W
warpspeedpetey
Guest
hey! whats that sposed to mean?Must take off (not at warp speed, thank God!)
hey! whats that sposed to mean?Must take off (not at warp speed, thank God!)
I wouldnāt want to start any argument since I am clueless as to how to argue. But in my humble opinion, it means that you are slowing down.hey! whats that sposed to mean?![]()
im either out of dilithium crystals, or scottie is asleep at the switch! wake up scottie!I wouldnāt want to start any argument since I am clueless as to how to argue. But in my humble opinion, it means that you are slowing down.
Blessings
granny
All human beings are worthy of profound respect.
Chancellor:JustHuman
Thank You. I am Catholic by choice but avoid apologetics because I recognize that I find apologetics offensive to me intellectually. Somehow I ended up inside through an extremely narrow path where words like aniconic, aconceptual, silent, symbolic and so forth are given alot of room and where the mystery is not prematurely packaged into dogma. Salman Rushdie says that atheists (like himself) are āobsessed with Godā. At times I have met so-called atheists that were more courageous in facing and accepting reality than many so-called believers.
May you find acceptance and blessing here.
Chancellor
Thank you very much, Detales. You have said some things that will give me a bunch to think about. In fact, your post reminds me of the story of how L. Ron Hubbard came to the conclusion that there had to be a āsoulā. He called the soul principle, theta, and an individual soul, he called a Thetan.jd, That sentence no way implies the necessity of no God! That sentence, to me, simply refers to the observation that whatever label is put on someone, there are way more āhatsā worn by that person than that one label indicates. Some of these hats include or exclude areas of experience, knowledge, whatever, under other hats of the same or other persons. Under any one of these, any person may be āsanerā or not than another person, eg a believer vs an atheist in a matter of particular skill or expertise. That may distribute as well over āwearers of groups of hatsā (people) as well.
Certainly I exist as a perception in your mind. That is mutual. That perception, though, is not equal to the person as such, or to that person as part of a continuum.
You will always have the body needed to express your state of being, this life or next, lol! āThis is always already the āotherā world.ā
My Mentor defined āsoulā as āThe feeling of being āI am.āā Stability is a matter of being grounded in THAT, as all contents of mind are indeed by their nature temporary. What there is to look forward to is an increasingly rich experience of what might be called āthe Beatific Visionā if you want to keep it forward somewhere like a carrot. Soul is unassailable and permanent. Perception and experience of it may be built by assiduous self examination, preferably guided by someone whoās permanently there. āGnothi Seauton.ā That is why it is not good to put too much stock in dogma, books and argumentation. Too easy to get lost, especially if one is too much right brain. God is All. Parts is parts.
Thanks, Rookie. Good post. But I am being serious - Iām not jesting. I am on this forum for the primary purpose of finding that supreme argument, or, reality, if you will, that will derail my loose affinity with and for religion. If I canāt find it, I will pretty safely conclude that there is none.I just want to add something about the problem of existence and existential meltdowns, although I write in plain-speak, not with the ātongues of angelsā or philosophers/mathematicians, so please bear with my humble offering.
There are so many topics/sub-topics Iād like to comment on, but Iāll just cover a couple since I have to catch a plane, and time is limited. No time to dissect words or parse thoughts/concepts/opinions.
We are all dying ā whatever our age is, as is the human condition from birth. The purpose of our existence is to seek and find TRUTH. We can come to the TRUTH when āyou seek Me with all your heart, you will find me.ā (Of course, I should look up the reference; please excuse me this time). We may have an āepiphanyā in our lifetime as did Dedalus (if I recall the name correctly) in James Joyceās āPortrait of the Artist as a Young Manā in which he discovered, not God per se, but that GOODNESS, TRUTH, AND BEAUTY were one and the same. The Spirit leads us on the path we are on through genetics, our choices, the environment ā all according to Godās will.
In the 16th century, St. Teresa of Avila, along with spiritual directors of the time, considered the soul to be host to the intellect and the will, while the emotions were on a lesser plane (if memory doesnāt completely fail me). Nowadays, we donāt express this sentiment, but it conveys a certain reality, or way of thought that explains our condition. Perhaps.
