- Dec 31, 2018
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As Christmas approaches we think of the Messiah coming into our world, we probably never considering the culture shock of His entering into a physical world in the flesh.
Which begs the question... why do people want to equate our afterlife to what we know of this universe, complete with form, space and time etc. when obviously that is not what lies beyond? Why do we associate ourselves and our identity with our soon to be composted fleshy body or even think the everyday gadgets of this life will even exist in the next. Time to perhaps consider what we really may become and what kind of world in the new Kingdom will be created, obviously free of everything we know that we have created in our own image. If nothing remains the same... who and what are we even now?
Which begs the question... why do people want to equate our afterlife to what we know of this universe, complete with form, space and time etc. when obviously that is not what lies beyond? Why do we associate ourselves and our identity with our soon to be composted fleshy body or even think the everyday gadgets of this life will even exist in the next. Time to perhaps consider what we really may become and what kind of world in the new Kingdom will be created, obviously free of everything we know that we have created in our own image. If nothing remains the same... who and what are we even now?
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