T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1353.1 | First step for the quest of knowledge | ALONZO::VERMA | Virendra, MRO4-3/H10, DTN 297-5913 | Mon Sep 10 1990 11:36 | 4 |
| A belief (I don't see difference between belief and faith) is the first step
for the quest of knowledge.
- Virendra
|
1353.2 | | POBOX::GAJOWNIK | | Mon Sep 10 1990 11:21 | 7 |
|
Overcoming is being stranded on an island of doubt in a sea of
fulfillment and, not knowing how to swim, building a skiff and
sailing out to sea.
Mark
|
1353.3 | It's preferable to make distinctions with these words... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Sep 10 1990 11:43 | 12 |
| re: .1
There is probably a closer association between faith and
hope than between faith and belief. Faith has a certain submissive,
resigned, connotation, however. Faith is the "last resort." Hope, on the
other hand, doesn't imply that no other avenues are available. Rather
it ties in better to an expectancy and opportunity for something
greater than what would usually happen. Belief is opinion held
with conviction based on all the data that has been processed.
Frederick
|
1353.4 | Faith is asserting trust | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Runnin' on rhythm -_- | Mon Sep 10 1990 12:47 | 21 |
| Hi Frederick,
Re: .3
> Faith has a certain submissive, resigned, connotation, however.
Your words describe how I used to view faith a few years ago.
Today, however, faith in my life walks hand in hand with courage.
Faith is the way I assert trust in my self, God, and the universe and I
use it everyday in many ordinary situations.
It is also especially useful when it is not always clear in my mind,
what the best course of action might be in a given situation. Faith,
having trust in the above, and courage, also enable me to move forward
in the face of fear and to move more quickly out of periods of personal
stagnation.
Just fwiw.
Karen.*
|
1353.5 | Where does charity fit in? | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Sep 10 1990 13:05 | 18 |
| re: .4 (Karendipity)
Your reply does little to show me that faith doesn't still hold that
"oh, I'm too insignificant"-kind-of plea to it. Asserting trust
is not faith. Asserting trust is to be trusting, not testing.
Faith, as spoken of by both of us, implies a lack of confidence.
It implies that whatever is sought isn't happening, and that
we'll just close our eyes, cross our fingers, and "pray" that
our "God" will rescue us. That's faith, not hope. Of course,
if in your own personal dictionary you have changed the meanings
to fit you, that's okay. I would rather hold onto the meanings
and change my use of the words, since most of the consensus reality
probably holds onto the implied definition I stated.
Thanks for your fwiw...this is *my* fwiw.
;-)
Frederick
|
1353.6 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Runnin' on rhythm -_- | Mon Sep 10 1990 13:54 | 22 |
| Frederick,
> Your reply does little to show me that faith doesn't still hold that
> "oh, I'm too insignificant"-kind-of plea to it.
> Faith, as spoken of by both of us, implies a lack of confidence.
No my friend, you are not understanding what I said correctly, for my
experience of faith *is* an expression of confidence - *not* a lack of
it. And I have faith :-) that you know me well enough to know I am
not of the "oh, I'm too insignificant" genre of human being.
And by the way, it's important to me that you know I was not trying to
change your mind about how you view faith. Faith for you equates to
insignificance, lack of confidence, and all the other things you
mentioned in .4. My understanding of "faith" is totally different
from your understanding, that's all.
:-)
later,
Kb.*
|
1353.7 | Faith not blind faith | ALONZO::VERMA | Virendra, MRO4-3/H10, DTN 297-5913 | Mon Sep 10 1990 14:40 | 9 |
| I don't think faith implies "insignificance", "lack of confidence" and
such things. People usually qualify such faith as "blind faith". Faith
to me is like you are prepared to learn on a certain basis such as religion,
science or philosophy. Next step is "understanding" based on faith and the
final step is "realization" of what you have understood.
Lack of realization translates the understanding as purely speculative.
- Virendra
|
1353.8 | | ATSE::FLAHERTY | The Hug Therapist | Mon Sep 10 1990 15:21 | 5 |
| Right on, Kb.*, what you have stated is close to my definition of
'faith' as well!!!
