I think the occasional Christian usage of "Hedonist" as a sort of slur is counter-intuitive, moreover I think most Christians today are Hedonists. I actively seek out a way to maximize my pleasure in life, but this does not mean I take no care for the morrow (unless we're talking about the afterlife.) But that doesn't mean I have no place for the unpleasant in my life. I still endure pain when I know the outcome will be pleasurable. For instance, I frequently do community service (15-20hrs a week), which, oddly enough, makes me feel very good afterward. And the feeling I get from doing so may be a bit prideful, but I would just as soon call it the feeling of love. There's a type of high, or euphoria, you get after doing something for somebody else, which has no equivalent in the human experience.
And it's not just me that's a Hedonist. You are as well. The choice of your Heaven is enough to verify this fact. You feel pleasure when you do things in the name of God, do you not?
Is this even a necessary statement though? I saw someone in this forum call some one else a Hedonist (not necessarily in a derogatory manner), and I immediately disagreed with it. If you're living your entire life for the pleasure of Heaven, the pleasure of grace, or the pleasure of God's company, then you're living it in the most Hedonistic manner conceivable.
And it's not just me that's a Hedonist. You are as well. The choice of your Heaven is enough to verify this fact. You feel pleasure when you do things in the name of God, do you not?
Is this even a necessary statement though? I saw someone in this forum call some one else a Hedonist (not necessarily in a derogatory manner), and I immediately disagreed with it. If you're living your entire life for the pleasure of Heaven, the pleasure of grace, or the pleasure of God's company, then you're living it in the most Hedonistic manner conceivable.