Everyone is connected and not everyone in God knows this. After death, humans will go to heaven or hell. "For everyone, death is either the door to the lives of God and his people, or the door to the withdrawal from what ultimately satisfies human needs" (Sire, 41). It depends on whether they believe in the teaching of God and live by them. If people do not recognize the religion itself, it is not important that they follow the same path.
Christian's view of the world is a consistent view of life, quite different from naturalism, naturalism, materialism, existentialism, polytheism, paganism, mysticism, or decompositionism. This theological view provides direction and direction facing the plurististic approach to spirituality and secularism and truth and morality of the new era. Fear of the future, suffering, illness, and poverty, based on Christ's redemption work and God's great Christian worldview. In addition, the view of the world of Christians provides meaning and purpose to every aspect of life.
Existentialism escapes from despair of nihilism. Existentialism basically has two forms, atheism and theology. Atheistic existentialism is a reexamination of naturalism. At least it escaped the suicidal tendency of nihilism. This world view again denies the existence of God. I oppose this. Because I feel that God is real and inner. However, it explains the world as a purpose. Because the world around us can understand through science and logic. I agree with the fact that we can understand the universe through observation and experiment. I think that science and logic can lead the most important people even to see God in the universe and become a creator of the universe.
Existentialism can be atheistic, theological (or theological), or unknown. Some existentialists, such as Nietzsche, argue that "God is dead" and claim that the concept of God is outdated. Even if they feel that they can not prove it, others like Kierkegaard are very religious. An important element of existentialists is freedom of choice whether to believe or not. Existential themes appeared in early Buddhist and Christian writings (including Saint Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas). In the 17th century, Bryce Pascal believed that Pascal would be meaningless, boring and miserable without God, as we thought of later existentialists, even if Pascal was different from them. . His contemporary John Rock claims individual autonomy and self-determination, but they actively pursue liberalism and individualism rather than reacting to existentialist experiences.