Coerce, manipulate, whatever...
The church claims to present insight into the after-life consequences of temporal behavior. Indeed, this seems to be one of the unique justifications for any church's existence (most churches in the US claim to help prepare the congregant for the best possible outcome after death). For obvious reasons these outcomes can not be quantified.
However, if you believe that living a church life is going to improve your long-term outcome, then is it really manipulation? To an atheist like myself, it all looks like perverse mind control. But to the believer, responding to church teachings feels more like following a road map. Since the existence of the final destination is presently unverifiable, I'm not sure that discussions of this sort are going to be useful.
The church claims to present insight into the after-life consequences of temporal behavior. Indeed, this seems to be one of the unique justifications for any church's existence (most churches in the US claim to help prepare the congregant for the best possible outcome after death). For obvious reasons these outcomes can not be quantified.
However, if you believe that living a church life is going to improve your long-term outcome, then is it really manipulation? To an atheist like myself, it all looks like perverse mind control. But to the believer, responding to church teachings feels more like following a road map. Since the existence of the final destination is presently unverifiable, I'm not sure that discussions of this sort are going to be useful.
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