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#1 |
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Jakarta
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Ummm that's what the bible teaches actually
![]() What I found surprising is that the mainstream Christian not knowing the teaching of the bible and what Jesus promised about raising them up from death: on THE last day and not on your each last day. He repeated this several times in his speeches which now gets ignored. The current concept of life after death and immediate punishment and reward is actually more alike to a Greek version of Utopia and Hades. The Catholic teaching came up with a weird over complicated thing of particular judgment(immediate judgment) and because they can't ignore the bible completely the last judgment too. I've searched the bible looking for clues and found many references to the latter including numerous made by St. Paul and ONLY one which seem to talk about the possibility of immediate judgment(I don't count inconclusive texts to prevent from speculating and guessing) which I admit it made me doubt the authenticity of the origin of that particular text that is the story of the beggar called Lazarus who lived in front of the rich man's house. It's the only and really only one single text that seems to support immediate judgment while many many many others(in fact ALL OTHERS) from both the old and new testament seem to only teach about the last judgment. Anyway if you're interested in my little finding which is nothing new I guess, feel free to PM me with your email and I'll email the doc to you. I found the scriptures to be fascinating ever since I looked it up in search of death to verify what was revealed.
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Last edited by Castout; 07-08-10 at 04:47 PM. |
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#2 |
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Jakarta
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#3 |
Fleet Admiral
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And your point is?
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abusus non tollit usum - A right should NOT be withheld from people on the basis that some tend to abuse that right. |
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#4 |
Maverick Modder
![]() Join Date: Aug 2007
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@Platapus
No point ![]() Heh, I didn't know that. Though little surprises me when it comes to religion. A Muslim (actually a secular daughter of a Muslim immigrant) told me that the part of the Qur'an that says a man can have several wives was added after some war that cut the male population down to almost nothing. I dunno if that's true, but it certainly sounds more plausible than God (Allah) telling a blind man to write it down! ![]() Personally I reckon most religious texts have been altered and re-interpreted dozens of times over the millennia. |
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#5 | |
Weps
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![]() ![]() And about all of this afterlife stuff... there is an afterlife. And I believe it depends on how much you believe in it. The more you believe in it, the higher in the spirit plane you will go and the better it will be. If you're a negative/evil person, you'll end up in the negative/lower plane. No fire or anything, just miserable existence on the other side. Though that can change, if I can try and get my hands on a few books from people who claim to have "Near-Death experiences" such as that man who "was in Heaven for 90 minutes" (I believe the video I viewed in church years ago is a fabrication...). However, this kind of topic requires you to have an open mind and just... think about it. Everyone's views are different, you can take ideas and assimilate it as your own belief or just leave it as is. As far as knowledge goes on this topic, there's not much definite information (that's what I believe anyway...). I'm always happy to see what people think, because I'm just like that ![]() As for the presence of a greater celestial being, I believe there is one but it has no definite name and no definite gender (seriously, how can you Christians tell "God" is a man? O_o I have my ideas on how this came to be, but like I said, I don't wanna clash/step on toes). It's just the Alpha and the Omega, with other beings doing their specific job such as bringing life, moderating life, and taking life when it is time. Just my ideas, it does change over time but there are some that remains ![]()
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#6 |
Admiral
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Free will, its the hardest thing to control.
Faith, its the hardest thing to believe. |
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#7 |
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: May 2008
Location: Storming the beaches!
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Some interesting views here, and even a story about people who believe atlanteans will destroy the world. Imagine that.
Personally, I believe there is a God an He sent His only Son to redeem mankind and that one day it will be on Earth as it is in heaven and I don't care if anyone thinks that's silly or not. When the day comes that their souls are judged, they will be granted entry into Paradise if I have anything to say about it, because ours is a God of mercy. Or, if that day doesn't come, at least I tried to live my life like a good person. For the most part, I'm not afraid of dying. It seems silly to worry over the inevitable, especially when it lasts forever (or until judgement day, at least) I just hope it's not too painful. What does scare me is that, if there is no afterlife, what happens when you die? The brain continues electrical activity for a while, right? Is it possible that you could still be aware? What if you were trapped in a nightmare world generated by randomly firing neurons while your brain slowly fades away? Someone please tell me that's not possible. And if it is, I want to be vaporized upon death.
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#8 | ||
Eternal Patrol
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Quote:
Of course there's that old Tales From The Crypt episode in which a dead doctor is still aware and feeling as his brother starts to cut his head open...
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo Last edited by Sailor Steve; 07-08-10 at 10:42 PM. |
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#9 |
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: May 2008
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@Steve
I've taken lots of blows to the head and had a lot of concussions. Roughstock riding will do that to you, but it's odd you should mention that because it was an incident where I had a concussion that started me wondering about what I mentioned. I fell off this horse and got a concussion from hitting the fence on the way down. I don't remember anything for hour after that, but everyone said I thought I was still on the horse, or just about to ride. It wasn't until I started feeling better and bent down to take off my spurs that everything suddenly came rushing back and for a brief moment, I was falling off that horse again. In reality, I was just falling on my face. Weird, huh?
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![]() I stole this sig from Task Force ![]() |
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#10 |
Wayfaring Stranger
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Personally I believe there is a God. Beyond that is pure speculation.
