Javelin wrote:
Thanks for all of the great discussion from both sides.
For a background, I was raised hardcore Roman Catholic (like Latin Mass and everything).
Now I'm thinking there may be some sort of collective consciousness or cyclical intelligence to us or our universe. I'm reading some Hawking right now (which is actually really interesting) and he talks about how some theories maintain time didn't even always exist. That's pretty deep!!
Have you ever read GK Chesterton? His Orthodoxy blows me away, and it is a far easier read than Thomas Aquinas. Edit: it is fun reading, unlike many dry (but spiritually fruitful) theological texts. He's part of the reason I am and continue to be Catholic.
“Christianity has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and not tried.”
Do you believe there is an afterlife?
Yes, of course.
If so, how do you justify/prove/believe in it?
These are "religious" reasons, but I believe they stand up to external scrutiny:
1. Jesus' disciples actions don't make any sense except in light of the Resurrection.
2. Miracle of Lanciano
3. Apparitions of Mary, particularly Guadalupe, Lourdes and Fatima
4. The witness of Bl Mother Theresa and Bl John Paul II
All 4 have accounts from a non-believer perspective.
If not, how do you live day-to-day without completely breaking down?
If the consequences for anything you do are the same, nothingness, then the only justification for not doing whatever the heck you want is some desire for less pain or more pleasure. Hitler - dirt, Mother Theresa - dirt. What the heck is the point then? Without God, without an afterlife, literally everything is meaningless when all is said and done. Love, pain, joy, suffering, art, money, pleasure, everything is meaningless and void without God.
I know it sounds like I'm saying that the only reason to live a generous loving life is some sort of external tattle-tale. But, in the absence of meaning, all that is left is rage. Without God, there can be no meaning to life, except the brief flash in the pan that is nothing the next moment. So, the answer is simply that God is how I live day-to-day without completely breaking down. There is literally nothing else that animates me. Without Him, I am salt without taste, I am but mere dust.
“Man is an exception, whatever else he is. If he is not the image of God, then he is a disease of the dust.”