I’m catching up on what must be four pages of replies since I last checked in. There are a lot of great thoughts in here, from all. What strikes me as I take it all in… is that we’re all talking about or around the same thing (/no-thing.) The only difference is how we say it. As I regard the sum of these posts, there is a great deal of commonality in our positions!
One line that caught me was by 4, who said, “ We can find the trinitarian God, the Three in One, in GOODNESS, TRUTH and BEAUTY”
That is an excellent idea to consider!
Goodness, Truth, Beauty
Art, Morals, Science
Father, Son, Holy Spirit
I, We, It
These are the three perspectives – 1st, 2nd, and 3rd person – that one can take. There are others, but these are the big three. What they all point to is that there is only IS (again, call IS what you choose…), and all else is a perspective that we can take regarding IS. We are not one or the other; all three arise simultaneously, with no exception and no exclusion. And we are a part of that arising. (Didn’t JK say that God could will us away?)
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As for the comment of science “being in a box”, that is quite true, but also, in another box are fundamental religious concepts, and the two boxes don’t tend to agree with one another, putting it mildly. We all know that there is a huge schism between religion and science (although some people seem to like to conflate the two through wild and inaccurate methods.)
The ‘problem’ with science (speaking generally) is that it takes the perspective of 3rd person, where all manifestation is seen as “IT’S”, physical phenomena that must be measured and quantified. There is no place in this view for interiority, or the “I” perspective, which is dismissed as being too subjective to have any real value. In this way, science guts any sort of interior transcendental experience, relegating these incredible insights to the result of misfiring neurons or imbalance of brain chemicals. (Again, speaking generally…)
There is a ‘problem’ with religion, as well, although I doubt that this is the best venue to delve deeply into that idea. Really, I don’t want to be misunderstood. Let’s just say that the interior experiences that some have had are not to be dismissed. And we can join together to compare our direct experiences – taking the “we” perspective, which is truly a miracle – in order to support and celebrate those experiences. But these experiences are often cloaked in traditional, mythic terms, which clearly grates those who are ensconced in a modern world.
There are many points of friction, but nowhere do we see the heat building more than if we look at the trouble in the Middle East. The pressure cooker is created when a post-modern world says, “There is no room in our scientific, material-based worldview for your myth-based religion”, and the religious say, “Well, if there’s no room in your world for my religious belief, then I will destroy your world.”
I’m sure I digress a bit. The point is that the problems can be reconciled by taking a multiperspectival point of view, where we consider all of the natural perspectives as arising simultaneously, with no distinction other than what we focus on at a given moment. Though we humans can only abide in one perspective at a time, we can hold each of them lovingly and carefully, and realize that all we see is just a part of a seamless whole - “God”, by any other name.
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Detales wrote in #293, “Since these assertions of a fundamental substrate of Reality include another dimension of awareness that is usually non-linear and exclusive of the usual subject/object mode of perception that most people claim is the only way we can be, …that this other mode might have something to do with that.”
I like the way you put that. It points to a deep truth, if not The Truth. (“Points”, I said.)
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Detales wrote in #295, ”… That “pride” is something that you did with your mind regarding inaccurate and personalized conclusions made from the experience. This is why there is a disparity in having a realization and in maintaining it. … These experiences refer to, and are part of, growth in awarenss to the trans-personal. That is why pride entered in. you made it a matter of personal acheivement instead of taking it for an insight into Being as such. Speaking from experience, it seems so to me.”
I’d agree with this as well. Just as quickly: There ain’t no shame in that. It’s very common and understandable. The experiences that so many here refer to are glimpses into the transpersonal, the very nature of God. But the experiences are just as quickly hijacked by the ego – our sense of a personal “I” – and it’s a dangerous trap that requires careful steps in order to avoid. This is exactly why there are so many false gurus and fallen clerics, megalomaniacs and New Age authors.
One who has truly seen and has transcended the ego (I did not say “kill the ego”), shines like a crystal chandelier, endlessly reflecting the inherent beauty contained in all-that-is.
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To round out the matter of perspectives, I’d like to leave this post with what Cookie-puss said:
In #317, Oreoracle wrote: *I…I don’t believe what constitutes “us” (God included) can be described. “I” cannot be differentiated from what’s around me; I contain the essence of the whole. All beings–and yes, even God–are essentially inseparable from the collective pool of Consciousness. We are all waves in the same pond.”
As you can see, this doesn’t lead to a “God and I” perspective, but rather an “I-I” or an “I am God” perspective.”*
Perhaps it would also be good to consider all three natural perspectives, moving among them in order to gain understanding, transcending and including what we think we know as ‘I’ (and “We”, and “It” and “I-I”), as we march on the path to Godhead?
That, if anything, is my practice.