you are now. Of you die before you have the opportunity to develop harmful habits and characteristics, then you won't be burdened with them in the hereafter. Most of us, however, WILL develop some bad habits. A lifetime compared to eternity would seem like a short time to set those habits in stone, but so is young adulthood, and that generally carries you through the rest of your life.
If you are hard hearted and ungenerous, you will still be that way in the spirit world and in many cases will segregate yourself to where you feel comfortable, especially considering that even the lowest layer of heaven is probably a better place than the standard Christian definition of Heaven. Most people like that would probably be as uninterested in improving in the afterlife as they are currently. By now, everybody knows that smoking is harmful, but a lot of people do it and even start doing it AFTER they know this. Even if someone realizes that the opportunity for improvement is there, most will say, "Nahhhh, I'm good." How many people today seek to better themselves daily?