Top 275 Afterlife Quotes & Sayings - Page 2

Explore popular Afterlife quotes.
Last updated on April 16, 2025.
Housework hassles go on, are never resolved, and will probably extend into the afterlife ('Why am I the one who takes the clouds to the dry cleaners?').
What wise God would consign a man to Hell for ignorance, instead of teaching him better in the afterlife?
So you’re saying the afterlife is hard on the libido? FYI, that’s probably not a good bullet point for your recruiting brochure. — © Rachel Vincent
So you’re saying the afterlife is hard on the libido? FYI, that’s probably not a good bullet point for your recruiting brochure.
Since there is absolutely no logical reason to assume there is an afterlife, I decided to make the life I have now as much fun as possible.
... I could have said something profound, but you would have forgotten it in 15 minutes - which is the afterlife of a graduation speech.
There is no heaven or afterlife for broken-down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark.
I remember when I first encountered anthropocentrism. I was in primary school and, in preparation for our confirmation, the class was learning about the afterlife.
For me, to say I want to go to sleep and retire and prepare for my afterlife, I think that is very selfish.
Whether you reach a lot of people or have a profound impact on a few people, their memories of you are your afterlife.
I don't believe there's an afterlife - but I don't believe there's an end to life. Consciousness goes beyond the bounds of your body.
First I stopped believing in hell, then the afterlife. Sometimes that connection is still there, and I'll feel an impulse to pray if I'm stressed or upset.
I'm not sure I believe in the whole 'ghost-afterlife' thing, but I think places are marked by people who have been there.
I do believe in an afterlife. I try to be at one with people and try to love life as much as I can.
God and the afterlife and all that is certainly a subject that's interested me, and I think it interests me more the older that I get. — © Stephen King
God and the afterlife and all that is certainly a subject that's interested me, and I think it interests me more the older that I get.
It's questionable whether I believe in God or Jesus but I do believe in a spiritual world and some kind of afterlife.
And if someone doesn’t believe in any afterlife?” I asked. Walt gave me a sad look. “Then that’s what they experience.
I'd rather there wasn't an afterlife, really. I'd much rather not be me for thousands of years.
When you have a regime that would be happier in the afterlife than in this life, this is not a regime that is subject to classic theories of deterrence.
Our current obsession with creativity is the result of our continued striving for immortality in an era when most people no longer believe in an afterlife.
There is no origin for the idea of an afterlife, save the conclusion which the savage draws from the notion suggested by dreams.
'Why are we here?' 'What is our purpose? 'Is there an afterlife?' 'Is there a God?' 'Is it all about science?' Those are big questions, and usually, TV is a little scared to go there.
If critics and fanboys weren't suckers for simplistic nihilism and high-pressure marketing, Afterlife would be universally acclaimed as a visionary feat, superior to Inception and Avatar on every level.
It wasn't that [he] believed in religion, or a God, or an afterlife. He just knew it was impossible to feel this much love and for it to end.
The process of communication with the afterlife - more of an exchange than a conversation - has always fascinated me.
My view of the afterlife is that it's made of different levels, depending on how spiritual a life we live.
There is no heaven or afterlife for broken down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark.
Likewise the leader of any state has to do the same, he has to enforce Shariah firmly, for he will be held in account later in the afterlife if he fails.
George Harrison's passing was really sad, but it does make the afterlife seem much more attractive.
I'd rather believe in reincarnation than hell. The idea of an afterlife is much so more tolerable when returning is an option.
I regard the brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail. There is no heaven or afterlife for broken down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark.
Memory is the only afterlife I have ever believed in. But the forgetting inside us cannot be stopped. We are programmed to betray.
People only get in the afterlife what they have most wanted-either to have God as Savior and Master or to be their own Saviors and Masters.
I think if there is a God, it's very important that he has a sense of humour - otherwise, you are in for a very miserable afterlife.
R.I.P. Steve Jobs. I bet you're busy right now revolutionizing and redesigning the afterlife for all of us to enjoy when our time comes
The yearning for an afterlife is the opposite of selfish: it is love and praise for the world that we are privileged, in this complex interval of light, to witness and experience.
Is there a God? Is there an afterlife?... I think that now, more so than ever, people are much more willing to take the time and question what's out there.
Everyone fears the cut of the blade. It doesn't matter after that. I know the spirit survives as there is so much evidence of the survival of the personality in the afterlife.
People are very appreciative, and I'm always thrilled at how long the 'Morse' films have lasted. They seem to have an afterlife that goes on and on for decades, which is touching.
I'm an atheist, so I don't believe in a heaven or afterlife. I believe that once I die, that's it. — © Courtney Act
I'm an atheist, so I don't believe in a heaven or afterlife. I believe that once I die, that's it.
It's hard to speculate as a human about the afterlife because you're not in it. And it's probably as wild and wacky as you could imagine. The idea that people have figured it out, I'm not sure if I can fathom that.
All the human beings I met were either sure that there would be no afterlife or else that they would get preferential treatment in the hereafter.
Of course there are people who think of 'heaven' as a kind of pie-in-the-sky dream of an afterlife to make the thought of dying less awful. No doubt that's a problem as old as the human race.
I believe that no matter what happens, or where we go, or if there's an afterlife, that we'll always be connected. Not even death can make me forget you, or forget that I love you.
I didn't mind giving up carnality, jewelry and red meat in return for comradeship and an afterlife.
I think I do believe in the afterlife; I have heard stories from people who I can completely trust that have seen ghosts.
I used to just want so badly to have afterlife insured and make sure I was going to heaven.
I am not interested in the afterlife. Religion is supposed to be about losing your ego, not preserving it eternally in optimum conditions.
What do babies dream of? She must be dreaming of the before-life, just as I dream of the afterlife.
If this world isn't good enough for us then an afterlife won't be enough. — © Fanny Howe
If this world isn't good enough for us then an afterlife won't be enough.
My understanding of life is very existential. I think that we are our bodies. There's nothing else, and when we die, that's it. No afterlife.
My language and my sensibility are yearning to admit a kind of religious or transcendent dimension. But then there's the reality: there's no Heaven, no afterlife of the sort we were promised, and no personal God.
Belief in God? An afterlife? I believe in rock: this apodictic rock beneath my feet.
Cast aside those who liken godliness to whimsy and who try to combine their greed for wealth with their desire for a happy afterlife.
I have always been interested in the paranormal and afterlife, everything from ghosts to angels. I think that everyone has that curiosity of the great unknown.
My dad has dementia, so I monitor my own memory in a way that other people may not. As an atheist, I don't believe in an afterlife so I feel I need to fit in as much as I can while I'm here.
The most important philosophy I think is that even if it isn't true you must absolutely assume there is no afterlife.
If we can prove an afterlife, then we have less pressure to make our physical life last forever.
Sluggish and sedentary peoples, such as the Ancient Egyptians-- with their concept of an afterlife journey through the Field of Reeds-- project on to the next world the journeys they failed to make in this one.
There's already been some trouble for Osama bin Laden in the afterlife. There was a mix up and he was greeted by 72 vegans.
Imagine that it’s not about the self and its concerns, about ‘what’s in it for me,’ whether that be a blessed afterlife or prosperity in this life.
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