jiii
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This question has been partially insipred by a different thread in the 'Alternative' forum, but I'm approaching it from a different angle.
Why is it that many religions seem to promote doing good or being compassionate by offering some kind of reward in the afterlife? Isn't this a case of being so unsatisfied with doing good that we must believe we will be rewarded in a future time? Doesn't this system simply encourage people to do good for selfish reasons, and diminish and obscure our sense of "doing good being its own reward"?
Hypothetically speaking, what if we found that a heaven, in its many varied forms world-wide, did not actually exist? Would it suddenly be acceptable to turn violent, pillage our neighbors home, kill indiscriminantly in vengeance, rape, plunder, steal, etc, etc? Because, after all, there is no reward for doing good anymore besides doing good for its own sake...and by and large, that apparently seems to be a pretty unattractive idea. It seems that very few people are really satisfied with that, you know...they want something for it. 'What's in in for me?', they ask...and it still seems as if many people still need some kind of reward for being compassionate. Frankly, I can only see this leading to a terribly affectacious and phony brand of compassion. The ultimate in selfishness, you know, because it hides one's selfishness very cleverly. They don't have to be selfish outwardly...no, no...they can be selfish inwardly. They can conceal it almost perfectly, go around doing good deed after good deed with a seeming selflessness, yet the whole time their mouth is just watering thinking about the glorious spoils they will receive after their death. The fact that one's fellow man is cared for compassionately is, in this view, really just a pleasant bonus. The real point is to get the gold in the afterlife.
What are everyone's ideas about this?
Why is it that many religions seem to promote doing good or being compassionate by offering some kind of reward in the afterlife? Isn't this a case of being so unsatisfied with doing good that we must believe we will be rewarded in a future time? Doesn't this system simply encourage people to do good for selfish reasons, and diminish and obscure our sense of "doing good being its own reward"?
Hypothetically speaking, what if we found that a heaven, in its many varied forms world-wide, did not actually exist? Would it suddenly be acceptable to turn violent, pillage our neighbors home, kill indiscriminantly in vengeance, rape, plunder, steal, etc, etc? Because, after all, there is no reward for doing good anymore besides doing good for its own sake...and by and large, that apparently seems to be a pretty unattractive idea. It seems that very few people are really satisfied with that, you know...they want something for it. 'What's in in for me?', they ask...and it still seems as if many people still need some kind of reward for being compassionate. Frankly, I can only see this leading to a terribly affectacious and phony brand of compassion. The ultimate in selfishness, you know, because it hides one's selfishness very cleverly. They don't have to be selfish outwardly...no, no...they can be selfish inwardly. They can conceal it almost perfectly, go around doing good deed after good deed with a seeming selflessness, yet the whole time their mouth is just watering thinking about the glorious spoils they will receive after their death. The fact that one's fellow man is cared for compassionately is, in this view, really just a pleasant bonus. The real point is to get the gold in the afterlife.
What are everyone's ideas about this?