Death, a bodiless exIStence
Again bodiless, but now discerning people and objects

So I digressed while writing this section about death. So if you're not a catholic, or you can stand harsh criticism, click the tombstone to go to a separate page where I moved my digression on Catholicism.

Dying is tough, but explaining it is easy. At the moment of death we go bodiless into our warm, bright-white light. Without a body, we not only lack the five senses, we lack a body that represents our personality. All that's left is our emotional memories, which are part of our spirit being.
And so, everyone who's died, sans Dead Things, has been dreaming of the good time or times they had. They have no personalities, so they can't recognize anyone. They just dream, though possibly they feel a twang of desire to see those people face to face.
That's it, easy. No hell.
And to Christians, this isn't hell here on Earth where Children starve to death and are bought and sold as sex objects. Not for Christians, hell for them is only when they themselves suffer personally, physically, even though their bodies are deconstructing here on Earth, the only real place that exists beyond doubt. Obviously, the non-believers, who all go to suffer even more in hell, get new bodies too, just like the believing, non-sinning people who go to their promised reward of a heaven for their obeisance, supplication.
They both also live forever, but it's never said if sinners age in the threatened hell, but they can't if they're to suffer for eternity; it should be noted that the sinners are without chance of forgiveness from their god. They don't say much about their promised heaven. Do they work in their heaven? Does everything just appear and disappear as in my Children's House? Are the new bodies we get, either way, have disease? After 2,000 years, they should have been told these things by their god.