Nick the Pilot
Well-Known Member
I disagree that heaven is eternal. Heaven is just as temporary as hell.
I am interested to know & explore if the concept of Hell and eternal punishment is purely a Christian preoccupation. Are people of the Jewish faith also as concerned about this possibility in the hereafter or is the focus on Hell introduced in the New Testament? Also, is this concept reflected in other religious or spiritual beliefs & traditions?
It appears that one person's heaven is another person's hell, and one person's hell is another person's heaven.The earth has an end, but not heaven. Heaven is eternal, never changing, with no beginning and no end.
Jesus's word's or my words are both temporary, although the ideas and the spiritual reality the words describe are eternal. The spiritual truth is eternal and unchanging, but it is described in different ways according to time and place and the people being spoken to. The essential spiritual truth can take any number of outer forms and still remain the same.
I disagree that heaven is eternal. Heaven is just as temporary as hell.
It appears that one person's heaven is another person's hell, and one person's hell is another person's heaven.
And what happens when you find out there is no god?I know what you mean, but what you refer to as heaven is not heaven but material pleasure.
Heaven is where God is, it is his abode and this defines heaven. Where God is, that is heaven.
Suffering only happens in hell. No one likes suffering and no one would consider it heaven to be suffering.
And what happens when you find out there is no god?
I disagree, the understanding of 'Heaven' will find its greatest relevance to us in the understanding that there will always be a balancing of bliss and grief during our existence, and both of these extremes are a part of life as we truly know it. By introducing factors that are irrational, based on faith and unexplainable there will only continue to be doubt and unbalance.
Revel in your yin & yang, embrace both Light & Dark!
How is it possible to find out there is no God? Can you ever be certain something does not exist?
By contrast, if God does exist, it must be possible for us to know that.
Heaven is not irrational, based on faith or unexplainable. It is a real place
Heaven's existence can also be supported by logical explanations.
Good point HK; one can never "prove" that something does not exist.
One would think that there should be some good evidence, if God wanted us to know that he exists. What evidence have you experienced?
Where exactly is this "real place" located? In the observable universe?
OK, I'll bite. What is your logical explanation in support of heaven? Why is heaven more logical than rebirth leading to nirvana/enlightenment? Or more logical than nothingness?
Excuse the two posts:The heavenly Kingdom is literally outside this universe but consists of spheres like this one but make up of much more light and much much bigger. However the spheres could travel to this universe like a ship can travel.
Excuse the two posts:
All heavenly beings in the true condtion have wings literally. The pics are not lies. Even god in his true form has wings. When a heavenly being incarnates into the human body they are sealed which miracles with the body identifies the body. The wings are not seen because of the human body. Human bodies do not have wings , never have never will. When a incarnated being is brought back to the prehuman divine condtion the true self is seen. GOD can manifest himself as human ect. If you were to see him in his actual condition he would be huge and has wings.
Wings often symbolize protective abilities/tendancies/capacity.
Well the light is more tightly packed but has wings cause its bigger and more spread out. This is the only way I know how to explain it. However your correct with the protective ect. When the wings are wrapped around someone its a protection.
I imagine for some that could be a very long time. Perhaps there is the definition of eternity.
One would think that there should be some good evidence, if God wanted us to know that he exists. What evidence have you experienced?
The question "Does God want us to know he exists?" is a separate question from "Does God exist?" Hari Krishna philosophy would tell us that God just wants to know us, to have a loving relationship with us. But God will never force us to acknowledge him. If we choose to deny or ignore him, he honours and respects our choice.
If we assume there is a God, wouldn't the presence of religious belief in every human society be "evidence" that God wanted us to have the choice to know about him? Guru's, saints, messiahs etc are people who have seen something wonderful about life and God and communicated it to others. Other people have valued their wisdom so much their words become holy, recorded as scripture or divine revelation, and we invest our faith in them.
It's not like all the people who claim such things are insane or ratbags. Their testimony has some value. Certainly enough value to be considered worthy of further investigation. If someone I trust tells me something, I am more likely to take it seriously.
Otherwise, why is this God rumour so persistent among humans? Some say it is ignorance and humans believing such things were primitive. Then why in this scientific age is religion still so prominent? There is such a thing as an intelligent theist. Some would argue it is just a natural human instinct, then why has this instinct arisen? Surely the explanation that the universe has a purpose is just as rational as nature did everything and there is no such thing as the supernatural.
It is difficult to say what evidence I have experienced and communicate anything meaningful to you. I can only say that my experience of practicing spiritual life has convinced me enough to pursue it with a high priority in my life. It has convinced "me". I can't show you my evidence, all I have is my testimony and my own decision that there is enough evidence to seriously investigate.
Where exactly is this "real place" located? In the observable universe?
Are you asking for co-ordinates to a geographical position in space-time? Do you think you can fly a spaceship to heaven? Where is your consciousness located? Is your consciousness a real place?
Is consciousness or the observer "in" the observable universe or is it by definition on the outside looking in? Isn't consciousness the thing who defines what the observable universe is? Can you observe the observer?
OK, I'll bite. What is your logical explanation in support of heaven? Why is heaven more logical than rebirth leading to nirvana/enlightenment? Or more logical than nothingness?
I wasn't claiming that heaven is more logical, only countering the claim that it was illogical. The heaven hypothesis is part of a bigger hypothesis that there is a God and all the associated logical explanations of who we are and why this world exists that flow from the existence of God. Every religion or philosophical stance gives slightly different intellectual explanations of the phenomena. You could have a whole discussion forum on all the different aspects of it
Can you observe the observer?
Dang it, Lunitik, I'm worried about you!This is exactly what enlightenment is, and yet it is not possible for mind to come along, it is impossible to fathom that with mind. There will be an impression, this is the minds interpretation of what has happened.
For instance, in my experience, there was a certain happening which I thought lasted only a few seconds. I entered into that at around 4pm, came back out - returned to normal experiencing - at 10:30pm. The exhilaration felt was immense, yet it didn't even occur to me how long I'd been in it. It didn't even register that now it was night time, I simply knew I'd traveled home and ever since I have been trying to return.
The impression of the experience was merely that of non-duality, of having no border between inner and outer, no barrier because I simply was not there - I merely observed relative to this bodies position. What has been instilled in the time which I cannot recall though? I only know it was pure love.