Roey
|
1353.9 | Faith is trusting | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Mon Sep 10 1990 15:38 | 14 |
| Faith *is* trusting.
Faith in Jesus means (in my understanding):
1) Jesus is *able* to keep the promises he made to you and me
2) Jesus has the *integrity* to stand by the promises he made
3) I *claim* (i.e. trust in) the promises he made to me.
I'd rather trust a promise of Jesus to me than a promise from anyone else
(because of points 1 and 2).
There was a time when I defined faith as "blind belief". I was wrong.
Collis
|
1353.10 | Exactly!! what happens when that word is used! | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Sep 10 1990 15:46 | 6 |
| re: .9 (Collis)
Thank you for helping me make my point.
Frederick
|
1353.11 | Right on | ALONZO::VERMA | Virendra, MRO4-3/H10, DTN 297-5913 | Tue Sep 11 1990 09:49 | 18 |
| RE: .9
Collins,
Do you understand (with reason) what Jesus promised? If so, you have passed
second step of understanding your faith. Try to realize it by practicing
what you understood in Jesus's teachings. (Please note that I regard religion
as private. To make ones argument robust, one should critically examine all
ones faith based on understanding and realization. I don't think, by making
lot more people agree with your faith will make your argument any stronger).
This scenario can be compared by an example from Science. We have a faith
or proposition that there is gravitional force between two masses. This faith
can be understood by observing apple falling toward earth and many other
examples. The faith can be realized in a laboratory when a force of
attraction is observed between one heavy ball and a light ball.
- Virendra
|
1353.12 | We *do* agree that a point is made.... ;-) | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Tue Sep 11 1990 10:42 | 13 |
| RE .10 (Frederick)
> re: .9 (Collis)
>
> Thank you for helping me make my point.
>
> Frederick
Sorry, Fred. Collis helped Karen make *her* point.
:-)
Arie
|
1353.13 | Faith=Integratory, Belief=Hypothetical ? | DWOVAX::STARK | Indistinguishable from Magic | Tue Sep 11 1990 10:44 | 30 |
| re: .11,
A point of confusion about this example in my mind ...
>The faith can be realized in a laboratory when a force of
>attraction is observed between one heavy ball and a light ball.
To my understanding, gravitation (and such) are hypotheses,
possible models of how things happen, and can be *disproven* by
observation as well as *borne out* by observation.
My faith, on the other hand, cannot be disproven by
observation, it is a personal experience of knowing beyond reason.
It can only be evolved by a similar integratory experience, not
displaced by empirical data.
In the science example, I might say that my faith is in an orderly
universe where planets don't attract each other one day and then
arbitrarily decide to repel each other the next day, but the details
are always open to verifying by observation.
My personal dictionary equates belief with my current hypotheses, and
faith with my personal metaphysics, the way I have integrated and
consolidated my knowledge so far, and is not open to question "as
a whole," only to possibly analysis with respect to details and
practical implementation.
I'm not sure whether that would make any sense to anyone else :-)
>Todd>
|
1353.14 | Practicing faith (i.e. sanctification) | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Tue Sep 11 1990 11:03 | 19 |
| Re: 1353.11
Re: Virendra
>Do you understand (with reason) what Jesus promised?
Yes. I believe that strong reasoning is one of the gifts God has given me.
>If so, you have passed second step of understanding your faith. Try to
>realize it by practicing what you understood in Jesus's teachings.
I wish I could. But it's just not that easy. My human nature keeps
getting in the way, leading me to do the things I wish I didn't do (Romans 7).
For example, I know that God promises me peace if I will just turn my
concerns over to him (Phil 4:6,7), but that doesn't necessarily make it easy
to do. But thanks, I will keep trying. Fortunately, I don't have to depend
on what I do to be acceptable to God.
Collis
|
1353.15 | Faith is based on past and experience | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Tue Sep 11 1990 11:03 | 19 |
| Re: 1353.13
As I understand faith, it is a current trusting based on our understanding
of what has happened in the past.
