The
Illusion of our Earthly Lives
Every three years in the village of Toraja in South
Sualwesi, in Indonesia they hold a very strange festival.
They exhume the bodies of their deceased relatives,
clean them up, dress them in new clothes and put them on display.
While this might be
grotesque, disgusting and not to everybody’s taste the Cleansing of the Corpses festival is held
so that the spirit of the deceased can return to its place of origin, hence the
dressing up and all that. While this might conflict with everyone’s view of
life after death it highlights one important fact – when we die all that we
leave behind in this world is just a shrivelled corpse. It doesn’t matter how
rich, famous, beautiful, handsome, good or evil you are, when you die the only
thing you leave behind is dried-up flesh on a skeleton.
I like to liken the
human being to a car. It could be any car from a cheap Skoda to the top of the
range Bugati. Without a human driver behind the wheel (or a human to program it
as regards the new driverless cars) it’s nothing but a pile of fancy metal on
wheels on wheels that will
just sit there without moving. Likewise a human being is nothing
but flesh and bones until you insert a soul to drive it.
Before we are born we sign a contract that when we come into
this world, as a new born baby, we will come with nothing and when our earthly
time is up we will leave with nothing, just leaving behind a shrivelled corpse
to be buried or cremated(- and hopefully not exhumed and displayed as the
Indonesians do!)
From the time we are
born to the time we depart we live an Earthly life. Our souls are in a physical
body that grows from that of a toddler to that of a fully grown adult. In
between birth and death we learn and grow, contributing to this earthly world,
good or bad, before we depart. We are like people who emigrate to live in
foreign lands before one day returning home; the foreign land will never be
your home and you can’t stay forever – you have to return to the source – and
with nothing as promised before you came to life.
Shakespeare once said
‘All the Worlds a stage. And all men and women merely players; they have their
exits and their entrances’. We are born to play a role or roles. What this role
is depends on the individuals’ destiny. Some are born to be teachers, pastors
or leaders. Others are born to be rich or poor, good or bad. Some might be
builders, inventors or market porters. We all have a role to play in the upkeep
and development of this word.
Whilst we are Masters
of our own destiny (to a certain degree!) we are in the habit of changing our
direction, from time to time, to worship the insatiable demands of our physical
bodies and the material world around us. We want more money (at any cost!). We want
bigger houses. We want more fame. Everything we want, want, want is just to
satisfy the vessel we call a human being, which in many cases may not be in
accordance to the ‘driving’ soul’s directive. When things are not done in
accordance to the soul’s reason for being on Earth it upsets the balance of
things. This is when people sin (- and there’s a long list of naughty things we
do!) with their sins affecting the lives of others and even the physical world
we inhabit – people start wars killing people, destroying property and
habitats. We deprive others of what is rightly theirs and so on and so forth.
And all for what?
We do all these things
because of our want for the material things of life. We have basic needs and
things we don’t need or could do without – but still clamour to get – things
you can’t take with you when you go.
The sixth richest man
in the world turned up in Nigeria the other day and people marvelled at how
simple he looked clad in T-shirt and jeans, no watch, no designer trainers,
nothing.
It’s because people
like him realize that life on this planet is an illusion. You’re probably here
for a short period of time, probably not more than a hundred years. You might
have money to fly in private planes, drink the most expensive champagne and eat
caviar but when your time is up you’re not taking any of it with you. Which is
why we probably have these new breed of billionaires who are giving their
wealth away to those who need it.
The average Naija man
will argue that if you have money its best to live like a glutton and live life
to the full, sparing no expenses, because you only live once. Hence the reason
why he’ll accumulate expensive cars, wives, houses and money – his or not. This
might be true, from his point of view, but yet again he’s wrong. Your fleshy
human body (like the ones exhumed in Indonesia) lives once and can enjoy all
this but your soul – which never dies – carries on into the afterlife.
Now what happens to our
souls in the afterlife which could be in Heaven or Hell or something else is
for eternity. Is it worth risking the wrath of what might be out there through
our misdeeds, selfishness and naughtiness, in this illusionary material world
we call Earth?
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