T
Tuno
Guest
What does that mean, DPM, “…made for God’s Righteousness, Judgement and Mercy?” You make God sound like an egomaniac fundamentalist preacher. Are you projecting on to God? You, know, anthropomorphizing?
TunoWhat does that mean, DPM, “…made for God’s Righteousness, Judgement and Mercy?” You make God sound like an egomaniac fundamentalist preacher. Are you projecting on to God? You, know, anthropomorphizing?
Aye, but supposedly only 3-5% of the world’s population is “teal,” and only a little more are “green,” and those are the levels this subject speaks to.i wish more people would reply to this thread. I might remake it under a different name to get more responses.
interesting. Do you see this number rising in the last 20-25 years?Aye, but supposedly only 3-5% of the world’s population is “teal,” and only a little more are “green,” and those are the levels this subject speaks to.![]()
TunoI believe we agree in essence, DPM. I just have had too much of preaching that has the distinct taste of God as an adversary, or better that man is essentially in an adversarial relationship with God. And there is so much, or was during my time in the Church, emphasis on guilt and cleansing as distinct from happy cooperation with what in the beginning was man’s soul relationship with God anyway. And I truly believe that the story of the Fall is completely misunderstood, either as a matter of ignorance, or momentum, now, of habit. Such might be the result of the definitely patristic slant of the Church’s interpretations. It also has much to do with the notion that Man largely thinks that he is what he thinks he is. That is not my experience. And though I do not subscribe to the standard accusation of the Church descending from “mythical” religions, there certainly is something to be said for the interpretation of the life of Jesus and a great deal of the Bible as parable as well as a history.
In other words, my outburst about the flavor of your first contribution has to do with the apparent general assumption that denies Man the credibility of good will by emphasizing too much his entropic tendencies. While these clearly exist, the reason for them perhaps is distorted in the blame oriented doctrine of the Church. Maybe, just maybe, there is another way of looking at all that.