As for āexistential tweakingā, it may be that most of us need to be struck off our high horses. I know I did. In college I went through a devastating experience, probably set off by events in my life as well as a pseudo-intellectual interpretation of philosophy/psychology courses that led to the feelings of āangstā common among youth and often adults as well.
However, God eventually rescued me because I went seeking Him a few years out of school. Btw, my education is no where near the venerable posters, having a mere B.S. in Elementary Education. However, I did try to continue my education and took several math courses but got derailed by another pregnancy. (I love my children dearly and desperately and want for them the very bestāfaith in Godās purpose for them). Anyhow, God rewarded me with āsigns and wondersā which I donāt expect anyone to believe seeing I, myself, would be hesitant to believe anyone elseās experiences. One poster has this quote at the bottom of his/her posts: āHuman beings must be known to be loved; but Divine beings must be loved to be known.ā (Blaise Pascal)
As for jd, surely you jest. Are you playing philosophical trivia? I have a question for you: Please tell me how many angels are there dancing on the head of a pin (lol). Thatās an old philosophical conundrum.
Must take off (not at warp speed, thank God!)
God bless all posting on this site. Itās one of the best, although I still have much more exploring to do. Just a rookie!
Very interesting; so, you clearly seem to have āhopeā. Hope for what, exactly?Rookie, though iI might use slightly different terminology due to my way of experience, I find myself very much agreeing with you. Surprisingly, to me, especially about St Theresa.
I am obviously not one of the āvenerable posters,ā lol as I barely made it through community college. But I did have a Mentor who was a voracious BE-er, who read and owned mountains of books, was accomplished to a very high degree in many areas, and was visited by people whom you would recognize from the international news for advice. I guess he rubbed off on me, and that is a great point of gratitude in my life.
I clearly understand about not believing otherās āexperiences.ā That is a tricky area at best. I have no doubt, though, that you have had such. Probably those are far more common than acknowledged, but passed over or rejected due to faith, emotion, or intellect. I can only say that the soul Knows, and that the intellect influenced by ignorance knows in a different mode, and that can yet be clouded by emotional turbulence. But as you say, we are dying, each one, and like you, it took a major shock in my high school/college period to send me looking. It behooves us here to help each other in sincerity and humility.
Such a shock as you experienced is commonly known to percipitate a search, but my seemingly rather thorough Catholic school education did not prepare me for mine. When it came, in fact, it and the clergy really offered me no support except to say ābelieve and it will pass.ā That was not sufficient for me, and I am very grateful for the enrichment of my subsequent journey, as it has re-instated a foundational Meaning for understanding the Church. I donāt think that that understanding makes me very welcome in some faith circles, but I earned it through honest inquiry and work. I can only report that it was a journey of great significance and discovery that resulted in an ability to disolve, at least in my own life, many obstacles that would have earlier proved perhaps insurmountable. I am happy to say that what I have learned is yet unfolding in its parcticality.
Good. I am glad to know this. We will walk through this together.Having taken a number of courses from the Church of Scientology, I know whereof you speak. They are still after me to join, but that is another story, as I seem to have made a particular kind of impression on the people who teased me on exiting one of the courses.
I am a voracious reader of RA Heinlein, who was twice a great friend of LRH. They were āwriting buddies.ā I have an extensive collection of each.