In the case of gravity, it is because of our observations and the awareness
that others have consistently observed the same force. We expect gravity
to continue (and would be very surprised if it didn't).
In the case of Jesus, personally it is because of fulfilled prophecy,
miracles, and most important an empty tomb which provides a historical
basis for trusting in the promises. Of course, there is also the evidence
of my changed lives and the changed lives and testimonies of millions
of others.
Either way, I understand faith to be a trusting that something is true
or something will happen because of our understanding of the past.
Collis
|
1353.16 | Faith can be born from both | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Runnin' on rhythm -_- | Tue Sep 11 1990 11:11 | 13 |
| Todd .13,
Imo, both your and Virendra's reply (.11) are true. Faith can
be drawn from *both* objective (empirical, scientific) and subjective
(transcendental, transpersonal) experience.
What I also understood from Virendra's response (and agree with)
is the need to integrate *reason with faith* to help prevent us
from falling into the "trap" of running our lives on "blind faith",
the term Collis referred to.
Karen.*
|
1353.17 | Everything can be reasoned | ALONZO::VERMA | Virendra, MRO4-3/H10, DTN 297-5913 | Tue Sep 11 1990 12:49 | 23 |
| RE: .13
> My faith, on the other hand, cannot be disproven by
> observation, it is a personal experience of knowing beyond reason.
I don't think there is anything which can not be reasoned even
spritual experience. Only speculations are disproven. Realized
experiences can never be.
Feats, miracles and even incantations came out of a very well
understood science called "Yoga". There is nothing mysterious
about it.
Good and bad stuff are a state of mind. To understand this, a good
moral in one culture may be considered a bad moral in another.
So there is nothing like an absolute good or absolute bad about
anything. If you feel good about your personal experiences, that's
again a state of mind. Yoga is a science which controls the state
of mind and has been used by ancient thinkers as a means to realize
spritual experiences. Well again, that's my faith and I don't intend
to impose on you.
- Virendra
|
1353.18 | Faith=Experience, Belief=Interpretation ? | DWOVAX::STARK | Indistinguishable from Magic | Tue Sep 11 1990 17:56 | 40 |
| re: .17, Virendra,
> (I don't see difference between belief and faith)
Yoga seems to have a fascinating worldview, and so do you. The
points I bring up are hopefully for the sake of further learning
by exposing our different personal definitions.
The thing with the realized experience is that while it helps my
understanding, and it can be specifically cultivated (such as your Yoga
example) I don't think a realization experience (whatever that may
actually be) translates directly into language.
IMO, it seems that when we try to interpret a realized experience, it
comes out as a belief, sometimes almost an arbitrary belief (or perhaps a
statement of dogma) rather than a pure experience. That belief is then
subject to scrutiny and proof or disproof, and subject to causing strife and
argument (or seeding creativity, depending on how attached we are to
the belief and willing to examine it).
The *experience itself* is, to me, the faith, and is not susceptible to
proof or disproof. Only its interpretation is thus subject, just like
the other types of belief, which result from observing the world
directly, learning from others, and making creative deductions,
are all happily subject to proof and disproof in the sincere quest
for knowledge.
That is to say, faith in God might not be a belief in God, but
an (the) experience of His presence in our life. Similarly, faith in
the goodness of humanity might be an experience of that goodness, rather
than a reasoned belief that "people are good," which if taken literally
is full of language meanings and assumptions that are probably relatively
easy to disprove on any given day :-) . The faith part often drives
life in a practical, foundational way. The belief part is just temporary
housing for the flow of ideas. Then again, I may be wrong :*), or
making a picky distinction.
love, light, and power,
>Todd>
|
1353.19 | You said it well | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Runnin' on rhythm -_- | Wed Sep 12 1990 09:34 | 8 |
| Todd .18,
> The experience, itself, is to me the faith...
Thanks for an enlightening note Todd! *Experience* is the essence
of the faith in my life as well.
Karen.*
|
1353.20 | bury seeds not talents | FREEBE::TURNER | | Wed Sep 12 1990 10:09 | 29 |
| I read a story once about a man from the netherlands, who was working
for a relief agency in Africa. Shortly after he received a letter
of commendation from the queen, he came upon the scene of an accident.
