So… we were created as holy beings, become corrupted by the ego, and then work toward returning to holiness?
Hi Stew: Again, I am only citing what people like myself believe, so I’m not challenging what anyone else wants or feels compelled to believe. Basically, yes, we are holy at our inmost level of being, which is what is commonly thought of as the soul in the West. Every soul or consciousness is part of the larger collective soul or consciousness. It would be like the energy from a power station. It might express as things like light bulbs in 25,000 different houses across a community, but at it’s source it is all the same energy. As for corruption, I don’t think that concept applies to how we would see it. It’s more like mislead, distracted or out of alignment. We never stop being holy or sacred. We belong to God and are part of Him, therefore we can’t be unholy or un-sacred.
How is the ego created?
The ego is an epiphenomenon of the nervous system, which of course includes the sense organs and the brain. Together, they are instruments of experience or for collecting, registering and processing experience. Early on, these systems get the idea that they in themselves are you. They are not. We look at a person who is under anesthesia and say “she’s not conscious.” This is because we have come to equate sensory experience with consciousness. It is an instrument of consciousness, but nowhere near consciousness in it’s nature. Consciousness is all pervading and creates the physical world, and the sensory or nervous system (which again includes the brain) are products of the physical world. We are far beyond that. Descartes was wrong in saying “I think, therefore I am.” In truth. what you are is that which is able to step outside of the system and make the observation or come to the realization that you are thinking. Thinking is just the brain. Something else about you is able to look at that brain and say that “it thinks.” This is why people are able to escape tangled hierarchies and not get trapped in an endless loop. Specifically in a tangled hierarchy, you have a loop that cannot be thought through or ended. Take the example of the statement “everything I say is a lie.” If that is true, then sometimes I tell the truth, in which case, this truth is a lie. There is no solution.That which enables you to avoid running through the problem over and over again is outside of the thought process. You are doing more than thinking.
From your perspective, was Jesus closer to Hinduism or Judaism?
I think Jesus was very close to John the Baptist and John the Baptist was very dear to Him. In fact it is my opinion that John the Baptist is the only person who ever met Jesus who understood Jesus or what Jesus was talking about. Sadly for us, he was not around later to write letters to the Romans or Corinthians, and instead someone who never met Him, or (in my opinion) never really understood Him did. Back to the point, I am in agreement with those bible scholars who suspect that John The Baptist was no standard Jew, but more likely an Essene. I think Jesus was more like an Essene, which is in some ways like a Jew and in some ways like a Hindu. This makes sense of course to me, because He was God, and we all belong to the same God.
Again, my opinions. There is no formal stance on such things in Sanatana Dharma, but those of us from my faith who have an interest in Jesus would basically agree.
Your friend,
Sufjon