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Posts Tagged ‘eternal life’

Was it a real, meaningful life decision? Or a desperate and cynical way to manufacture hope in the face of impending death?

That’s the question that occurred to me when I read about the last few months of Scott Adams’ life. The American author, cartoonist and media personality, best known as the creator of the comic strip Dilbert, died earlier this month after a very public battle with bone and prostate cancer.

Not long before his demise, Adams, 69, revealed that he was abandoning his agnostic worldview in favour of Christianity.

Adams explained that his evolving perspective was shaped in part by interactions with Christian friends and supporters who had been praying for him and sharing their faith during his illness,” said an article on the Beliefnet website. “Their examples, conversations, and care influenced Adams to reconsider questions of God, eternity, and salvation.”

The article went on to explain that Adams “indicated the Christian vision of hope beyond death, combined with the moral and relational framework of the faith, had become increasingly compelling to him as he grappled with his own mortality.”

I can imagine some folks will roll their eyes and opt for the ‘desperate and cynical way to manufacture hope in the face his impending death’ explanation for all this. And I understand their skepticism.

But even if you’re not the cynical type, there’s something else to consider — an important point made by my pastor friend Ross Carkner.

Noting that he didn’t intend to denigrate Adams’ decision, Ross pointed out it’s not about comparing and selecting one spiritual belief system over another. That strikes me resembling a business or government tendering a project and picking the cheapest, most advantageous bidder as the “winner”.

It’s about a man — Jesus of Nazareth, who many people believe is the Son of God. During His physical time on Earth, Jesus taught us how to live our best lives, showed us who God is, then paid the price for all the wrong things we’ve done and the right things we’ve failed to do. Put plainly, Jesus told anyone willing to listen that He is “the way, the truth and the life.”

Jesus also said this: “Anyone who hears what I say and believes in the One who sent me has eternal life. They will not be judged guilty. They have already left death and have entered into life.” In other words, eternal life begins RIGHT NOW for people who commit their lives and their future to Jesus.

Did Scott Adams understand this and accept this? Or did he commit his final days and his eternal future on a system of beliefs and morals? I hope you, as a person open to spirituality, can fully understand the difference and what it can mean for YOUR life.

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BuyingIntoHeaven 7.15No doubt about it; Microsoft co-founder, philanthropist and uber-billionaire Bill Gates has done a lot of amazing things in his years on this planet.

Through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, he’s given away $28 billion (almost half of his total wealth) since 2007.  That money has gone to improving education, providing medical aid for millions of children, upgrading water/sanitation in the developing world and much more.

Along the way, Gates has persuaded other billionaires, such as Warren Buffett, to similarly dedicate massive amounts of their personal wealth to charity.

In short, this guy ROCKS.

So what about the meme (found in an internet atheism community) that inspired me to write this essay?

I did some research; after reading several interviews, it seems Gates can best be described as agnostic. That means he declares that he simply doesn’t know if there’s a God.

So, is Bill Gates going to hell, as this graphic suggests? The simple answer for me is: I don’t know.

As a follower of Jesus of Nazareth (who many people believe is God’s Son), I DO know that giving $28 billion or $280 billion to charity is not the ticket to Heaven. No one can buy eternal life with God. It’s not for sale.

Indeed, one of Jesus’s earliest followers noted “Your salvation doesn’t come from anything you do. It is God’s gift. It is not based on anything you have done. No one can brag about earning it.

On the other hand, having faith in Jesus and doing nothing about it isn’t going to go over well, either.

One of Jesus’s brothers explained it this way: “Does merely talking about faith indicate that a person really has it? Isn’t it obvious that God-talk without God-acts is outrageous nonsense?

I don’t know where that leaves someone like Bill Gates. After all, despite his “God-acts” he is not (and never will be) anywhere close to perfect.

For example, under his leadership the United States government took Microsoft to court over anti-competitive business practices. Despite Gates’ testimony, the company lost. In addition, while Gates was chairman and chief software architect, Microsoft lost another major anti-competition court case, this time to the European Union.

But never mind Bill. What about YOU? You can’t buy your way into Heaven, so how does your behaviour stack up? Examine it with cold, hard realism. Can you defend and account for every wrong thing you’ve done and every right thing you’ve failed to do?

If you’re like me, you can’t. But by believing in Jesus and following Him, you don’t have to. He’s the gift that gives you eternal life. How about giving Him serious consideration?

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