He stopped to help a young man who was injured by a fallen tree.
The injured man was in extreme pain and begged the white man for
some powerful medicine. All he had with him was a few aspirin which
he gave him, but the man still begged for something stronger. The
WM was a loss for something to do. Finally, he said, I hve this
letter from the Queen! He took it out an placed it on the injured
man's chest and immediately the injured man was relieved. After
that the letter enjoyed a reputation for awhile as a healing device!
the point of all this is that belief even in a lie is a very
powerful substance. Certainly the letter had no power except from
the faith placed in it. I think this explains why so many people
settle for belief in lies. The destruction of faith is a dangerous
thing. Unless one builds faith in something better, more damage
than good is done by destroying belief. Unfortunately, lies tend
to be found out, resulting in damage to faith.
Jesus said that if you had faith as a grain of mustard seed you
could move mountains. He not talking about size, so how much faith
does a grain of mustard have? It simply takes hold of the resources
that are provided in its invironment such as warmth, moisture, and
nutrients to fulfill its potential. It doesn't know ahead of time
whether it will succeed, yet it goes ahead and grows.
|
1353.21 | | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long strange trip its been... | Wed Sep 12 1990 13:49 | 1 |
| Then have faith in yourself.... and you can move mountains.
|
1353.22 | Faith = Acceptance? | REGENT::WAGNER | Life Can Be One Continuous Orgasm | Wed Sep 12 1990 21:12 | 37 |
| Karen,
What you said was beautiful. It most closely says what my metaphor
tried to visually demonstrate. What you refer to as faith perhaps is
"knowledgeable acceptance." Never-the-less, knowledge gained from
experience is the highest form of awareness. Ouspenski refers to "real
faith" as "belonging to the higher emotional center. In our ordinary
emotional center there can only be imitation faith. Real faith means
not only emotion, but also knowledge."
Fred,
You intellectuallize very well. The Words can only take one
so close to the truth. There comes a time that one must put aside the
words and get down to business and do the work. This in a word is what
Faith is: getting down to business and doing the work (experiencing).
The following is related to an earlier entry concernig the
transformation of the various masters teaching an inner truth to the
present outer search that is generally practiced today:
"As time went on, and people started to practice less, they began to
mistake the words for the experience. Different schools arose, arguing
over concepts. It is as if in attempting to explain the light on ta
full moon night one points up at the moon. To look at the finger,
rather than the moon, is to misunderstand the pointing. We should not
confuse the finger for the moon, no confuse the words pointing to the
truth for the experience itself."
--THE EXPERIENCE OF INSIGHT, Joseph Goldstein.
"As long as there is opinions and views, we can never experience the
truth. Do not seek truth, only cease to cherish opinion."
Ernie
|
1353.23 | With faith, Jesus can't be too far behind... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Thu Sep 13 1990 10:29 | 16 |
| re: Ernie (.22)
Thanks, but as for intellectualizing, at least to the point
of regurgitating, I certainly take a back seat to others in here.
I suggest you could use a pointer or two in doing something other
than intellectualizing, yourself.
I am not beyond the experiential. My experiences are definitely
reflecting my beliefs, moreover. But I must say, my experiences
around the use of the word "faith" are definitely negative. As long
as this topic centers around that word, then I give it a "thumbs down."
I have read nothing by anyone in here that has convinced me or inspired
me to want to use that word in any positive context in any of my
vocalized discourses. That's all...
Frederick
|
1353.24 | when it comes right down to it... | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Runnin' on rhythm -_- | Thu Sep 13 1990 11:14 | 5 |
| what's in a word anyway?
shrug,
Kb.:-)
|
1353.25 | On the contrary Fred (:'> | REGENT::WAGNER | Life Can Be One Continuous Orgasm | Thu Sep 13 1990 11:25 | 10 |
| Fred,
I apologize for "ruffling your feathers." (:'> On the contrary, I
experience almost completely. I thought my new personal name
demonstrated that. (:'> I never thought life could be so "unbearably
exciting." I mean experiencing life as one continuous 'nonlocalized'
orgasm is intellectualizing excessively? Me thinks not.
