I'm interested in this, in reading the thread about unanticipated judgement by a diety upon death there seemed to be a lot of righteous indignation about being judged and especially about the application of certain criteria in the judgement, ie observance of worship, homage, subordination to a diety.
So I'm interested to know about peoples views about an afterlife, should one exist, is there any kind of element of reward? Does living as a sinner or a saint feature in your reckoning or conceptualisation of an afterlife or judgement? Is there an afterlife devoid of judgement, reward, merit or consequence? Perhaps you believe that this life is prelude to another but not an afterlife in a sense of an "otherworld" but instead a further life as in reincarnation or the transmigration of the soul to another vassal?
Most recently I've been interested by two things, Mesier Echarkt (spelling) and mysticism's suggestion that after death the spirits which strip away any attachment to life will be preceived as either angels or devils depending upon how attached you are to life and whether you are in a state of traumatic loss and resisting the cross over.
The other more interesting idea has been that of the Samuari attitude to death and an afterlife, they did not speculate because on the principle of desert they didnt not believe themselves deserving of it because of their having killed people in this life and other exclusionary criteria meaning they could or should receive no reward and should abhor and disdain it in any case.
So I'm interested to know about peoples views about an afterlife, should one exist, is there any kind of element of reward? Does living as a sinner or a saint feature in your reckoning or conceptualisation of an afterlife or judgement? Is there an afterlife devoid of judgement, reward, merit or consequence? Perhaps you believe that this life is prelude to another but not an afterlife in a sense of an "otherworld" but instead a further life as in reincarnation or the transmigration of the soul to another vassal?
Most recently I've been interested by two things, Mesier Echarkt (spelling) and mysticism's suggestion that after death the spirits which strip away any attachment to life will be preceived as either angels or devils depending upon how attached you are to life and whether you are in a state of traumatic loss and resisting the cross over.
The other more interesting idea has been that of the Samuari attitude to death and an afterlife, they did not speculate because on the principle of desert they didnt not believe themselves deserving of it because of their having killed people in this life and other exclusionary criteria meaning they could or should receive no reward and should abhor and disdain it in any case.