Eternal Rewards or Just a Celestial Carrot? The Big Question on Religious Sacrifice...
For thousands of years, devout followers of Judaism and Christianity have been subjecting themselves to an extensive list of moral rules, dietary restrictions, and self-sacrificial acts—all in the hope of a cosmic reward. The deal seems simple enough: Be good, follow the rules, and get a golden ticket to the greatest afterparty in the sky. But what if that celestial extravaganza is just speculative? What if there’s no afterlife? What, then, is the point of all the self-denial? In contrast, life as we know it is undeniably real. We wake up, pay taxes, work a job (unless we’ve cracked the code to eternal wealth), and navigate human existence with all its pains, pleasures, and bureaucratic nightmares. Given that life itself is a certainty while the afterlife remains in the realm of philosophical guesswork, should we really be placing all our chips on a celestial wager? Or is virtue its own reward? Let’s dive in. The Heavenly Investment Plan Most religious doctrines, especially those roote...