We know for sure about life. Do everything you can to make this world a better place for our descendants; you'll be assured of a place in the world to come.
Choose Life!
Shalom my friend
2006-07-11 15:15:47
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answer #1
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answered by Hatikvah 7
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How about a scientific look.
Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only converted.
Your mind is the seat of your consciousness, it exists in the fluctuation of biological energy produced by your body.
Since your mind(implying soul) exists as a form of energy and energy cannot be destroyed, then yes, we do continue for eternity, and this is a form of life after death.
It may not be the same as life itself as we know it, but it definitely means that something of ourselves continues to exist for eternity.
So yes, there is life after death.
You can also look at the impact a person has on life, creation of art/music, children, friendship. Those ripples exist reflected in peoples decisions and actions long after the physical body dies. Once a person exists, they are, for all intents and purposes, eternal.
2006-07-11 22:19:23
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answer #2
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answered by Demosthenes&Locke 3
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I'm absolutely certain that there is life after death. For some, there is utter annihilation, liberals and humanists because that's what they believe in, they are processed in the lunar site where souls go to be re-integrated as food for actual arising beings. Those who are genuinely arising in the being-bodies which they inhabit here on earth, that is, participants in one of the four ways that lead to the holy of holies, these ones are taken directly up as Enoch and Ezekial were taken up, to become a part of the celestial Qeduesha response, holy holy holy, is the glory of the Father from His throne. Sincerely, Eagle.
2006-07-11 22:21:02
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answer #3
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answered by UCSteve 5
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MY WORRIES ABOUT DEATH
Everybody have their answer, you see?
That's all I worry about. A lot of answer but nothing proven.
Should we all have to just believe them. Every religion has its definition about death. It's just like a commodity around. Well, if all religion claim that their 'death' is valid, then what happen for those who in faith of any other one?
Some answers have different approaches like energy, matters, or just simply to ash or to dust.
I always think that people who asking anything about death are just like me: worry about the definition; worry about what next ahead; are we suffer at the time of death and beyond.
I never will have a good answer for this, even in my faith. Then like some people, I just walk the life. Trying to walk the good in life, but sometimes it just like walk in vain.
Sometimes I sure that the future is on the life after death. Can we hope for any detail information from someone that passed the point of death and go back to tell us in such way that ensure about the definition? I'd like to know what makes you ask your question. I doubt that you are satisfied to all of the answers posted here.
And I'm in worry again.
2006-07-12 14:27:45
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answer #4
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answered by Taufiq 3
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When we think of our physical body then life has to end sometime. But think of the eternal self that give life energy to the body, that makes it move, see, hear, etc., this is the soul.
The body does not exist without the soul or energy, because energy does not die, it is eternal.
Physical body is mortal, where as soul, or the subtle energy is immortal, therefore life continues after the death of the body but continues on into another, reincarnation.
Hope this helps.
2006-07-11 22:24:18
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answer #5
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answered by ANGEL 1
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Of course there is life after death, but not in a supernatural way, you body, your brain, everything that constitutes you, and the world, the life around you, goes one way after you are gone, it transforms in many other natural things which keep on living; you concience stops, but life does not end
2006-07-11 22:15:44
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answer #6
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answered by yupi666 2
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Of course there is life after death!
2006-07-11 22:12:33
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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i dont think we just end. no way. listen to a symphony or work of music from a great composer. how can that just end?
also i think we are just energy. and much like going to sleep - we dont really know we are falling asleep at that moment, we just do, drift off. then we are somewhere else. literally. every night.
such with death. much like where we go when we dream at night. energy gone somewhere else. your certainly not in your body so to speak when your dreaming. your out floating around in your consiousness - scootin around doing things and flittin around the universe of consciousness. sleep is like the daily end of life and an exercise in holding on to nothing. it has been said anyways.
2006-07-11 22:18:02
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answer #8
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answered by oregonsquatch69 2
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I think we just end but it helps in the future you may be able to imprint you consciousness into a machine and it will think exactly the same way as you. Of course that technology is a little far off.
2006-07-11 22:15:29
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answer #9
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answered by Annonymas 3
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WHAT JESUS SAID ABOUT DEATH
Jesus Christ spoke about the condition of the dead. He did so with regard to Lazarus, a man whom he knew well and who had died. Jesus told his disciples: “Lazarus our friend has gone to rest.” The disciples thought that Jesus meant that Lazarus was resting in sleep, recovering from an illness. They were wrong. Jesus explained: “Lazarus has died.” (John 11:11-14) Notice that Jesus compared death to rest and sleep. Lazarus was neither in heaven nor in a burning hell. He was not meeting angels or ancestors. Lazarus was not being reborn as another human. He was at rest in death, as though in a deep sleep without dreams. Other scriptures also compare death to sleep. For example, when the disciple Stephen was stoned to death, the Bible says that he “fell asleep.” (Acts 7:60) Similarly, the apostle Paul wrote about some in his day who had “fallen asleep” in death.—1 Corinthians 15:6.
The Bible teaches that the dead “are conscious of nothing at all.” They are not alive and have no conscious existence anywhere. The account of Lazarus confirms this. Upon returning to life, did Lazarus thrill people with descriptions of heaven? Or did he terrify them with horrible tales about a burning hell? No. The Bible contains no such words from Lazarus. During the four days that he was dead, he had been “conscious of nothing at all.” (Ecclesiastes 9:5) Lazarus had simply been sleeping in death.—John 11:11.
The account of Lazarus also teaches us that the resurrection is a reality, not a mere myth. Jesus raised Lazarus in front of a crowd of eyewitnesses. Even the religious leaders, who hated Jesus, did not deny this miracle.
Think about this too: If Lazarus had been in heaven for those four days, would he not have said something about it?— And if he had been in heaven, would Jesus have made him come back to earth from that wonderful place?— Of course not!
Yet, many people say that we have a soul, and they say that the soul lives on after the body dies. They say that Lazarus’ soul was alive somewhere. But the Bible does not say that. It says that God made the first man Adam “a living soul.” Gen. 2:7, Adam was a soul. The Bible also says that when Adam sinned, he died. He became a “dead soul,” and he returned to the dust from which he had been made. The Bible also says that all Adam’s offspring inherited sin and death too.
The Scriptural teaching of the resurrection, however, is not compatible with the doctrine of the immortality of the soul. If an immortal soul survived death, no one would need to be resurrected, or brought back to life. Indeed, Martha expressed no thought about an immortal soul that was living on elsewhere after death. She did not believe that Lazarus had already gone to some spirit realm to continue his existence. On the contrary, she showed her faith in God’s purpose to reverse the effects of death. She said: “I know he will rise in the resurrection on the last day.” (John 11:23, 24) Likewise, Lazarus himself related no experiences of some afterlife. There was nothing to report.
Clearly, according to the Bible, the soul dies and the remedy for death is the resurrection. You enjoy the best sleep ever, until Jesus resurrects you, sometime in the future.
2006-07-11 22:43:16
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answer #10
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answered by BJ 7
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In my opinion, we certainly don't just end - that would be a colossal waste of time and energy. I think when we die we return to our source, rest up, catch up with friends, discuss what we learned - and then plan the next trip to the physical world.
Funny though - so many people are convinced that they just end, and maybe they do. All I know is I don't.
Peace!
2006-07-11 22:14:18
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answer #11
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answered by carole 7
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