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dr wu23 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 21 2013 at 14:28
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by dr wu23 dr wu23 wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

It's been a while since I've participated on this forum at all - I've found myself less and less enthusiastic about arguing over music, then less and less enthusiastic about arguing over politics, and more and more focused on "heart issues".  I have a love for theology I've never had before!  So I have put a lot of work into a document that ended up being 80 pages long (and this was only because I wanted to - imagine that...I used to hate doing reports in school), and split that into sections which I've posted on my blog (note: the entire thing is split into 19 parts, and I've only "published" 17 so far).  So I wanted to share this on here for anyone who cares:
Checkmate For Hell
Hello dt,
I read your first part and found it very interesting. I attended a Unitarian church for 10 years until they folded in my area and I have always been agnostic with a leaning towards eastern philosophy and spirituality. Read up on those ideas for many years and even practiced some Vipassana and Zen sitting for several years.
I see things in a similar manner in that All is connected and no one is excluded whether they kneel or not to a 'god or God'. I'll try to read your other parts when I get time.
 
btw....I haven't posted here often because it seemed that the 'Christians' here ignored new posters, myself included,  and ideas that didn't align with their beliefs. Just saying.
Confused

Thank you for reading!  I have 19 parts in this series, as I said.  The last 2 are sitting in draft mode, and I've been publishing one a day.  Once that is done with, I wrote a short story to illustrate what I'm trying to get at in this series, and I also have written a short post showing an alternate logical route to "checkmate".  THEN, I have something you might be interested in which I will publish - a post exploring the idea of "All" or "Oneness" or "Christ-mind", or whatever you'd like to call it.  I wanted to post this after everything else, because you have to cut through the crap of people's bad logic before they'd be ready for such ideas, I think.  Otherwise it just sounds like nonsense to them.
 
I think  the basic ideas you present ,at least in what I read so far, are well known by those who have studied theology in relation to western society . And the idea of Oneness or Christmind is a well known concept with those who have read eastern ideas and has been postulated for over 3000 years originally stemming from Hindu traditions and then Buddhist traditions. It's also present in Taoism.
Nothing nonsensical about it and imho makes far more sense on multiple levels than traditional Christian ideology and doctrine. One has to throw out/reject many basic ideas and ignore uncomfortable questions if one accepts mainstream Christian beliefs. But then an atheist would say the same thing about all religious ideology.
Wink
 

That's what's so crazy!  People over here in America act like the things I'm talking about are insane - like NO ONE believes them, and I'm a crazy loon!  When I first started thinking like this, I had this sort of "dare I even think?" kind of question hanging over my head.  But I am a rebel, and I will challenge anything that doesn't make sense to me, so I pressed on.  But it kind of scares me that so many people who are trapped in these oppressive views are so afraid to even challenge them!
Well....maybe the problem is where you live..? Some areas of the country are just not that literate and tend to follow that old time religion.  Wink
I used to attend a Unitarian discussion group in northwest Indiana about 40 miles south of Chicago that talked about all aspects of modern religion both east and west as well as how that interacted with society, politics, and current events. There were no mainstream Christians in that group and not because we excluded them but they were simply not interested in hearing any other point of view and as far as they were concerned they were right , Jesus was the way ,and we were all going to hell. It's really difficult to get a dialogue going when someone  simply closes their mind.
The reason I went to the Unitarian church was that 'thinking was allowed'.
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2013 at 15:18
Hi Dr. Wu - I have posted my exploration of "Christ mind".  Thought you might be interested!  Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2013 at 19:08
Cool to put a face with a name.  You have a beautiful family, and you ain't bad looking yourself.
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dr wu23 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2013 at 22:30
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Hi Dr. Wu - I have posted my exploration of "Christ mind".  Thought you might be interested!  Big smile
I did enjoy it and it was well written.
I definitely support the idea of 'interconnectedness' but I approach it from a non-denominational angle meaning that all religious dogma is merely a superficial and cultural explanation of this 'oneness' that is beyond any one cultural religious model and in the end is That Which Has No name. This is a concept I first read about from Vedanta and is also present in Buddhism and Taoism ;all cultural 'religious' approaches btw yet they all 3 understand that these are just models and that true Oneness transcends all specific models and is beyond such categorization.
 
