S
Sufjon
Guest
I’m not sure what it is you want to know Can you explain?I am not clear about what you’re referencing. So I can’t answer how it’s easier or if I’m giving them more slack.
Could you be more specific?
I’m not sure what it is you want to know Can you explain?I am not clear about what you’re referencing. So I can’t answer how it’s easier or if I’m giving them more slack.
Could you be more specific?
Amen!Yes, that’s why you do what you can, and it should always be your best.
What if someone decides the rule about not committing adultery is wrong? Do you think God would care? What about if the spouse cares? Does God care about that?If you get some rule wrong or see God a bit differently, He’'s not going to care so much.
What austerities are some New Age practitioners doing that comes from your faith tradition?I’m not sure what it is you want to know Can you explain?
New Age practitioners seem to gather what they can from what they see like anyone else. I know a few of them who have adopted austerities from come from my faith that are probably not fitting to anyone’s tastes. They do them to get closer to God. They are by no means easy, so how are they any more slack than you? There are rigorous demands from my faith in terms of what I should and should not do. Most Christians I know wouldn’t even attempt them outside of Lent. Imagine giving up some of the things people give up during Lent for an entire lifetime. That said, this isn’t the spiritual Olympics where you can one-up someone by flogging yourself. It’s a matter of just doing what you can to find your way. That’s all. If you can do a lot, then you should do a a lot. If you can do very little, then you should do whatever you can.
Your friend,
Sufjon
This, Sufjon, is absolutely not true.He has revealed Himself in countless ways to numberless people. None is more valid or less valid than the other.
'Tis true, this.God has a relationship with me. It’s special, and I would never trade it for yours. Likewise, God has a relationship with you, and likewise that is special and you wouldn’t trade it with mine.
Well, there are a multitude of ways that it “can be”.If the only relationship that God felt was acceptable was the way in which He interacts with Catholics, then He needn’t have made me, yet here I am, and He is with me just the same. He always has been and always will be with me. I have no doubt. Yet, I don;t see Him as you do, and even so, I see Him every day. How can that be?
Oh - okay: Here are some of them that are required of a practitioner:What austerities are some New Age practitioners doing that comes from your faith tradition?
How does it bring them closer to God?
How do they know God wants them to do this?
Oh - okay: Here are some of them that are required of a practitioner:
raditional yamas are:[4][unreliable source?] [1]
These can keep you rather busy. Also, an hour of prayer each day is required, along with an hour for study of scripture and an hour of rigorous exercise.
- Ahimsa (अहिंसा): Nonviolence. Abstinence from injury; harmlessness, the not causing of pain to any living creature in thought, word, or deed at any time. This is the “main” yama. The other nine are there in support of its accomplishment.
- Satya (सत्य): truthfulness, word and thought in conformity with the facts.
- Asteya (अस्तेय): non-stealing, non-coveting, non-entering into debt. This means only owning what you can pay for at the moment.
- Brahmacharya (ब्रह्मचर्य): divine conduct, continence, celibate when single, faithful when married. This can also mean celibate when married.
- Kshama (क्षमा): patience, releasing time, functioning in the now.
- Dhriti (धृति): steadfastness, overcoming non-perseverance, fear, and indecision; seeing each task through to completion.
- Daya (दया): compassion; conquering callous, cruel and insensitive feelings toward all beings.
- Arjava (अर्जव): honesty, straightforwardness, renouncing deception and wrongdoing.
- Mitahara (मितहार): moderate appetite, neither eating too much nor too little; nor consuming meat, fish, shellfish, fowl or eggs. This means vegetarian diet every day for the rest of your life, nit just during holy days or seasons and NO junk food.
- Shaucha (शौच): purity, avoidance of impurity in body, mind and speech. (Note: Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras list Shaucha as the first of the Niyamas.)
These activities do bring one closer to God, but it is something you have to experience for yourself and want badly enough to go through the trouble of experiencing. We know it comes from God because it is prescribed in the scriptures by God Himself. Once you;ve seen Him, it’s worth it.
Your friend
Sufjon
To answer your question, those who practice the above “austerities” are no more slack than I am. In fact, most are quite consonant with the Catholic tradition.They do them to get closer to God. They are by no means easy, so how are they any more slack than you?
Your friend,
Sufjon
To answer your question, those who practice the above “austerities” are no more slack than I am. In fact, most are quite consonant with the Catholic tradition.
