According to fideists, the leap of faith springs from God and the nature of immortality. Here God means He who has provides survival for human beings after death. Immortality here means the way of survival that God provides. To fideists, God and the afterlife cannot be separated. God to them is just a God synonymous with nature, and He is concerned is about mortals to live again.
This God of faith is a God of Spinoza, He who provides immortality, and He is merciful than you and I, as said by Gardener. This faith, according to fideists, is based on the afterlife. Human beings regard survival as the nature of things. The afterlife they believe in is based on reincarnation. The pre-existence and afterlife of human souls have been a subject of study by philosophers. Fideists believe that God is the provider of immortality. They base this on Jesus, who endured death and resurrection.
The leap of faith among theists springs from passionate hope and longing, which originates from fear and despair. Faith is an expression of feelings of emotions, not just an expression of emotion. Gardener says that even though human beings are the only rational beings, faith is not based on rationality due to its special approach to God. Faith is like the desire created by children when in the hands of their caring parents.