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Isn't pantheism safer?
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Someone suggested (it might have been Dawkins) that those who believe in God might discover, when they reach the hereafter, that the Bloke-in-Charge is actually some other deity and that they have therefore been worshipping the wrong one all the time. I can just picture the scene:
Theland and I are sitting together at Afterlife Reception waiting to be interviewed, classified and sent to our fates. An official calls out "All rise! Your god approaches!" and into the room walks�Zeus!
Zeus is cross with me for having refused to believe in any god, including him. But he is absolutely livid with Theland for having worshipped a false deity called "God" all his life. So I am grudgingly given second-class accommodation in heaven and poor old Theland is consigned to the other place.
So, Theland and others, isn't monotheism risky? Wouldn't it be better to embrace pantheism � covering all possibilities, just in case?
Theland and I are sitting together at Afterlife Reception waiting to be interviewed, classified and sent to our fates. An official calls out "All rise! Your god approaches!" and into the room walks�Zeus!
Zeus is cross with me for having refused to believe in any god, including him. But he is absolutely livid with Theland for having worshipped a false deity called "God" all his life. So I am grudgingly given second-class accommodation in heaven and poor old Theland is consigned to the other place.
So, Theland and others, isn't monotheism risky? Wouldn't it be better to embrace pantheism � covering all possibilities, just in case?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Very well said, naomi. I have often wondered what we would think of a human being who went around the place demanding to be worshipped.
And for what, in God's case? If he was born omnipotent then he 's a jolly lucky fellow. He can do as many good things as he likes without any effort and he has no excuse for doing bad things. I reckon any sane person could use omnipotence a lot better than he does.
I sometimes wish there were a Day of Judgment: by heavens, God would have a lot of explaining to do and I'd be first in the line of inquisitors.
And for what, in God's case? If he was born omnipotent then he 's a jolly lucky fellow. He can do as many good things as he likes without any effort and he has no excuse for doing bad things. I reckon any sane person could use omnipotence a lot better than he does.
I sometimes wish there were a Day of Judgment: by heavens, God would have a lot of explaining to do and I'd be first in the line of inquisitors.
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