So my question is: what New Age Practitioners follow these austerities, and how do you know they do this? And how do they know that your God wants them to do this?
I know a number who do. A few of them are some sort of Taoists Christians according to what they tell me. Some of them started doing these things because they are interested in my religion. Some just show up at temple I go to. As far as God wanting me to do these things, I think I explained that these practices were prescribed to us by God about 1,000 years before Christ, although Christ did stay consistent with these, so I am sure he would not disagree, being that He was an incarnation of God Himself.
I know a number who do. A few of them are some sort of Taoists Christians according to what they tell me. Some of them started doing these things because they are interested in my religion. Some just show up at temple I go to. As far as God wanting me to do these things, I think I explained that these practices were prescribed to us by God about 1,000 years before Christ, although Christ did stay consistent with these, so I am sure he would not disagree, being that He was an incarnation of God Himself.To answer your question, those who practice the above “austerities” are no more slack than I am. In fact, most are quite consonant with the Catholic tradition.
So my question is: what New Age Practitioners follow these austerities, and how do you know they do this? And how do they know that your God wants them to do this?
Do you have a verse that says that Christ was a vegetarian and proposed NO JUNK food?I know a number who do. A few of them are some sort of Taoists Christians according to what they tell me. Some of them started doing these things because they are interested in my religion. Some just show up at temple I go to. As far as God wanting me to do these things, I think I explained that these practices were prescribed to us by God about 1,000 years before Christ, although Christ did stay consistent with these, so I am sure he would not disagree, being that He was an incarnation of God Himself.
Your friend,
Sufjon
Regarding Christ and vegetarianism, I have no idea about that. I know that some Christians practice it on certain holy days. We just do it all the time. It is what God has called us to do.Do you have a verse that says that Christ was a vegetarian and proposed NO JUNK food?
At any rate, if there are a few New Age Practitioners who espouse these austerities, I have no problems with that.
It is when they decide that something they want to do (i.e. marry their homosexual lover) is forbidden by their religion, so they decide to find a religion that conforms to their own agenda.
Ok. I was almost certain that Christ did not espouse vegetarianism.Regarding Christ and vegetarianism, I have no idea about that. I know that some Christians practice it on certain holy days. We just do it all the time. It is what God has called us to do.
This is Catholic teaching, too. The self-sacrificial relationship between husband and wife is only an icon, or an image of the relationship we have with God.Any love based on marriage or kinship is a beginners level of love anyway. It’s a good starting place, because that’s where you learn how to love someone, but that’s only a start.
I asked:If you get some rule wrong or see God a bit differently, He’'s not going to care so much.
Beautifully stated, Sufjon. I’d also like to think that Judaism–like Hinduism–is not limited by its own specific beliefs in Torah Law. The true spiritual interpretation of Torah, probably the interpretation held by Jesus and the interpretation of famous rabbis such as Rabbi Akiva and Maimonides, gives us the allowance of individual conscience in deciding matters of morality in extenuating circumstances. Those Torah (Orthodox) Jews who abide by the Law by saying it is G-d’s Will without questioning, even though strict obedience to certain laws (not many) may cause suffering, have not, in my view, understood the Torah correctly. The leniencies of not keeping the Sabbath and not keeping the kosher laws when life is imperiled are known and understood by all Torah Jews; but there are a few other laws that are kept despite their unpleasant consequences. No moral justification can be offered based on modern definitions of harshness and cruelty; however, those who keep these laws say that the Law is not temporal but eternal. I find certain Christians (Catholics and Protestants) say much the same thing with regard to their own doctrines based on New Testament scripture, Apostolic tradition, and the Magisterium. All of these groups (Torah Jews, traditional Catholics, and fundamentalist Protestants, as well as fundamentalist Muslims) are restrictive in their own ways and believe they have a monopoly on the absolute Truth and the One, True G-d. I disagree with all of them on this point. And I believe that the essence of Judaism–with which I am most familiar–also disagrees.What other religion is so full of conditions and limitations to it’s familial love? God is not subject to limits and conditions, and He doesn’t impose them on you. What is imposed on you is entirely the machinations of the human mind applied to the things that an incarnation of God said and did whilst He was among you in human form. Being among us in human form is nothing new either. New to Christians, but not new to everyone.