My impression is that Scientologists believe in God, but not the way that christianists do. I posted a url pertinent to that on the thread called āDo Scientologists Believe in Godā It is a point of great frustration for me that this forum seems impenetrable to the idea that there are perceptions and insights about God that are totally alien to the christianist or Abrahamic view. I would think that in a forum such as this, there would be at least an acknowledgment of that dynamic. It would though, in terms of intellectual honesty, be useful to actually account for those other views. All that goes with what I consider to be a predominant either/or mentality on here that is not inclusive of other possibilities that yet include one or both sides of the either/or. (both/and)
Again, I am coming from a position that forced me outside the Church to find a reasonable explanation for a mode of experience that I and many like me have had. We have yet to discover an adequate addressing of it in Catholic dogma, which in my understanding tends to at least dismiss the experiential actuality of what happened to us, if not worse. Yet there is a system of accounting, if it can be even remotely described by that phrase, that has answered my questions through and through, even accounting for the stance of the Church. It is not something that by any means I would recommend to everyone, in fact I donāt. I personally had to go there out of the necessity of sanity. Most arenāt faced with that, though what is in question is a basic, though clouded an ignored, aspect of the human mode of awareness.
Detales:Though I am not by any means a Scientologist, I heartily agree with you on the aspects you mentioned. I am also very confident that LRHās complete teaching is not public. Well, it isnāt anyway if you canāt pay for it, lol!
But you seem to be very invested in the idea of āhope.ā The symbol of hope is the anchor, for good reason. It can hold still and safe your ship of Soul through a storm. There is a point, I would say though, where hope is replaced fundamentally by knowledge and becomes a secondary feature of engagement with lifeās exigencies.
In that regard āXenuā may at last be a play on words as well as a parable-like veil for the initiate to pass through. It is not important. But it reminds me of Walt Kellyās malaprop paraphrase of Commander Perry: āWe have met the enemy, and he is us!ā There have been few statements of greater accuracy in all of philosophy and religion taken together. The trick is to know how that is true.
So, I do have great hope in a sense, but it is not in terms of dealing with a resolution to a personal existential dilemma. That for me is done and growing in fulfillment. My hope is for evolution in human awareness in general, or at least some clarification on simple points.
Dear JDaniel,All of my knowledge, and it is fairly considerable, all of my right-thinking, and all of my accomplishments have not prepared me for the ultimacy of death. If death is merely the cessation of my soul, then that is an unforgivable practical joke. But, if I indeed have a soul, then, hopefully, there is a final end that will allow me to endure, not only this lifetime, but also, the afterlife. Hope, for me, is an imperative.
jd
lol! It just means that Iām not up to āwarpspeedā to keep up with the terrific discussion. Keep it going!hey! whats that sposed to mean?![]()
Dear jd,Thanks, Rookie. Good post. But I am being serious - Iām not jesting. I am on this forum for the primary purpose of finding that supreme argument, or, reality, if you will, that will derail my loose affinity with and for religion. If I canāt find it, I will pretty safely conclude that there is none.
In the mean time, I am, so far, quite convinced by the cosmological and ontological arguments. But, obviously, there is always that lingering feeling that it is impossible to be sure of anything. We see water up ahead and it is only a mirage. A friend of mine told me to go and make love (to my wife), then, come back and tell him that illusion is all that there is. It worked, at the time, but, all of that has since faded into the realm of rumor. She passed on a few years ago from cancer.
Obviously, for me, the end-time might be of greater importance than for almost everyone else on this forum. For most, the exigency of ādeathā is extraordinarily remote. For me, it has brought itself much closer.
Again, much thanks,
jd
grannymh;4918132:
Dear rookieonedge,Dear Grannymh,
Iām sorry this post is so belated, but Iāve been out of touch for awhile.
Iām also assuming that youāve already found the sources concerning St. Teresa of Avila, but just in case, Iāll inform you anyhow. A while back I read St. Teresaās autobiography as well as her study of the spiritual life in a book called āThe Interior Castle.ā It made a great impression on me at the time, and I still regard her work as one of the signposts in my life leading me to what can be called āthe holyā or āthe Divine.ā Itās something science cannot prove exists (although theorists try) because it is out of the realm of the scientific, more like the metaphysical but yet beyond.
P.S. Keep counting those angels!
Rookie
Since it is Lent, I must confess that I didnāt even look for sources. So your reply is timely.
As soon as you said āThe Interior Castleā I remembered a book about St. Teresa of Avila and St. John of the Cross which I read years ago. It is by Thomas Dubay, S.M. called Fire Within
ISBN: 0-89870-263-1 Father Dubay includes a lot of quotes. It was inspiring. Just looked at the copy right date of 1989. Time to reread it.