This approach can be most easily read in J Krishnamurti's  writings and something he like to call Freedom From The Known. The same idea can be found in the first part of the Tao Te Ching which says that the Tao that can be named is not the true Tao.
 
In other words Jesus was tapping into the same Oneness or Tao or Christmind  that the Buddha , Lao Tzu,  and others before him had done. But being from different cultural traditions they 'explained' or transmitted that truth via their cultures words, terms, and language.
 
That's how I interpret these core doctrines in most religions . Obviously someone who adheres to a specific one and immerses themselves in a specific path being from a specific culture they will not 'see this' and reject the other core truths as being not the real truth. They cannot see the forest for the trees.
The closest person imho that ever came to explaining this in fairly clear terms was Krishnamurti but Alan Watts makes some good attempts at doing this in his books also. While he used Zen Buddhism as his vehicle to seek truth he clearly stated that in the end it was just another path or model to reach enlightenment and that in the end we must drop the vehicle itself to be truly free and at one with all things.
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2013 at 07:09
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Cool to put a face with a name.  You have a beautiful family, and you ain't bad looking yourself.

Was that to me?  Thank you, if so.  I do think my family is beautiful.  Big smile

Dr. Wu - we are totally thinking along the same lines.  And it's so sad that so many people from the background I came from are stuck in this kind of thinking that says that anyone who doesn't come from the same religion or thought patterns is the enemy.  This is the opposite force to unity - the separation; the non-love; as the Bible would put it: the accuser ("ha-satan").  But they go around saying that everyone who isn't just like them is influenced by an entity named "Satan".  It's ironic, in a very sad way.  I've become very aware during the last year that there is SO MUCH in common between writings in the Bible (and the apochryphal works) and other sacred texts.  Too much to be mere coincidence.  It led me to the conclusion that "God" is at work in all religions.  But people from the background I came from would try to lead me to believe that this is "Satan" trying to trick me, and he's oh-so-clever so I have to really watch out for him!  So I am deeply rooted in Christianity, and the language of Christianity and the Bible are what I know best.  So I focus on trying to explain these concepts to people who came from similar backgrounds as myself using the Biblical/Christian language.  But I love it when I meet people like you who have arrived at the point of transcendence - I can't start talking along those lines with most Christians I know or they'd start yelling "heretic!" in my face.  WinkLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2013 at 07:29
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Cool to put a face with a name.  You have a beautiful family, and you ain't bad looking yourself.

Was that to me?  Thank you, if so.  I do think my family is beautiful.  Big smile



It was.
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dr wu23 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2013 at 17:33
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


Dr. Wu - we are totally thinking along the same lines.  And it's so sad that so many people from the background I came from are stuck in this kind of thinking that says that anyone who doesn't come from the same religion or thought patterns is the enemy.  This is the opposite force to unity - the separation; the non-love; as the Bible would put it: the accuser ("ha-satan").  But they go around saying that everyone who isn't just like them is influenced by an entity named "Satan".  It's ironic, in a very sad way.  I've become very aware during the last year that there is SO MUCH in common between writings in the Bible (and the apochryphal works) and other sacred texts.  Too much to be mere coincidence.  It led me to the conclusion that "God" is at work in all religions.  But people from the background I came from would try to lead me to believe that this is "Satan" trying to trick me, and he's oh-so-clever so I have to really watch out for him!  So I am deeply rooted in Christianity, and the language of Christianity and the Bible are what I know best.  So I focus on trying to explain these concepts to people who came from similar backgrounds as myself using the Biblical/Christian language.  But I love it when I meet people like you who have arrived at the point of transcendence - I can't start talking along those lines with most Christians I know or they'd start yelling "heretic!" in my face.  WinkLOL
I don't have any problem with people being 'rooted' in a specific religious path but imho they should come to the realization that it's not the only way to be 'free' and One With God/Tao/Atman/ ..whatever one wishes to call That Which Has No Name which as you mentioned is at work in all 'religions'. I've been around for a few years and met many people on different paths including many Christians- some Fundamentalists others more open minded - and for the most part they are well meaning but sadly they have no desire to look at this from any other perspective and fail to see the bigger picture.
 
