And I don't behave this way because of
afterlife consequences.
So you're saying that a preacher giving you the choice with the warning of eternal
afterlife consequences is as convincing as the mafia coming to you with a choice warning of bodily harm or immediate harm to your home and family?
Not exact matches
I think we're a much more subtle people now; we don't need to see someone struck down for disobeying God — we see «natural
consequences» and we consider the
afterlife.
Similarly, why would a loving God create a world with an eternal
afterlife where finite and fleeting choices you make now have eternal
consequences?
My guess is if we, you and I, were to have this conversation in 2,000 years, and I told you that if you don't follow Ingersoll the Magnificent you will suffer the
consequences in the
afterlife, you would probably ask me how I know that.
I'm an atheist, I don't believe in god or an
afterlife, but I most certainly believe that my words and actions have
consequences.
Rob Bell's views may be more appealing in contemporary culture, but it falls short of faithfully proclaiming what the scriptures teach — just read Jesus» frequent comments about the
afterlife and eternal
consequences.
And as their car lies mangled and wrapped around a tree, see the otherworldly aftermath as each student faces the eternal
consequences of an
afterlife with or without Jesus.
The answer to this question is rivetingly explored in The Discovery, where world - renowned physicist Doctor Thomas Harber (Robert Redford) is able to scientifically prove the existence of an
afterlife — but with dire
consequences.
A future art history occurs in response to the conceptual instigations, interpretive claims,
consequences and
afterlives of present artistic objects.
I bet this guy worries more about his
afterlife because he figures the
consequences of not tending to that will be eternal.