Anyone who claims to know more about
the supposed afterlife is a fraud.
There would be no need to discuss their eventual place of residence in
the supposed afterlife.
Not exact matches
There's a few nice things said about early Christians helping their neighbors and giving the poor hope that the
afterlife will bring them a better existence, which is positive in a sort of back - handed way... I
suppose.
Subsequent to that statement, I have a hard time imagining an
afterlife that doesn't have some version of a «god»... unless us humans created everything and all the rules that govern it — then I
suppose we would be the god — but I'd think I would remember doing that.
In his apartment in the Riverdale section of the Bronx, hand - sized servant - mummy statuettes — figurines that were
supposed to accompany ancient Egyptians into the
afterlife — line the top shelves of his bookcases.
The trailer makes the film look off - kilter and a bit depressing, but I
suppose that's fitting for a world where suicides have skyrocketed due to the confirmation of an
afterlife.
Since death and the
afterlife are at the center of so many religions in this world, I
suppose a film in which one of the main characters is dead for 2/3 of his time on screen is going to feel spiritual and possibly religious in some way, regardless of David's intentions.
So the process of developing a conception of its
afterlife world is never dull and is critical to cluing you in to what exactly you're
supposed to do with all those items your skeletal protagonist has stashed in his suit jacket.