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 27 2013 at 16:27
 
 
This is a very interesting book and one .
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
A book that even Christians might find compelling.
Watts was an Anglican minister before embracing eastern ideology and he tells about the differences in eastern and western thinking about the nature of reality ,religion ,and spirituality and why we are all 'missing the point' of it all.
Wink


Edited by dr wu23 - September 27 2013 at 19:30
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 28 2013 at 14:09
^ Interesting - I have put it on my list of books I want to read.  Thank you!  I have another one of his books on my list.

Yeah, even that title is provocative.  I had a recent conversation where someone asked what the gospel was and how to preach it.  I went into the history of the word "euangelion" and how Jesus' gospel matched other gospels of Caesar and other "messiah's" in some ways, but contrasted them in others, etc. etc. (I have a blog post on the subject).  So then, the person who started the conversation goes "Geoff, what is truth?"  So I immediately had this back-of-the-neck-hair-raising-suspicious feeling from that question.  So I go into the difference between "truths" and "Truth", which is infinite and thus infinitely unknowable, etc.  So she starts going "is there anything you know is true?"  And I can tell she's heretic hunting here, so I'm taking an avoidant stance.  I'm describing how people often claim to "know" things, but all they know is what they've perceived, and this implies that they've put trust in their methods of perception, but how can we "know" that we don't have faulty perception?  What if my eyes are bad and I've never found out (for example)?  Etc.  She keeps hounding me: "is there anything you know is true?"  Over and over again she's asking, and I'm trying to get her to think deeply and lead her to the inevitable answer.  She's having none of it.  Other people in the thread are even telling her she's being pushy and rude, but she's ignoring them.  Finally, after she repeats the "is there anything you know" line of questioning I give her my answer: "there is only one thing anyone can know with absolute certainty: I am."  Boom, she goes off on a tirade about what a heretic I am and lists of about 30 things she "knows" are true that are requirements for being a "Christian", and therefore I'm not one but a wolf in sheep's clothing in the service of Satan, bla bla bla.  I say "you don't know any of those things.  You hope and trust in them, just as I hope and trust in the things I believe in.  And belief, by the way, is more than thoughts in your head - it's about what you're willing to act on.  If you can't act on it, you don't really believe it."  More heretic calling, etc., and finally I leave.  Eh...well, I thought you might enjoy that story.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 28 2013 at 16:27
"I am" is surely no certainty.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 29 2013 at 09:49
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

^ Interesting - I have put it on my list of books I want to read.  Thank you!  I have another one of his books on my list.

Yeah, even that title is provocative.  I had a recent conversation where someone asked what the gospel was and how to preach it.  I went into the history of the word "euangelion" and how Jesus' gospel matched other gospels of Caesar and other "messiah's" in some ways, but contrasted them in others, etc. etc. (I have a blog post on the subject).  So then, the person who started the conversation goes "Geoff, what is truth?"  So I immediately had this back-of-the-neck-hair-raising-suspicious feeling from that question.  So I go into the difference between "truths" and "Truth", which is infinite and thus infinitely unknowable, etc.  So she starts going "is there anything you know is true?"  And I can tell she's heretic hunting here, so I'm taking an avoidant stance.  I'm describing how people often claim to "know" things, but all they know is what they've perceived, and this implies that they've put trust in their methods of perception, but how can we "know" that we don't have faulty perception?  What if my eyes are bad and I've never found out (for example)?  Etc.  She keeps hounding me: "is there anything you know is true?"  Over and over again she's asking, and I'm trying to get her to think deeply and lead her to the inevitable answer.  She's having none of it.  Other people in the thread are even telling her she's being pushy and rude, but she's ignoring them.  Finally, after she repeats the "is there anything you know" line of questioning I give her my answer: "there is only one thing anyone can know with absolute certainty: I am."  Boom, she goes off on a tirade about what a heretic I am and lists of about 30 things she "knows" are true that are requirements for being a "Christian", and therefore I'm not one but a wolf in sheep's clothing in the service of Satan, bla bla bla.  I say "you don't know any of those things.  You hope and trust in them, just as I hope and trust in the things I believe in.  And belief, by the way, is more than thoughts in your head - it's about what you're willing to act on.  If you can't act on it, you don't really believe it."  More heretic calling, etc., and finally I leave.  Eh...well, I thought you might enjoy that story.
It was an interesting story and Watts would say she's 'missing the point' . Wink
I've met many people like that in person and had similar conversations....I don't bother anymore. They are caught up in a specific paradigm belief and aren't interested in anything else. End of story.
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 29 2013 at 09:51
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