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![]() Flanked by life and the funeral pyre. Putting on a show for you to see. |
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#11 | |
Soaring
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![]() The clinical death criterion depends on what they call "brain death", that is a person is declared dead when there is no more brain activity that coluld be measured. While there are rare diseases/syndroms when people will give an appearance of being dead, only to find that in Edgar Allan Poe style they wake up inside a coffin, this is extremely rare. You may want to change your last will regarding being buried with a cellphone, always. ![]()
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
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#12 |
Soaring
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The early Christians knew the idea of reincarnation, but I do not know how they understood the concept: as a superior essence lasting on, or an individual soul moving on from body to body. There are religion-scientists and historians who imply that maybe Jesus, before he reached the age at which the bible starts to tell tories of him, maybe was travelling to India and came into contact with Buddhist concepts. That may very well be possible, since it would explain why there are so many parallels between Buddhist and Jesus' ideas (and I mean Jesus, not what the church made of him, between the church and buddhist view of the world obviously there is no parallel at all).
Buddha denied the idea of an individual "soul" that survives the body and begins a new cycle once the former body has been destroyed. Man is not a host and soul is not a Goa'uld worm. ![]() In the end, if it is something like this, we all must not find any spiritual fullfillment or justification for our existence, for since we are already "there" (since we, the reflections that we are, are the One-ness anyway), we must not and cannot go anywhere anyway. We can just trouble the water by shaking the waves without need, believing in the false idea that we must "reach" something and must try to get into a "heaven" because we want to avoid a "hell". Heaven and hell are two states of human mind that man forms up - all by himself, and there is nobody and nothing promising him reward or threatening him penalty for doing so. We can trouble the water and add to the dance of reflections we call "the world", if we want. But we could as well let it be. This is my understanding of "sin": to lose or to reject this knowledge about our already present, always existent "higher" origin, and to start making things comolicated and worse by trying to acchieve a solvation that we already are embedded in, and never had left: the salvation of understanding who, or better: what we are, and what we are not. Sin is - lacking insight, lacking knowledge, lacking own experience. We mess up things by your egos' narcissim, and our intellect running amok since we do not keep it under control. Our clever ideas and fantastic conceptions run an eons-long olympic competetion of who can run the fastest, jumps the widest, reaches the highest. Our egos claim medals for out acchievements in this championship, and it makes us believe that once we have enough medals, we will be saved and will be given access to a paradise, "paradise" understood materialistically or religiously. Not only relgions are prone to falling for this trap - scientists and social reformers can be that prone, too. The result can be unjutsified, uncritical optimism into materialistic ideas and concepts, from the hedonism of the capitalistic world to the uncritical implementation of possibly dangerous technologies that do not get crticially questioned because they are new, and "new" makes them attractive. Where all this happens at the cost of our exploration of whom and what we really are, then nothing good usually comes from it, that way we mess up the world we live in and harm ourselves in the best of intentions. It's just that these our intentions maybe are reaching too short. Spirituality in my understanding is trying to understand the nature and reason of our existence by introspection, by observing how our minds call the world that we believe to perceive into existence, and how "mind" manifestates itself. This is the path of experiencing ourselves. Science tries to make conclusions on the nature of reality and things existing by describing them empirically, checking for patterns that may reveal to us why and how things are, where they come from, and where they go. Spirituality is about going into the thing itself, science is about describing the thing from the outside as best as is possible, and from the outer appearance make conclusions on the inner reason. Objectivity and a lack of sentimentalities are virtues in both approaches. Religion is neither the one, nor the other, it is hallucinating and fantasy. It obstructs the path of introspection and own experience by raising a dogma that should neither be examined nor questioned, but simply should be believed and taken for granted although there is no objective justification for doing so, it just promises to be a shortcut of greater comfort and easiness, to bypass the more difficult path of spirituality and/or science. You are spiritual for your own well-being and by changing yourself becoming of benefit for others as well. But you are being talked into being religious not for your own well-being, but the interest of others for gaining control and power over people, inclduing yourself. Spirituality and (institutional) religion (dogmas) are antagonists, seen that way. We all are dreams within one dream. Dust and shadows, winds in the leaves, the waves on the ocean's surface. Stick to the things in life as if they are substantial and real, and you will become a prisoner and miss the meaning of it all, being blind and fall to despair over the existential questions of life. Let it all go (even your desire to let things go ![]() A later teacher of mine, running a taoistic-buddhist centre in Germany, once wrote in a book this (tranlsated from the German): The letting go of all ideas of God and all religious thoughts one is fond of, is an absolute prerequisite for true mystical experience. […] But experience has shown that the letting go of personal idols and religious symbols is espe-cially difficult for those, whose personality structure shows the strongest egocentricity and focussing on themselves. They are afraid to lose everything, and therefore they cling to their small, mortal self with all their might. When one is looking closer to it, one will recognize that most people are not about a living experience of the divine essence, but are more about a maintaining of their personal ideas of the god they are fond of, and about wallowing religious feelings. But true mystic has nothing to do with emotional rapture and inappropriate holiness, these belong to the realm of mysticism, which only is a distortion of true and pure mystic. […] Man in general tends to fooling himself and looking for a short-cut, a religion of superficial consolation, an ideal world without problems and challenges, where everything falls into its’ correct place… […] The clinging to superficial forms and religious practices is one of the greatest dangers on the spiritual way. They are shackles which bind us to signs and symbols which actually should only show us the way inwards. Therefore every symbol shows towards something that is beyond itself and that cannot be named or displayed. To go beyond religious signs and symbols therefore does not mean to refuse these symbols, but to strive for what they are pointing at.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. Last edited by Skybird; 07-09-10 at 06:56 AM. |
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