Is it possible to believe in God without knowing that
anything happens after you die?
Is it possible to live morally without the afterlife as a
reward – or as punishment?
Is Christianity’s view of the afterlife absolutely pivotal,
or is it secondary?
C.S. Lewis would say that it is possible to be a
Christian without even thinking of heaven at all. In fact, for almost an entire
year he followed Christ with no thoughts of heaven or hell really crossing his
mind.
“My training was like that of the Jews, to whom He revealed Himself centuries before there was a whisper of anything better (or worse) beyond the grave than shadowy and featureless Sheol. And I did not dream even of that.”
And Lewis has this to say in regards to my third
question:
“There are men, far better men than I, who have made immortality almost the central doctrine of their religion; but for my own part I have never seen how a preoccupation with that subject at the outset could fail to corrupt the whole thing. I had been brought up to believe that goodness was goodness only if it were disinterested, and that any hope of reward or fear of punishment contaminated the will.”
This stands in diametric opposition to much American
Evangelic thought. In good churches, children are brought up hearing stories
about the magnificence of heaven. In bad churches, young children might be led
through so-called “Hell Houses,” and explicitly told to turn or burn. Yet
Lewis, often an icon in these same circles, is once more at odds with
entrenched thought.
For Lewis, the point of Christianity, the reason to
follow God, is at its core humanistic. Following God is the true end for all
people, and is thus the only true way to the good life. No further rewards or
punishments would be needed. Lewis said, “The commands were inexorable, but
they were backed by no "sanctions." God was to be obeyed simply
because he was God.” Obedience is merely the logical conclusion of belief.
Heaven (and hell) come only after this point. Once one
realizes that the divine nature is what is to be desired above all else, then a
desire to be in the presence of that nature would result in eternal happiness,
while to be separate would be a veritable hell in every sense. But, as Lewis
concludes, “It may well be that to think much of either except in this context
of thought, to hypostatize them as if they had a substantial meaning apart from
the presence or absence of God, corrupts the doctrine of both and corrupts us
while we so think of them.”
All quoted excerpts are from Surprised By Joy.
i really like the thoughts here, and it really makes me think of my own motivations. thanks dude! :)
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