"I am" is surely no certainty.
 
It's as certain as it gets.......it's the bedrock of existence on a self awareness level.
One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 29 2013 at 10:11
Buddha says awareness of self is illusion and the main cause of suffering
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 29 2013 at 10:21
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Buddha says awareness of self is illusion and the main cause of suffering
 
Well...the Buddha was suffering from delusion himself ..Wink as are all human beings.
But more to the point is that self  and how we see reality overall with a small s is certainly a state of misperception or 'illusion' if you like and Self with large s is when we 'get it' and realize that error.
If one realizes...not just intellectually... 'I Am' (state of pure beingness) ,then they are beyond this and have gone beyond duality . They Are and are one with All.
 
 
 

The first noble truth explains the nature of dukkha. Dukkha is commonly translated as “suffering”, “anxiety”, “dissatisfaction”, “unease”, etc., and it is said to have the following three aspects:[c]

  • The obvious physical and mental suffering associated with birth, growing old, illness and dying.
  • The anxiety or stress of trying to hold onto things that are constantly changing.
  • A basic unsatisfactoriness pervading all forms of existence, due to the fact that all forms of life are changing, impermanent and without any inner core or substance. On this level, the term indicates a lack of satisfaction, a sense that things never measure up to our expectations or standards.
 
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 29 2013 at 12:07
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

"I am" is surely no certainty.


How so?  I thought Descartes took care of this.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 29 2013 at 12:28
My bad....you is then
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 30 2013 at 06:57
Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Buddha says awareness of self is illusion and the main cause of suffering

I think the point of this was not to say "I don't really exist".  I think it's more along the lines of realizing that this idea that I can be an "individual" without anyone else is an illusion.  This idea of separation is an illusion.  I am a product of all of the people I've met and the combination of ideas I've been presented with through all of them.  There is nothing that I "know" outside of my relationships.  I can't "know" anything if I haven't experienced it or observed it.  So separation is an illusion.  It's very hard to explain, but I think that was more what Buddha was getting at - knowing that we are all a part of "one another".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 30 2013 at 08:02
^ To add to my earlier post, I also find a commonality between Buddhism's idea of the "annihilation of self" (as I've heard it called in some cases) and "taking up your cross", or "self-sacrifice".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 30 2013 at 08:12
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Buddha says awareness of self is illusion and the main cause of suffering

but I think that was more what Buddha was getting at
I know a lot of buddists, both westeners (sigh) and Asians, but its the first time anyone have indicated to know what Budda was getting at. LOL
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 30 2013 at 09:52
Originally posted by tamijo tamijo wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by timothy leary timothy leary wrote:

Buddha says awareness of self is illusion and the main cause of suffering

but I think that was more what Buddha was getting at
I know a lot of buddists, both westeners (sigh) and Asians, but its the first time anyone have indicated to know what Budda was getting at. LOL

I'm not claiming to understand Buddha in the same way I understand that 2+2=4.  It is very difficult for anyone to claim understanding of these concepts, as they almost always involve some paradox.  For example, it could be said that in order to properly release the self, you must first understand your self.  It's tricky, for sure.  What I'm getting at, though, is that I don't think the goal is this complete detachment where you become apathetic.  Rather, it is more about becoming very much "real", very much in the world.  To be "real" and in the world, you must learn to stop living inside of your false self.  But to stop living in your false self, you must first be aware of your false self, and how it operates.  Yes, very confusing, I know.  But perhaps you're starting to see what I'm getting at at little?
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