FutureHumanDestiny
Active Member
aloha people!
During the time that i've enjoyed the Interfaith forums, a persistent question has been surfacing in my head, and i'd like to ask it here. Since a large segment of the Interfaith Forums Population is unusually spiritual, and opinionated about that (and opinionated about their beliefs), i'd like to discuss the various flavors of spirituality.
Obviously spirituality is personal, and it is cosmic, and it is strange.
Within cultures there are religions, within religions there are sects, within sects there are various schools, and doctrines, and various laypeople, adherents, scholars and 'gurus.' over time those can be translated and re-interpreted, etc. but does that justify the creation of various flavors of religious and spiritual belief? or is there much more to it?
obviously people are not obtaining the spiritual attainments and they are misunderstanding the meaning and relevancy of the teachings, which are twisted, distorted and flawed.
But there have been real spiritual masters who have raised kundalni, obtained samadhi and sat on the doorstep of enlightenment (and beyond). are they not enough to sway the confusion of the masses? each master knows that there is a unified path and unified purpose to spirituality.
so here is my question, put simply: Why are there so many flavors of spirituality?
thanks for your insights, opinions and ramblings (in advance!).
-dale
During the time that i've enjoyed the Interfaith forums, a persistent question has been surfacing in my head, and i'd like to ask it here. Since a large segment of the Interfaith Forums Population is unusually spiritual, and opinionated about that (and opinionated about their beliefs), i'd like to discuss the various flavors of spirituality.
Obviously spirituality is personal, and it is cosmic, and it is strange.
Within cultures there are religions, within religions there are sects, within sects there are various schools, and doctrines, and various laypeople, adherents, scholars and 'gurus.' over time those can be translated and re-interpreted, etc. but does that justify the creation of various flavors of religious and spiritual belief? or is there much more to it?
obviously people are not obtaining the spiritual attainments and they are misunderstanding the meaning and relevancy of the teachings, which are twisted, distorted and flawed.
But there have been real spiritual masters who have raised kundalni, obtained samadhi and sat on the doorstep of enlightenment (and beyond). are they not enough to sway the confusion of the masses? each master knows that there is a unified path and unified purpose to spirituality.
so here is my question, put simply: Why are there so many flavors of spirituality?
thanks for your insights, opinions and ramblings (in advance!).
-dale