I think we resurrect ourselves each time we become that and more than we are in the moment by including spirit where we did not before. See the unseen as it were.
On Aug 24, 7:59 am, Pat <[email protected]> wrote: > On 22 Aug, 17:24, gruff <[email protected]> wrote: > > > "... On Aug 22, 6:57 am, [email protected] wrote: ..." > > > > And if resurrected I predict the same old politics. There will either be > > > high level politics in which the right to dissent > > > will be valued and encouraged - or there will be suppression of unpopular > > > opinion. In any event no need to bother > > > ourselves about such a future - > > > I'm not sure it will be in the form of a resurrection -- resurrection > > is too close to insurrection to suit me. But in any case, based in my > > stout belief in irony, it is highly likely that you are correct > > regarding the political substance of any afterlife. I don't think > > that the right to dissent will be lost or suppressed. Our history, > > short though it may be, has always been in the overall direction of > > freedom and individual responsibility. I don't see that changing > > easily -- or at all. > > I view resurrection as easier than the original creation/assemblage of > any of us in the first place. Surely it's easier to do something a > second time, once you've had practice and a working model (our current > incarnation)? So, to my way of thinking, resurrection is FAR easier > for God to perform than it would be to create us in the first place > and, since THAT'S already the case, the second-time-round is a piece > of cake.
