The death of God didn’t strike Nietzsche as an entirely good thing. Without a God, the basic belief system of Western Europe was in jeopardy.
Scotty Hendricks at Big Think website
Confirming of course that genetically, biologically, we seem clearly hard-wired to seek out something -- anything -- that we can ascribe one or another essential meaning to. Something -- anything -- that will allow us to think ourselves into believing that our individual life is a part of something that encompasses a crucial teleological purpose. It's not just the brute facticity of birth --> school --> work --> death. Instead, we "take our place on the Great Mandella" and become at one with whatever the universe is finally all about.Nietzsche would not have been surprised by the events that plagued Europe in the 20th century. Communism, Nazism, nationalism, and the other ideologies that spread across the continent in the wake of World War I sought to provide man with meaning and value, as a worker, as an Aryan, or some other greater deed...
So, sure, what's your rendition of it?
With Nietzsche and the death of God, however, other fonts had to be invented to anchor the Self [if not the Soul] in.
Indeed, here's a list of just the political ideologies alone out there to choose from:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_p ... ideologies
Which one are you more or less convinced comes closest to the One True Path?
And, again, he even made the attempt to provide us with one of his own. Only, as with all other secular fonts, morality on this side of the grave can fall anywhere at all along this ideological spectrum. And, as for immortality and salvation?...in a similar way as to how Christianity could provide meaning as a child of God, and give life on Earth value by its relation to heaven. Although he may have rejected those ideologies, he no doubt would have acknowledged the need for the meaning they provided.
Just ask Woody Allen: https://youtu.be/90Z98ZlvpPU