taijasi
Gnōthi seauton
"Et in Arcadia ego ..."
If I lived for tens of thousands of years there would not be time to see and do everything that I would like to. quote]
According to the promise of the bible , those who will go on to inherit a paradise earth will have EVERLASTING LIFE
But of cause those people would be willing to do things inline with Gods ways.
lots of time for taking in knowledge about things .
Yes ,true paradise would not only mean a park-like garden , but also no more war ,and even no more death, and peace would prevail, and it is a sure hope from the promise of what the bible reallly teaches. and your picture brings this verse in the bible to my mindParadise is friom an ancient Persian word para-deiza as I recall ...it means a walled garden. I think in peoples minds the concept is proabbly related to the Garden of Eden. But anyway.. I think myself the concept of teh Kingdom of God on earth...means there will be a greater oneness of humanity and an end to war where the lamb and the lion can peacefully coexist as in the peaceable kingdom idea. Quakers had this idea
Baha'is have a concept o fthe Ridwan Garden..which means the Garden of Paradise.. The Ridwan Garden was on an island in the Tigris river on the outskirts of Bagdad where Baha'u'llah declared His Mission to a few close relatives and this event is celebrated in the Baha'i world in April to this day.
- Art
Agreed, Dharmaatmaa (Spirit of Truth). This kind of understanding is the only one that makes sense from a point of view both intelligent and spiritually aligned. This is why the religions which inaccurately and fretfully preach a fear-based mis-understanding of holy scriptures are so unhealthy, and so damaging to humankind.If no one minds, I'd say my opinion on so-call'd Paradise. All the opinions does smell very anthropomorphic, if it's possible to say so. When reading the above situated posts I was expected something like that.
Has anyone ever thought why religion is so powerful in Orient? I'm Russian. Is it Orient? Nevertheless, I know something of Orient. And I wanna say religion is on the same level as science here. Maybe it sounds strange. Its authority is the same as the science's. Why? Of cause, not because here live stupid or unserious, uneducated people. The answer is: because religion de facto (if it's correct) must be founded on a scientifical earth (humus). The teaching of paradise has its own found, and very intellectual, you know.
It was said that paradise "is reaching the point/place/time you would rather be in other than the point that you are at". What does the word 'point' mean? I was tought it means any place. If to understand it this way, I'm not sure that'd be correct and philosophically truely. But if to say 'condition' instead of 'point', I'll be perfectly agree with Truthseeker.
Every culture from the very early days of history had common, alike paradise-teaching. Scandinavian Valgalla and Nifelheim, Greek Gades with its three fields, Islamic Janna, and finally Indian Kamaloka and Deva-chan. With first sight it appears to be meant as a place, but specialist would never be so limited-minded to think so even uno momento!
For example, in India people till today do believe in Kamaloka and Devachan. The Kamaloka (kama - god of phisical, 'flesh' love, god of sexual wish; loka - just a place) stands for Hell. But any educated brahman knows that kamaloka has its secret (for usual people) meaning. They found out that in our psychica there is an 'organ' to be responsible for 'wish' and wanting to do sex. It's Kama. So kamaloka is just the place where kama stays after we leave the body. And Devachan (the country of Devas, Gods) - our Paradise - stands for the most progressive and altruistic part of our soul.
I do believe we shouldn't think Paradise is a place. It's a state of consciousness, undoutedly.
Would hell on Earth, really be hell?
lol! Which the former or later?
Imagine an earth where humanity experiences no suffering, no pain, no death, no disease, no illness, no loss or want for anything...
Sometimes various cultures suggest this as a state of paradise - but would it be so?
When you consider what physical existence would entail under such considerations of "perfection", in my opinion all you would have is the complete stagnation of humanity.
If there is no sickness or death, no problems to solve, then what is there to aspire to? What boundaries would there be to break and surpass? It is hard to imagine anyone having anything but the most banal and mundane motivations. The human species would be in a state of living death, moving forward to nothing, aspiring to nothing, and never attempting to break the bonds of its own physical restrictions.
Additionally, eternal life as a physical human being would be the ultimate punishment - forever separate from God, trapped in this limited and restrictive vessel, with no Heaven or transcendence of experience to perhaps look forward to.
When you look at the universe, in all its complexities and degrees of scale, then the idea that there is nothing more within each one of us but a cluster of cells that function and die is perhaps one of the most unimaginative visions of all.
And whilst there are many different interpretations of what vision for humanity may be, whether it is Christian or Buddhist, Islamic or Confucian, Jewish or Wiccan, there is one clear theme among them all - we must all strive to become the best that we may be.
Without that sense of striving, what human spirit is there left to aspire with?
Just my 2c.
"The future is made of the same stuff as the present." Simone Weil
so what is hell ?Would hell on Earth, really be hell?