Love,
Ernie
|
1353.26 | I think I said enough about what I feel? | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Thu Sep 13 1990 13:03 | 32 |
| re: Ernie
Somehow, Ernie, I never get the impression that you are
doing what you suggest. You have demonstrated excitement over
intellectual accomplishments, and that's fine, of course, but
otherwise I have seen little to convince me of your true feelings.
IN other words, without putting you on the spot more than you
are, intellectualizing seems more your angle than mine...maybe
I'm projecting, however. As for this topic, I have lots of hopes
and desires...and I will not reduce them downward, to the extent
that it reads as though my fingers are somehow metaphysically
crossed "Oh, great cosmic Santa Claus, I have faith in you, for
only you can do it!" for I know better than that. My reality
is my responsibility, not anyone else's. If I succeed, I will
share the success...if I fail, it is my failure, for I'm the only
thing in my universe or reality keeping me from success. Having
faith, as I already suggested, means that there is some doubt that
this is the case. I may doubt myself, but I don't doubt my belief
in reality creation.
Perhaps it is for you, too, as it is for Karen, in that you
can use the words interchangeably. I cannot and willnot and have
so stated. Everyone is free to do as they wish; however, I don't
mind pointing out some potential pitfalls for various beliefs and
attitudes, should I see them.
Are you trying to tell me that you "experience" life as a
continuous orgasm, Ernie? Me thinks not. Me thinks that you have
intellectually decided that that sounds good and nifty and will
get you some clever guy votes and that you would desire it to be
that way some day. Maybe I'm "wrong" or maybe my experience of
orgasms is different from yourS?
Frederick
|
1353.27 | Reality Creation ? | DWOVAX::STARK | Indistinguishable from Magic | Thu Sep 13 1990 13:28 | 9 |
| Frederick,
>I may doubt myself, but I don't doubt my belief
> in reality creation.
This is a delightful turn of phrase ! What do you mean by reality
creation, and why do you believe in it, if you don't mind my asking ?
>Todd>
|
1353.28 | getting straight | CARTUN::BERGGREN | Runnin' on rhythm -_- | Thu Sep 13 1990 14:52 | 22 |
| Ah well, fwiw Frederick, I do not use the words faith and trust
interchangeably. I use Webster's definition of faith:
"Belief in the truth,
value,
or trustworthiness
of someone or something."
If you look up trust, amongst other things it also defines it as having
faith in something.... so much for the english language :-).
Anyway, my distinction between trust and faith, is that faith is the
highest experience I have of trust, as *for me* there are degrees of
trust. There is only one degree of faith. It doesn't really matter
to me if you agree or disagree with my definition or usage of either
word, I just wanted to set the record straight.
Let me ask you this though, if I may. Do you believe there is a
God or "something" equivalent? Or are you creating your universe
all by your lonesome?
Karen
|
1353.29 | My oh my what a wonderful day...plenty of sunshine, ... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Thu Sep 13 1990 15:13 | 34 |
| re: .27 (Todd)
First off, that was poorly written, so ambiguous meanings
are likely. What I meant to say was that I often have doubts about
what I am doing or in why I am doing whatever (self-awareness, or
perhaps self-confidence, etc.) but that my belief in the way
reality functions is no longer in doubt for me. It is clear
that I am at the helm, no matter how consciously or not.
re: Karendipity-do-dah, dippity ay.
"all by my lonesome?" No, but that whatever extends
beyond me isn't outside of me, rather within. This counters
the way most people view "their creator", I think. I am a piece
of something much more aware than I am. As I become more aware
of who/what I am, as I see more of the parts that comprise myself,
I become and come closer to being that source, or the larger part
of myself. No, I don't do it alone, but I cannot acknowledge the
totality of the creation, either, at this point. But I cannot
co-create anything if I cannot create alone. The co-creators within
have already created. IT is I who have not consciously done so.
But as that becomes more real, as I allow myself to make it real,
then I can have dominion and move forward to truly co-create.