As for reality vs subjectivity, what proof do you have that what you have embraced as reality is any more real than what someone else has taken to be reality? I hear the words of Jesus and see one thing. You hear them and hear something else. Listing a succession of people back to Paul or whomever you like doesn’t make you right. It simply makes you able to list the names of people who thought they were right, or wanted you to think so at least. Because they told you they were divinely inspired is not cause to take it that they were or were not. You cannot know their motives, ability to comprehend what they saw or didn’t see, or much else other than what they told you. yet you chose to believe it. You take it to be reality, but I see another reality. You can cite sources back 2,000 years that say you are right. I can cite sources back 6,000 years that say I am right. My version allows you the space to be right, and yours is more limited in what it allows. More limited doesn’t mean more right. It means more limited. In this case, the more limited faction is trying to confine God to one reality, because one reality is easier to comprehend or more comfortable. It is not necessarily how things are, and God needn’t be confined to one reality or confined to anything else for that matter. Only your mind is confined to that. In my 6.000 year old religion, God says there are many realities, all of which belong to Him. In your 2,000 year old religion, there seems to be but one. It does not allow for the existence of what others see as reality, while my religion allows your reality to exist. Which is more likely to be a product of a real God in a real universe? That which is limited and tunnelized in scope, or that which is infinite? I think t hat is self-evident. If that were not the case, God needn’t have troubled Himself to make me. He would have only needed to make you. Yet here I am, and my being here makes what I have said self-evident.
Your friend
Sufjon
Greetings, meltzerboy! I appreciate your comments, but wonder if you see the irony in them?All of these groups (Torah Jews, traditional Catholics, and fundamentalist Protestants, as well as fundamentalist Muslims) are restrictive in their own ways and believe they have a monopoly on the absolute Truth and the One, True G-d. I disagree with all of them on this point. And I believe that the essence of Judaism–with which I am most familiar–also disagrees.
I am finding more similarities between Hinduism and Judaism every time I read your posts. There is a case in Torah Judaism for vegetarianism, and some Orthodox Jews are vegetarians.Regarding Christ and vegetarianism, I have no idea about that. I know that some Christians practice it on certain holy days. We just do it all the time. It is what God has called us to do.
Regarding homosexuality, I really don’t spend much time thinking about the sexual behavior of others. Any love based on marriage or kinship is a beginners level of love anyway. It’s a good starting place, because that’s where you learn how to love someone, but that’s only a start. Most people don’t move much past that. In my faith it s believed that my task is in fact to move past all that. Well past that. The point is, you start by loving someone. A man who loves a man more than another man has some growing to do. A man who loves a woman more than other women or other men also has some growing to do. The point is that in either case, they have at least learned to love someone. I know a woman who has only learned to love her cats. That is a start.
Your friend,
Sufjon
In a sense, I suppose, taking a stand or making a commitment on anything is being restrictive. But there are gradations, I believe. My perspective on the issue of G-d is encompassing other points of view: there are several paths to Heaven, so to speak, and no one has a monopoly on absolute truth. Following one’s individual conscience as well is less restrictive than blind obedience, is it not? Spiritual interpretation is, by and large, also less restrictive than legalistic interpretation. So much so that many traditionalists label my way of thinking as subjective moral relativism. I would say Traditional Catholicism, Protestant Fundamentalism, Islamic Fundamentalism, and Torah Judaism are all more restrictive in their approach to G-d. While they may enable others to be saved by the grace of G-d (much debate on this issue in Catholicism, as you know) and, in the case of Judaism, non-Jews need follow only seven commandments of the Noahide Law rather than 613 Torah commandments to achieve morality and salvation, there is still a certain preference given to those of one’s own religion since they alone are thought to practice the true faith.Greetings, meltzerboy! I appreciate your comments, but wonder if you see the irony in them?
You seem to be promoting a restrictive truth here: no one has a monopoly on the absolute Truth.
And another restrictive truth: there is One, true God.
And another restrictive truth: The true spiritual interpretation of Torah, probably the interpretation held by Jesus and the interpretation of famous rabbis such as Rabbi Akiva and Maimonides, gives us the allowance of individual conscience in deciding matters of morality in extenuating circumstances.
So why are the truths you proclaim liberating, but the truths proclaimed by, say, Catholicism restrictive?
