PsychedelicDragon
Master Psychonaut
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"The Kingdom of God lies within you."
That simple quote of pure wisdom came from the main figure of the most popularly adhered religion (christianity) in the world: Jesus Christ. From another tradition, it is said that there is no salvation through merely believing. Having faith in the fact that your ego is an illusion will not get you to enlightenment. Such sayings were attributed to the wisdom of the Buddah, who learned this from years and years of spiritual discipline and practice. Of course, one does not need years and years of spiritual discipline to see this very obvious fact.
I think and feel that many religions of today have lost their original meaning. I could call myself a christian under some definitions. But probably most of the people who call themselves christian, I would want nothing to do with their beliefs. Mainly because that is what they are. Beliefs. Not direct experience of the divine. Or knowledge of the "creation" itself. Faith in dogma is what drives many of the world's christians. Faith to my mind is a hopeful belief. The word belief itself comes from the latin root "to wish". So as a result, so many people just blindly follow a bunch of dogmatic outdated religious commandments from religious books that they believe to be the infallible word of god (eg the "Bible"). And if that isn't enough, there is a strong cultural component to the many delusions of the masses, such as adherents blindly believing what their clergy tells them, or believing the right wing bigots (like the ones on fox news, for instance) who claim to be followers of Christ.
This of course is true of all organized major world religions. I can be called a muslim as well, but the overwhelming vast majority of muslims I would want nothing to do with. And there is even a bigger current of fundamentalism in the islamic world. So many of which believe many of the same absurd notions that under-developed christians do.
What are some of these delusions? Well for one, that God is like a man. Among christians god is popularly imagined as a bearded old man in the sky who tallies whether you have been good or bad and gives you heaven and hell as punishments. That god is something personal, like a real human but with superpowers.....you know like a cosmic grandfather. It is obvious such metaphors are meant to be taken allegorically, just like the creation story in the bible. Of course the world wasn't made in 6 days 6,000 years ago, all scientific evidence shows otherwise anyways.
Well that does lead us into the meat of the problem. Many christians believe by forsaking rational thought, science, and reason that they are becoming closer to God. When in fact, all this does is further isolate them from the divine.
Now don't get me wrong, I'm certainly not saying that rational thought and science are the basis to find the ultimate spiritual truth. Indeed, many spiritual practices, such as zazen for instance, involve silencing the chatter in the skull (thoughts), so our mind perceives the world independent of words and symbols. But to forsake rationality and science in the realm of words and reasons is quite foolish.
Instead of having blind faith in some teachings, clergy, culture, or ritual, wouldn't it make more sense to know the spiritual reality through direct experience? Wouldn't knowledge based off of direct experience be the hands down best way to approach this subject? After all, when you know something to be true, you have no doubt in your heart that it is true.
We all know with 100% certainty gravity is what keeps our feet firmly planted on the Earth. Now if we were to say we had faith that gravity kept us on the Earth, wouldn't that suggest that maybe we are not sure? There is no reason to have faith if you know something. I don't know any people who will say they "know" god is a personal deity with a beard in the sky that takes tallies on everyone. They will call it faith. And that is exactly what it is. Faith. No one will say they know all those images as literally true, especially since they know they have no direct experience of what they believe.
The metaphor for god as a male deity is just as allegorical as the metaphor for earth being a female deity. We can of course personify mother Earth as a goddess, and claim that Earth is literally a goddess with the appearance of a woman. But I'm sure all of us agree that it is just an allegorical image or metaphor. Isn't the same true for the spiritual father, the one we call "God"? The ultimate is beyond gender, for one. How can the cosmic spirit be a male human with male reproductive organs if he is made of full spirit and omnipresent?
Shamanism was the first religion ever. All spiritual and religious traditions can trace back to the original shamanism that our hunter-gatherers and our early settled ancestors. Shamanism certainly did not die out when the neolithic revolution hit. It continued on, in the spiritual practices of the various ascetics and gurus. Shamanism has often emphasized personal experience of the spirit world, and this is achieved by the use of trance-inducing techniques....eg entheogens, meditation, hypnosis, fasting, ect.
However over time, as power centers grew, religion was hijacked in many cultures to serve the interests of those in power, until among many religions, all that was left was the rituals that have lost their original meaning. And this is the dilemma we face today, as we try to get out of the dark ages of discontents of old civilization. And yet it continues, more people are just following the religion that their parents or culture follow, and do it mindlessly and ritualistically. Instead of having trust in themselves, their perception, and their ability to find the divine for themselves based with direct experience. If the kingdom of god lies within you, then trying to find him separate from you, as if he was it was a separate entity, would not make much sense.
These are just my opinions, I by no means want to downplay the religious beliefs of others here. I just wish to challenge the commonly accepted notions of organized religions, in hopes of perhaps improving your spirituality, as well as my own. I don't think science is the only area where we should be asking skeptical questions. Spirituality also requires skeptical questions.....and it is only through direct experience do we really come to know the divine.
What do you think? Do you approach spirituality with knowledge or pure faith? Should direct experience be the basis of of spirituality, or should it be based on how well one obeys the dogma of religious rules and texts? Vote in the poll and discuss.
