S
soleil10
Guest
I have heard of this concept in Buddhism.As a Buddhist, I believe that any separation between my wife and myself (or anybody else for that matter) is due to our bodies, senses and thoughts reinforcing the notion of separation. One one hand it is a very real separation, but it is only part of the picture and a very temporary perspective. When we die and lose the mechanism by which this separation is created we return to "oneness".
In my view a man who is married does not enter in a second marriage.I do not believe that marriage is eternal. Marriage is an invention of our biology and culture and ends, at best, with death. In your view, if a man—totally committed, in a loving marriage—becomes a widower and then enters a second totally committed and loving marriage, who does he spend eternity with?
Since we are spiritual beings first, his spouse physical body has died but her spiritual body is very much alive. She is right there with him.
The rules have not changed. God's will and purpose for his creation have always been the same. We are the ones going back to our original ancestors who have not play by the rules of our own free will. It has been a long road back home.One other aspect that doesn't feel right to me is this idea that the rules keep changing by which your God judges people.
Once again the conditions have never changed and the purpose has always been the same but humanity have created many delays.The Buddha lived 600 years before Jesus, and the Dharma has been the same before he was born, while he lived, and in the thousands of years since his death. A caveman could have experienced enlightenment (and probably did) and some future being, living 10,000 years from now, could too (and will) using similar practices as the Buddha. All of these changing conditions that your God requires for salvation, paints Him as inconstant.
I'm not trying to derail a Christian thread. I'm merely trying to compare and contrast our perspectives. I do appreciate learning about the different ways that people interpret—what I believe is—the most important aspect of our existence.
It is very fine, I do myself enjoy study about other religions from those who practice them and find the similarities or differences.
I found out that people who are truly believers in their own religion get along very well with others. Their love for God and their fellow men transcend their differences.