Hi Meltzerboy: I am seeing the same thing as well. The more I learn about Judaism, the more convinced I am of a connection between your faith and mine. The conclusions are very similar. I have head that there was contact between the two cultures via the silk roads. These are two very ancient religions, and I think they may go back to when there was some inherent wisdom of the species, hence the similarities Just speculation on my part. The odd thing is that not only do the early teachings match, but later Judaic teachings and later Hindu teaching also match very closely. There is not only similarity, but continuity as well.I am finding more similarities between Hinduism and Judaism every time I read your posts. There is a case in Torah Judaism for vegetarianism, and some Orthodox Jews are vegetarians.
That’s a huge subject and I have to go to bed. I’ll check in tomorrow hopefully , and I’ll follow up.Ok.
What if someone decides the rule about not committing adultery is wrong? Do you think God would care? What about if the spouse cares? Does God care about that?
Do you really believe that if someone “gets some rule wrong” God sees it a bit differently? God doesn’t care if a man commits adultery?
“An it harm none, do what thou wilt.I can accept this, Sunny.
My question to you though is this: is there anything that you believe that you are called to do–because it’s the right thing to do–that you wouldn’t believe except that your goddess has called you to do?
If not, then I submit to you that perhaps you are only creating a false image of god in your mind–something that conforms to your own tastes and likes.
Reason tells us that if there is a god (or goddess), then her ways would not be our ways, yes?
First of all you conveniently only quoted what would support you. Second of all, I would have a hard job convincing a white supremacist because im indian/malaysian.In the area of social justice, then, Sunny, you would have a hard time telling a white supremacist that his views are wrong. You would not be able to tell a person who proclaims that women have no souls that he is wrong. You can not tell someone that even throwing a plastic soda bottle into the ocean is wrong…
because they’ll just tell you that this is what their “intuition” has told them is the right thing to do.
And in your paradigm, that’s all that is required.![]()
What is relevant here is everything from the but (refering to quote) onwards.well in wicca at least theres the rede
“an it harm none do what thou wilt.
an it harm all do what you must.”
Then theres the law of threefold.
Theres so many different interpretations of morality,
For some its black and white, set on stone, its the rules in the book set out for you to follow.
For others its something that doesnt exist.
For others its made up in their head and they follow it.
But for me, its when you are pointed in the right direction and you walk the path, you make your own share of mistakes and its faith. Faith in yourself, and faith in the Goddess.
I dont think morality is black or white, but a complex and delicate balance of shades of gray. Im guided by the rede, law of threefold, my judgement, the actions of others under similar circumstance, and by my heart.
You seem to think that people need to have it set in stone. In black or white, on or off, with us or not with us.
In Wicca we strive to be more understanding, tolerant, and empathatic. It may not seem like a change for you, but its a change for us.
While your intuition might tell you one thing, someone elses intuition might tell them wholly another. Morality can have so many different meanings, more than I can put down, and life shapes us to be who we are. One mans trash is another mans treasure.
I see no reason to convert her because one disapproves. If she finds it fufilling and deep down she knows that this is her calling and her path then let her follow it. If you are concerned about morality then ask her what her interpretation is
You mightnt agree with it but if its her path, then its her path.
Blessed be.![]()
I think because like all thing’s that come from the devil are his empty promises. We pray alot in Church and if you recall when we renew our Baptism promises the one thing we pray for is to stay away from the devil and his empty promises.Not sure if this is the correct forum, but here we go. The question I’m posing has really struck me for some time. I’ve wondered why all of these crazy ideas proposed by New Age “leaders” (for lack of a better word) and their followers are so attractive to people. I guess it’s true that in a way this reveals a great hunger in people for Truth and their purpose in life.
The last item that I emphasized here is truly affecting my sister. She’s been driving herself further and further away from the teachings of the Catholic faith and immersing herself into these New Age ideas. I guess I’m not even sure how deeply she is into this but I know that she’s always wondering about what her purpose is, that she is trying to find her “inner self”, and other stuff like that. She claims of having premonitions, visions, hauntings by demonic beings in her dreams, having a past life, belief in reincarnation, etc. etc.
I’ve been praying for her, but this is quite frustrating as she no longer has the desire to attend Mass. I don’t know what happened to cause her and her husband to no longer attend. Long story, but I thought I could start this discussion by asking the question I posed in this thread’s title.