That simple quote of pure wisdom came from the main figure of the most popularly adhered religion (christianity) in the world: Jesus Christ. From another tradition, it is said that there is no salvation through merely believing. Having faith in the fact that your ego is an illusion will not get you to enlightenment. Such sayings were attributed to the wisdom of the Buddah, who learned this from years and years of spiritual discipline and practice. Of course, one does not need years and years of spiritual discipline to see this very obvious fact.
I think and feel that many religions of today have lost their original meaning. I could call myself a christian under some definitions. But probably most of the people who call themselves christian, I would want nothing to do with their beliefs. Mainly because that is what they are. Beliefs. Not direct experience of the divine. Or knowledge of the "creation" itself. Faith in dogma is what drives many of the world's christians. Faith to my mind is a hopeful belief. The word belief itself comes from the latin root "to wish". So as a result, so many people just blindly follow a bunch of dogmatic outdated religious commandments from religious books that they believe to be the infallible word of god (eg the "Bible"). And if that isn't enough, there is a strong cultural component to the many delusions of the masses, such as adherents blindly believing what their clergy tells them, or believing the right wing bigots (like the ones on fox news, for instance) who claim to be followers of Christ.
This of course is true of all organized major world religions. I can be called a muslim as well, but the overwhelming vast majority of muslims I would want nothing to do with. And there is even a bigger current of fundamentalism in the islamic world. So many of which believe many of the same absurd notions that under-developed christians do.
What are some of these delusions? Well for one, that God is like a man. Among christians god is popularly imagined as a bearded old man in the sky who tallies whether you have been good or bad and gives you heaven and hell as punishments. That god is something personal, like a real human but with superpowers.....you know like a cosmic grandfather. It is obvious such metaphors are meant to be taken allegorically, just like the creation story in the bible. Of course the world wasn't made in 6 days 6,000 years ago, all scientific evidence shows otherwise anyways.
Well that does lead us into the meat of the problem. Many christians believe by forsaking rational thought, science, and reason that they are becoming closer to God. When in fact, all this does is further isolate them from the divine.
Now don't get me wrong, I'm certainly not saying that rational thought and science are the basis to find the ultimate spiritual truth. Indeed, many spiritual practices, such as zazen for instance, involve silencing the chatter in the skull (thoughts), so our mind perceives the world independent of words and symbols. But to forsake rationality and science in the realm of words and reasons is quite foolish.
Instead of having blind faith in some teachings, clergy, culture, or ritual, wouldn't it make more sense to know the spiritual reality through direct experience? Wouldn't knowledge based off of direct experience be the hands down best way to approach this subject? After all, when you know something to be true, you have no doubt in your heart that it is true.
We all know with 100% certainty gravity is what keeps our feet firmly planted on the Earth. Now if we were to say we had faith that gravity kept us on the Earth, wouldn't that suggest that maybe we are not sure? There is no reason to have faith if you know something. I don't know any people who will say they "know" god is a personal deity with a beard in the sky that takes tallies on everyone. They will call it faith. And that is exactly what it is. Faith. No one will say they know all those images as literally true, especially since they know they have no direct experience of what they believe.
The metaphor for god as a male deity is just as allegorical as the metaphor for earth being a female deity. We can of course personify mother Earth as a goddess, and claim that Earth is literally a goddess with the appearance of a woman. But I'm sure all of us agree that it is just an allegorical image or metaphor. Isn't the same true for the spiritual father, the one we call "God"? The ultimate is beyond gender, for one. How can the cosmic spirit be a male human with male reproductive organs if he is made of full spirit and omnipresent?
Shamanism was the first religion ever. All spiritual and religious traditions can trace back to the original shamanism that our hunter-gatherers and our early settled ancestors. Shamanism certainly did not die out when the neolithic revolution hit. It continued on, in the spiritual practices of the various ascetics and gurus. Shamanism has often emphasized personal experience of the spirit world, and this is achieved by the use of trance-inducing techniques....eg entheogens, meditation, hypnosis, fasting, ect.
However over time, as power centers grew, religion was hijacked in many cultures to serve the interests of those in power, until among many religions, all that was left was the rituals that have lost their original meaning. And this is the dilemma we face today, as we try to get out of the dark ages of discontents of old civilization. And yet it continues, more people are just following the religion that their parents or culture follow, and do it mindlessly and ritualistically. Instead of having trust in themselves, their perception, and their ability to find the divine for themselves based with direct experience. If the kingdom of god lies within you, then trying to find him separate from you, as if he was it was a separate entity, would not make much sense.
These are just my opinions, I by no means want to downplay the religious beliefs of others here. I just wish to challenge the commonly accepted notions of organized religions, in hopes of perhaps improving your spirituality, as well as my own. I don't think science is the only area where we should be asking skeptical questions. Spirituality also requires skeptical questions.....and it is only through direct experience do we really come to know the divine.
What do you think? Do you approach spirituality with knowledge or pure faith? Should direct experience be the basis of of spirituality, or should it be based on how well one obeys the dogma of religious rules and texts? Vote in the poll and discuss.