Topic: religion small mindedness | |
---|---|
so.......
im going to hell in a lot of peoples eyes, im comfortable with that. i have a comment that i would love to see spurred into a logical debate.....unfortunately this is a hit and run and i will have to look at the posts tommorrow, but if you will please leave a little. man for sometime has decided that it is the center of the universe. even if you believe in the vastness of the universe it still comes back to us. we are arrogant that way. i think we need to feel like we have this huge purpose. but anyway, for the god allah , prophets etc people, are we alone in the universe? if no- is their religion right or wrong? if yes- center of the universe? 6.5 billion people on the planet,,,only about 1 billion people have the 'right' religion? what about the different sects within the religion (theres only about 1000 different in christianity)which one of them is right? is there a common religion in the world hidden underneath the fabric of the rest of them, something that links them all together in the same way that there is human rights observed by everybody? you know like the right to breath. ok well whatever looking forward to seeing whatever is said. thanks |
|
|
|
everything is linked by one God, whatever name each religion wants to
give Him. |
|
|
|
why is there always a religion forum?
|
|
|
|
TheLonelyWalker,
My friend, I cannot understand this position. Jesus spoke of one narrow way to heaven, not many broad paths. Can you offer any scriptures to support this belief? I know that non-Christians are a law unto themselves, but it's a huge strech to say that all religions have the same god. Voodoo? Hinduism? Buddism? Satanism? Satanism has the same god as Christianity? It just seems like a very worldly thing that you have said and to me, it lacks any spiritual depth. |
|
|
|
My dear brother spider:
satanism as far as I'm concern is not a religion because this people are an aberration. I have one single point God the Heavenly Father can't be just the Father of a selected group of people. I really believe that God is more Universal than that. U r wise man due to study of the sripture, and I respect that. I don't have anything from the bible to suppor my thesis, but i truely believe that God is bigger and broader. My sincere believe is that a human being who accepts his/her own defects and works hard to love all the other creatures deserves the same heaven I'm working so hard to get. Regards. TLW |
|
|
|
Straight is the Gate and narrow is the way...
God provides for each of us. Take a single step... Is not your step narrow? Is not that Gate allways Straight in front of you? Aye there is more than one way to look at words. the way truly is narrow for it fits what you are. The gate will allways be straight in front of you for it is your gate. God is greater than a simple set of man made rules and yet a simple man can understand more than can one of great learning. |
|
|
|
TLW I wouldn't worry my brother.
The Word of God is written in our hearts with more accuracy than the words of man can discribe it. |
|
|
|
thank you AB
|
|
|
|
Doc - after pondering your topic for a while, I can come up with only
one thing that seems to unite the majority, if not all religions and it is not necessarily god/s. Rather, it seems to be that this vast majority feel so unbelievably, singularly, unique and special that they must somehow continue on even after the demise of the body. So doc, it sort of seems like you are correct, when you say that 'man' believes they are the center of the universe, for they can not fathom not existing in some form or another within the universe. |
|
|
|
Red if you look around are you not the center of all that you see?
While you and I together might have a mutual center you and I apart each is at the center of our own individual universe. |
|
|
|
well army doc
maybe you will meet those who choose to cast you there as last i heard is was not up to humans to decide |
|
|
|
Red wrote:
“So doc, it sort of seems like you are correct, when you say that 'man' believes they are the center of the universe, for they can not fathom not existing in some form or another within the universe.” I would love to cease to exist. Unfortunately, I don’t believe that’s possible. Where would I go? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Armydoc wrote:
“is there a common religion in the world hidden underneath the fabric of the rest of them, something that links them all together in the same way that there is human rights observed by everybody? you know like the right to breath..” Pantheism |
|
|
|
AB you ask me: """ Red if you look around are you not the center of all
that you see?""" A question that made me think. I have never felt like I was at the center of my life. My life, while it is my own, has never seemed, to me, to be central in the universe. In fact, I have always felt quite small and inconsequential when considering the whole of our universe. I have often envisioned myself on the fringes of all that goes on within humanity. So to answer your question, no, I do not look outside myself with eyes that can only see a circumference of equal distance. I look outside myself and cannot even imagine how small I am in comparison to the vastness and wonders that that this universe contains. |
|
|
|
Abra, you ask "where would I go?"