Also, inspiring to me is your post 137 on this thread. Giving up our pre-set theories of ourselves is very hard to do.
P.S. ā regarding counting those angels. That is a lot better than the alternative.
Blessings,
granny
All human life is sacred.
A very interesting post. I take it youāre into Scientology because it stays away from a simple black/white solution to situations, whereas you seem to think that Catholics emphasize rightness and wrongness of certain acts outside of prevailing internal motives and external environmental situations (that is, if I understand you correctly). On the contrary, although the Church argues for absolutes, this doesnāt mean that a personās circumstances may not mitigate sinful/bad/wrong actions. For the same transgression, one personās culpability may vary in terms of anotherās culpability. So, IME, God, Himself, sees our hearts and judges accordingly whether one is a Scientologist or a Christian. Maybe the explanation Scientologists present seems more reasonable to you, but I donāt why because I donāt know about that philosohical/religious stance.Having taken a number of courses from the Church of Scientology, I know whereof you speak. They are still after me to join, but that is another story, as I seem to have made a particular kind of impression on the people who tesed me on exiting one of the courses.
I am a voracious reader of RA Heinlein, who was twice a great freind of LRH. They were āwriting buddies.ā I have an extensive collection of each.
My impression is that Scientologists believe in God, but not the way that christianists do. I posted a url pertinent to that on the thread called āDo Scientologists Believe in Godā It is a point of great frustration for me that this forum seems impenatrable to the idea that there are perceptions and insights about God that are totally alien to the christianist or Abrahamic view. I would think that in a forum such as this, there would be at least an acknowledgement of that dynamic. It would though, in terms of intellectual honesty, be useful to actualy account for those other views. All that goes with what I consider to be a predominent either/or mentality on here that is not inclusive of other possibilities that yet include one or both sides of the either/or. (both/and)
Again, I am coming from a position that forced me outside the Church to find a reasonable explanation for a mode of experience that I and many like me have had. We have yet to discover an adequate addressing of it in Catholic dogma, which in my understanding tends to at least dismiss the experiential actuality of what happened to us, if not worse. Yet there is a system of accounting, if it can be even remotley described by that phrese, that has answered my questions through and through, even accounting for the stance of the Church. It is not something that by any means I would recommend to everyone, in fact I donāt. I personally had to go there out of the necessity of sanity. Most arenāt faced with that, though what is in question is a basic, though clouded an ignored, aspect of the human mode of awareness.
rookieonedge;4933936:
ISBN: 0-89870-263-1 Father Dubay includes a lot of quotes. It was inspiring. Just looked at the copy right date of 1989. Time to reread it.Dear rookieonedge,
Since it is Lent, I must confess that I didnāt even look for sources. So your reply is timely.
As soon as you said āThe Interior Castleā I remembered a book about St. Teresa of Avila and St. John of the Cross which I read years ago. It is by Thomas Dubay, S.M. called Fire Within
Also, inspiring to me is your post 137 on this thread. Giving up our pre-set theories of ourselves is very hard to do.
P.S. ā regarding counting those angels. That is a lot better than the alternative.
Blessings,
granny
All human life is sacred.
Hi granny,
With more time, Iād like to get into some of the spiritual reading Iāve come across. Maybe that should be on another thread. I think Iāve already re-directed this one from its original topic ā How to argue. In any case, I was enthralled with St. John of the Cross and his book āThe Dark Night of the Soul.ā I donāt think I ever completely understood it. I still wonder if he was experiencing something on such a high spiritual plane ā the dryness of his prayers ā or was it the exisential angst? Did it truly come from God? Or was it related to psychological implications like depression since he was imprisoned for quite some time? I know Iād be pretty depressed, but heās a saint, and having read other spiritual authors, it seems to point to an act of God.
No devils on my sewing needles!
Agreed: āAll human life is sacred.ā
God bless,
rookie