Many people today say, “I only believe in what I see.”
They trust science and logic — and that’s not wrong.
But what if logic itself points beyond death?
Thousands of people throughout history have experienced near-death experiences — moments where the body clinically dies, yet the person remains conscious, aware, and remembers.
Science can measure the body, but not the soul.
If human consciousness continues after the brain stops, then life does not end in the grave.
🔹 Faith is not against logic — it goes beyond it
Faith is not blind.
It does not cancel reason; it completes it.
As Saint Gregory Palamas said:
“Reason is the servant of faith, not its master.”
Logic can tell us something about the world — but not everything.
It cannot grasp eternity, love, or the meaning of life.
That is where faith begins: not where reason fails, but where it reaches its limit.
🔹 Atheism is also a kind of belief
When an atheist says, “I don’t believe in God,”
he still believes in something — that behind the universe there is nothing.
That’s not logic — that’s another kind of faith, a faith in nothingness.
The difference is that faith in God brings hope, love, and purpose.
Faith in nothing brings emptiness.
🔹 The logic of love
If we truly use logic, we see that the greatest human power is love.
And love, by nature, desires eternity — to never end.
Would love be given to us if everything ended in death?
The existence of love itself points to the Eternal Source of love — God.
🔹 The ultimate truth
Christ did not promise philosophy or theory.
He promised Life.
He said:
“I am the Resurrection and the Life.
Whoever believes in Me, though he may die, yet shall he live.”
(John 11:25)
Faith does not start in the mind — it starts in the heart that seeks truth.
Logic may open the door, but only love makes us enter.
🌿 Reflection
If you are searching, don’t be afraid to question — but also don’t be afraid to listen.
Because truth is not an idea.
Truth is a Person — Jesus Christ.
And when the heart meets Him, both faith and logic find peace.
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