I ask you, where did you come from? Your frame of reference indicates what you believe, that you are, at least in part, the God that claims to be without beginning and without end, the Alpha and the Omega. Yet the universe had a beginning, it will have an end, and then what of the God? |
|
|
|
Red wrote:
“Yet the universe had a beginning, it will have an end, and then what of the God?” You don’t know that. Sure, it’s true that science has a theory of the “Big Bang”, and their evidence supports this theory quite profoundly. However, any scientist worth his salt will tell you that no one knows what banged or precisely how the bang was initiated. There is absolutely no proof (or even a serious suggestion) that the universe came into existence at the moment of the Big Bang. That could have simply been a transition from a previous state. Moreover, Relativity Theory gives us much reason to believe that there is no such thing as time. What we perceive as time is merely an illusion. In fact, the effects of Relativity (which have been observed) prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that time is in fact an illusion. I certainly don’t want to go into this in a post, but Relativity basically shows that the time that we experience is merely a fabrication of the space we are experiencing. To be brief, there is no difference between ‘now’ and ‘eternity’. Time is not what we thought it was. Just like Einstein’s famous equation E = mc^2 shows the matter and energy are interchangeable, the laws of Relativity Theory show that time and space are interchangeable There’s no doubt in my mind that there is no such thing as time as we perceive it. If you exist now then you’ve always existed because there simply is no other time in which to not exist. The popular belief that we came into being at our birth is pretty much taken for granted. But that idea is riddled with paradoxes if you actually stop to think about it. People think that a spirit is ‘created’ at birth, but they refuse to believe that it ceases to exist when the body dies. How silly is that? Why should a physical body being conceived ‘create’ a spirit? And, if that were the case, then why should that spirit then just die when the body dies? People make these things up in a desperate attempt to keep from having to face the fact that they might die. But let’s just assume for a second that living beings have a spirit. What the hell, we’re in the religion forum I suppose that concept should be acceptable. So why would that spirit have been created during physical birth? What does a physical body have to do with a spirit? Well, the answer to that should be quite evident. It has nothing to do with a spirit! Our spirits always exist whether we are in our physical form (the form of matter) or in our natural form of pure energy. We chose to be in this incarnation. No one is here against their will. And everyone made the choice to be born into this world prior to that event. Religions only exist because people have forgotten who they are. The universe will not end. Even if it appears to have a physical end where will all the energy go? Energy cannot be created nor destroyed. How can the universe be destroyed? If it ceases to exist physically then it must have gone back into its natural form of pure energy. Perhaps to have another Big Bang? Don’t listen to the physicists (even though I am one of them), because in the end, neither science nor mathematics can possibly explain this universe. That would be like pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps. In our universe 1+1=2, but in the state of pure energy there is only one. Mathematics is meaningless to god. Mathematics is nothing more than a reflection of the quantitative physical world of matter. |
|
|
|
Abra, Thanks for your explanation. I agree with much of what you say
about time. I was a teenager when I grasped the idea that time is an illusion. I actually like your ideas or your beliefs. As far as beliefs go, I can relate to them beyond any others I have been acquainted with. What I have always had a problem with, is the whole pure energy thing. To imagine that energy has a thought process at all is not within my grasp. Further you assign creative impulses to that thought which allow us to materialize through a whole birth process, just to experience life in this dimension. Yet with each, incarnation from energy to the physical there is no recollection. The theory is then complicated by this illusion of time. That somehow through this concept of space and time being relative, every experience has already occurred. Thus making these experiences more dream than reality. And what has the entity that began as energy learned from dreaming? What's more, because this is a cycle that extends through eternity then you make energy the only possible infinite in the universe energy - US. I can see why you would want an end, because I would not want to spend eternity dreaming of things that have happened over & over. This is no better an existence than the heaven that some Christians believe awaits them. |
|
|
|
Abracadabra writes:
"Don’t listen to the physicists (even though I am one of them), because in the end, neither science nor mathematics can possibly explain this universe. That would be like pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps. In our universe 1+1=2, but in the state of pure energy there is only one. Mathematics is meaningless to god. Mathematics is nothing more than a reflection of the quantitative physical world of matter. " Ah! So God *does* play dice with the Universe, eh? (See, engineers have a short attention span when physicists go on and on about what they don't know and what can't be done, and then we just go out and do it anyway:) She just plays it with an infinite number of infinite-sided die. -Kerry O., channeling the Chief Engineer, who nowhere and nowhen in the 23rd over dimension of the Mulitiverse is laffing and saying, "There. That oughta goof things up for those arrogant little know-it-alls for a bit." |
|
|
|
>> The universe will not end. Even if it appears to have a physical end where will all the energy go?
Ab, what if the universe expands forever and entropy increases towards its maximum level? This would not be the 'end' of the universe itself, but wouldn't it be the end of all life in the universe, indeed all active processes of any kind? |
|
|