Yes.
I don't think that he would make some women so hot and some pussy so good and then demand that I don't enjoy it. If he did, he will forgive me because he created temptation that was to great to bear.
One of the most fascinating theories that I ever read is that God is one and the same as the Universe. As it was born, so was God born. In his infancy God had to try to figure things out and that is why the old testament is so strict - God was using to much force. Since then he has gotten older and wiser and eased up a bit on all the "Thou Shalt Nots"
I find Protestantism one of the best religions because the requirements are simple. You simply have to believe, and give the kind of acknowledgement [love] that a creator would want from his creation. Thereafter, even if you mess up time and again, you will be forgiven. There is no person (such as the Pope in Catholicism) getting in between the creator and his creation. Also, there is not the fatalism so limiting in Islam - man was put here on Earth to have free will, because only those who chose freely to acknowledge their creator can ever give anything to his creator that would be wanted.
Further, it comports with the idea that we are put on this Earth to experience the free world. We struggle, we strive, there are good days and bad in order to give us the appreciation of life.
As was said by Robert E. Howard: Let me live deep while I live; let me know the rich juices of red meat and stinging wine on my palate, the hot embrace of white arms, the mad exultation of battle when the blue blades flame and crimson . . . I live, I burn with life, I love, I slay, and am content.
Only when he has thus lived can a man truly appreciate that which is to come after.
Death then is a gift - as long as YOU have lived a full life here on earth and squeezed every drop from it that you could. Note, I said "full life" and not necessarily "long life" or "easy" life.
J.R.R. Tolkien, in his under-appreciated writings, expressed this sentiment in his concept of "the Doom of Man"
Quote:Quote:
The Gift of Men is death—the inheritance of Ilúvatar's Younger Children, which allows them to go beyond the confines of Arda, this world. Though the phrase commonly refers to this type of mortality, death is actually only part of the broader Gift given to Men: it is one with their ability to operate beyond the Music of the Ainur, which "is as fate to all things else". With this Gift, Men were to fulfill the world down to the finest detail.[1]
It was said among the Elves that after they died, the fëar of Men were gathered in the Halls of Mandos, and then departed from the World for a destination unknown even to the Valar. Whereas all other beings in Arda, including the Valar themselves, were bound to the World and its fate, the Gift freed Men from this destiny, allowing them to shape their own lives as they wished. For this reason, the Elves, who must live as long as Arda exists and become burdened with its sorrows, often envy the Gift given to Men, and it is said that even the Valar shall do so as well.
http://tolkiengateway.net/wiki/Gift_of_Men
As a final closing thought, while it seems unfair that a beautiful woman can live out the first 30 years or so of her life with all handed on a silver platter, and the general ease of life that many women have compared to men, women are to be pitied.
Pity I feel for women because very few ever experience the fullness of life that many men do. They do not have our struggles. They experience not a man's personal victories and defeats. They can always rely on the safety net of their pussy should they fail.
Unlike women, men rise and fall on their own character, will, and ambition.
God created man first. Women were only created as a helper (and foil) for man and are not likely to have the full experience that a man does on this earth. I wonder if most women, like the elves in Tolkien's fable, do not receive the same fullness of the "Gift of Death" because they will not have experienced enough of the world to appreciate the difference in the afterlife.