"When a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight," Dr. Johnson opined, "it concentrates his mind wonderfully." True enough. But there certainly are other, less extreme measures, to achieve the same thing. I like to remind myself, from time to time, usually when I’m feeling put upon, overburdened, chained to an uninteresting routine, that nothing one has to do or happens to do would seem onerous if I knew for sure that I would never have the opportunity to do them again, or anything else. And not just that. I would never remember doing anything, never remember having been. "Not to be here,/Not to be anywhere," as Philip Larkin put it.
Concern over death is a common characteristic of religion — even one like Buddhism, which seems to put God in Husserlian brackets — but it is a somewhat paradoxical characteristic. Religion is about finding a point in being and how to go about making it. That cannot be done without taking into consideration overwhelming evidence that your organism will die. The value of religion does not lie in a resolution of this problem, but in the continual reminder of it. Faith is engagement with death.
How much would we care about God if we could live forever?
ReplyDeleteLiving forever. What a scary thought. But perhaps we go on in some way, shape, or form, because God cares for us. It's possible.
ReplyDelete