About
 a hundred years ago a friend of mine asked me to do a simple 
calculation.  What calculation, you ask?  The mass of eye boogers 
created over a normal human lifespan? The amount of acceleration 
required to launch the neighbors’ effing barking dog into the stratosphere? The amount of time he spends flipping through Popstar! magazines to 
fuel his disturbing crush on Justin Bieber?  Nope...thankfully {shudder}.
  In this edition of The Missing Piece I am going to take a basic 
low-level engineering approach to determine what the probability is that
 an individual is actually going to heaven.  On the surface this seems 
like a pretty daunting task considering the charged atmosphere 
surrounding religion and the necessarily nebulous rules that each one 
employs to control its flock, but like most calculations I think we can 
do get pretty close with a few assumptions.  Here are the relevant 
assumptions as I see them:
- You either believe in God or you don’t.
 - Belief in God implies, in this case, that you subscribe to a certain religion.
 - The religion of your choice offers something more for your afterlife party.
 - Simply by subscribing to your religion Capital-G automagically opens up the pearly gates regardless of your behavior while living.
 
Before we begin, here is a short list of what I’m not going to do:
- Dig through the dirty laundry of every religion to figure out which ones even believe in heaven.
 - Interview clergy from each religion (if there are even clergy) to determine how one acquires the exact directions to heaven.
 - Discuss the merits (if any) in belief in God or heaven or religion. I’ll save that for a later date.
 - Go to heaven.
 
With the above assumptions in mind, this should result in calculating the maximum probability of the devout meeting their maker
First,
 it seems obvious that an individual has two choices: believe in a 
supreme being (believer) or don’t (atheist).  Therefore, one’s odds of 
believing in God is 1 out of 2 or 0.5.
Now,
 of the people that believe in God some subset of them think that their 
deity (or deities) is THE ONE that holds their ticket to a cushy 
afterlife.  To these believers everyone else is a non-believing 
interloper that will boil in a vat of camel oil for eternity.  Based on 
that “logic” it is fair to assume that each religion is mutually 
exclusive.  So, theoretically, one of them must be the one true 
religion, all others are shite.  Currently there are approximately 4,200
 religious groups that exist on Earth, each believing they are the 
shining light and the beacon of hope for all humanity.  As of this 
writing, the current population of the planet is 6,973,738,433.  Based 
on those numbers (assuming an even distribution) there is roughly one 
religion for every 1,660,414 people on the planet.  I think it is fair 
to assume that religion has been around as long as humans have. 
 Certainly archaeological digs seem to support this.  Over the course of
 human history there have been approximately 108 billion people that 
have walked the Earth.  Surely those people had souls, too; they must 
have gone somewhere, right?  If we assume the same ratio of religions to
 people over the course of human history there have been 65,044 
religions since we were created. Some of these religions are 
monotheistic; some are polytheistic.  The top two religions today (based
 on the number of followers only) are monotheistic; however, number 
three on the list has no less than 306 deities, while some other 
religions have been documented to have over 1000 deities.  For the sake 
of calculation I will use the low estimate of 100 gods per religion. 
 This means there have been somewhere on the order of 6.5 million gods 
floating around the ether since Spider Grandmother used a hollow reed to
 create the sky.  For the benefit of doubt, let’s say there is about 50%
 overlap of gods throughout history, so there really have only been 3.25
 million gods.  The believers’ temporal placement in history and 
physical placement geographically generally dictate which of these gods 
they choose, but for now I will leave this out and consider being a denizen of 
the Earth to be enough.
OK.
  That’s most of the groundwork done.  One of these religions and 
therefore one of these gods holds the keys to the pearly gates.  What 
are the odds that the believer has selected the right one?  Assuming 
that there is some sort of natural selection or evolution of gods and 
that one of the current deities that survives today is THE ONE, the odds
 that someone has selected the right god today is approximately 1 out of
 420,000 or 0.000002, if they are already a believer.
  Multiplying that by 100 to account for the number of gods in the 
chosen religion, odds improve to 0.0002 or 0.02%.  Multiplying that by 
the chance of being a believer (0.5) the end result is 0.01%.  That 
doesn’t look too good.  If there is no natural selection among gods then
 all of the gods over all of human history are still in play, even 
though we may not know who they are.  Who knows, maybe He took all of 
his followers with Him off to paradise already?  Extending that 
calculation over the whole of human history, the odds that the believer 
has selected the right god is 0.0015%.  Jesus.  Hell must be huge!
To
 be fair, true believers generally believe that God created the entire 
universe so let’s include the rest of Her creation, shall we?  Current 
estimates for the number of exoplanets that lie within the habitable 
zone of stars similar to our sun is somewhere on the order of 10 billion
 in the Milky Way alone.  The Milky Way is just one of approximately 200
 billion galaxies (low estimate) in the universe.  If even 0.1% of these
 exoplanets within the habitable zone have some form of life and only 
0.1% of those supports “intelligent” life then there will be ~10,000 
planets that harbor intelligent life in the Milky Way.  This translates 
to 2,000,000,000,000,000 (2 million billion) planets in the universe 
with intelligent life.  One would assume that some percentage of those 
would develop religions - let’s say 50%.  Let’s further assume that 
there are only 10 competing religions with 10 gods on each of those 
exoplanets.  That’s 1E17 more gods.  Our measly number of gods (3.25 
million) doesn’t even factor into the noise.  Taking the chances of 
believing in God (0.5), multiplied by the chance of selecting the “real”
 God (1E-17), multiplied by the chances of that God being Earth-based 
(5E-16), Multiplied by the number of gods per religion (on Earth, 100) 
leaves the universal believer in the unenviable position of being right 1
 out of 4,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 times.  Odin’s beard! 
 That’s really not good.
Analyzing this a bit further, even if one assumes that we are alone in the universe and
 one assumes the believer’s god is still around (I don’t think these are
 fair assumptions, by the way), true believers have about a 0.01% of 
selecting the correct deity and therefore going to heaven. 
 Interestingly, that means only 700,000 out of the nearly 7 billion 
people on our fair planet may have a shot at reaching heaven.  The rest of the teeming masses can go suck a lemon.  Still, 
the individual that chooses not to believe has a 50% chance of being 
correct compared to 0.01% for the non-universal believer.
Choose 
wisely.

