For many people, it seems that Christianity has always offered too much and too easily - and too equally.
So long as a person attains "salvation" then he is given eternal resurrected life, in a Heaven without evil or death...
This universal reward for all who follow Jesus Christ has often seemed to obliterate any necessary value in this mortal life on earth, or any reason for living "well" in this earthly existence. It seems as if everybody gets "the same" result, no matter how good or how evil his actions during mortal life.
I suspect that this kind of inference is a consequence of the very common way of thinking about "human beings" as interchangeable members of a class, rather than as unique individuals: such that resurrected people in Heaven are vaguely-assumed to be identical creatures living almost-exactly the same life - "equal" in all important respects.
But if instead we can develop an understanding of Jesus's work as aimed at unique individual persons ( individuals that have always been unique, and whose destiny is to remain unique); then it becomes evident that resurrection to eternal life must be of an unique soul.
And, insofar as our unique soul can change through life - can learn, can get better or worse... then the result of this change, will affect the outcome of resurrection.
In other words; if we compare someone who has tried to lead a virtuous life and who has learned from his mistakes; with someone who lived to use others for his own pleasure and gratification - the outcome of such difference will be that: that which is resurrected is different in each case.
If we look at life subjectively; when we each come to a major life choice, our soul will be changed in different directions according to our decision and its outcomes - such that when it comes to resurrection, then we can expect to end-up differently.
Because what went-into resurrection was different - what comes-out from resurrection will be different.
If we spend much of life in a state of resentment, which we justify by a narrative that we are innocent victims, and if we engage in spiteful fantasies of revenge on our oppressors; then this evil aspect of ourselves will need to be left-behind at resurrection.
Any and all that is not "of love" is left-behind at resurrection - so that our resurrected self will be diminished by however much is evil and is un-repented.
But if, instead, we were able to recognize that resentment is a sin, and we acknowledged this sin in ourselves and aspired to turn-aside from it - then such a process of learning and repentance during mortal life, means that our resurrected self will be rooted in a larger, more complex and balanced character.
Of course, we need to be clear and unambiguous that even the most evil person imaginable - one who has dedicated his life to using and harming other people, animals, plants and the rest; can nonetheless repent "at the last moment" (which I believe comes after death, post-mortally) - and can, in principle - i.e. if he truly desires to follow Jesus - repent and receive resurrected eternal Heavenly life.
But such a person will need to leave-behind a great deal of his mortal self to become fit for Heaven.
His resurrected self will, and must be, made a very different character from his mortal self.
Only that which is good is resurrected; because that which is evil cannot be carried forward into Heaven. And this is why it is "worthwhile" to live well, to learn spiritually from experience; and to repent our sins.
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