It can come as no surprise to the regulars here that I find the died-in-the-wool, locked-in-syndrome, my-way-or-the-highway attitudes of some of the religioso’s on this forum, oh dammit, let’s call a spade a spade, some Christians on this forum, together with their derogatory dismissal of any other belief more than a little irritating.
Some of the atheists here are almost as bad but only almost.
I make no mention of one poster’s sworn enemies, the anti-theists, as I see them as being a non-existent figment of an over-heated and delusional imagination.
In a moment of introspection I pondered upon the reaction of these Super-Christians should they, after death, find that the atheists were, in fact, correct (I am making the assumption that the soul of a person, however each of us defines that article, will linger on for an unknown period of time after death) and there is nothing thereafter. No god, no Jesus, no heaven, no angels, no fanfares, and rewards for their staunch attachment to Christianity – just nothing.
Now I would have no problem with this as I am, as I have stated many times before, quite prepared to find, one way or another, that my religious beliefs are, in fact, in error. To the Super-Christians I think it would be a devastating blow to their egos.
However, I can think of one possibility that would drive the Super-Christians into a terminal state of complete, utter, and totally incurable even within the timespan of eternity, insanity.
That possibility is, of course that they find that the Pagans, the Jews, the Hindus, the Sikhs, et cetera, either individually or collectively were correct. Their whole carefully constructed, advertised, and defended edifice comes to be nothing!
I find it hard to imagine just how long I would spend laughing at the looks on their smug arrogant faces.
I would think that the reaction of the atheists would, for most, be rather pragmatic acceptance that, all same the Oxford Union, they had lost the debate.
I await the views of the rest of the Forum with interest.