One Answer:
According to Raghuvamsham, the holy book that tells about life history of Ramas Vamsha, there are four stages of spending a meaningful life in which the last stage was the SANYASASHRAMA and this says that the last stage of life must be devoted.
Another Answer:
According to The Bible, when you die so does your soul, but your spirit does not: it goes either to heaven if you're a Christian or hell if you're not. To not die spiritually you must become a Christian: all you have to do is repent of your sins and accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour and He will do the rest.
Another Answer:
According to Muslim belief:
When you die either you go to Hell or Paradise: If you die as a righteous Muslim (not sinful), you go to Paradise. If you die as a Christian, Jew, Hindu or anything else other than Muslim, you go straight to hell fire for ever and ever, no end, no more death. If you die as a sinful Muslim (without repentance), you may be forgiven or go to hell for limited time (amount of time depends upon your sins).
Another Answer:
According to Jewish belief:
When the body dies, the soul (neshama) continues to exist and is treated in accordance with the person's actions while he/she was alive.
All outstanding accounts are settled after this life. Some cases illustrate this point, since this entire world wouldn't be enough to reward a Moses or punish a Hitler.
The afterlife is detailed at length in the Talmud and referred to briefly in Torah (Bible) verses. The prophets are more explicit with such references (see Isaiah 26:19, Daniel 12:13, Zechariah 3:7, 1 Kings 8:30, 2 Kings ch.2, Ecclesiastes 12:7).
One reason that the Tanakh does not delve into the details of the afterlife is that this belief was shared by all ancient societies and needed little reiteration.
Judaism believes that all people, Jewish or not, are able to merit the rewards of the afterlife if they live righteously.
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