Do I need to trust (or have faith in) them? NO, I need to have
trust in myself. They have already demonstrated their power.
Now I must trust myself enough to recognize that they are more of
me. Not to await their decisions, but to make my own decisions.
Not to pray for a miracle, but to make one happen. Not to sit around
to see what they have in store, but to decide what I want to have
in store for myself. Not to be a pawn, but to be responsible.
Does this make it clearer?
Frederick
|
1353.30 | exit | REGENT::WAGNER | Life Can Be One Continuous Orgasm | Thu Sep 13 1990 17:16 | 14 |
| Fred,
You can continue to thinks what you want about me. You can
continue to place what ever personal value you want to my words, If
you refuse to believe them there is nothing I can or care to do about
it. I know what I feel and that is the only thing that counts for me.
Ask Nikki, she has had to put up with my joy and "mirth" for awhile now
since she sits only a few cubicles away from me. (:'> I had heard
about the Laughing Buddha and always wondered what he had to laugh
about, now I know. No, he laughs at no particular one, he only laughs at
the continuing uncovering of illusion.
ERnie
|
1353.31 | The Alchemy of Non-Belief :-) | DWOVAX::STARK | Indistinguishable from Magic | Thu Sep 13 1990 18:34 | 33 |
| re: .29, (Frederick)
>They have already demonstrated their power.
> Now I must trust myself enough to recognize that they are more of
> me. Not to await their decisions, but to make my own decisions.
> Not to pray for a miracle, but to make one happen. Not to sit around
> to see what they have in store, but to decide what I want to have
> in store for myself. Not to be a pawn, but to be responsible.
Thanks for your interesting clarifications and comments. This is very close
to how I was intending to define "faith" (i.e. an experience of
demonstrated power, not necessarily in anything external or
supernatural !). "Religion" as such has no real personal meaning to me
except as an umbrella used by groups of people to represent what they
think of as a common faith, but in reality is individual experience
under a common set of symbols and doctrine.
For some reason, I can't see any practical difference between the two
ideas of personal responsibility and Christian Faith, even though
I'm not personally any kind of Christian and never was.
If beliefs are temporary structures used for gaining knowledge (?),
and we create our own reality over time, with help (?), and presumably
we also create our own "purpose," then I don't see why prayer could not be
part of taking personal responsibility, a symbolic form of power and a focus
of intention. Just so long as that is not the *only* thing you
do to create or transform reality, but an adjunct. I don't mind
someone praying in my behalf when I'm hurt, so long as they send for the
doctor and give appropriate first aid, too ! :-)
kind regards,
>Todd>
|
1353.32 | You're right! | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Fri Sep 14 1990 11:16 | 5 |
| Todd,
Given your framework, I agree that Christianity is meaningless.
Collis
|
1353.33 | Will this help? | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Mon Sep 17 1990 09:54 | 30 |
|
Well, I've read a few replies here and the one that comes closest
to what I (try to :'}) understand as "faith" is .20 -
Faith == Belief without evidence. No experience involved,
applicable to any context; an emotional decision.
I've heard or read that this is Jesus's most fundamental thing
He wanted to get across. He was so upset because he couldnt get
His followers to believe - even with plenty of evidence! How would
they possibly have faith with none?
Perhaps the letter in .20 was such strong medicine simply because
the recipient simply believed it so, without any "evidence" that
it was anything other than a piece of paper. It was a lie - so what?
It mattered not what it was, it mattered what the person believed
it was.
Maybe you can move a mountain with the faith in a mustard seed,
instead of sitting around thinking "I've never moved a mountain
before" or "all these guys died trying" or all the other evidence
you could stack up in the "against" coulumn in your head -
It's easy to apply "faith" in a positive context, because faith
is positive in context - you just pick one, anything. Could be Jesus,
or could be "career as a computer programmer". The moment you think,
"what evidence do *I have* of Jesus in my life, so I can believe?"
you've lost your faith.
Joe
|
1353.34 | Words strain, crack, crumble ... | DWOVAX::STARK | Indistinguishable from Magic | Mon Sep 17 1990 11:07 | 33 |
| Collis,
> Given your framework, I agree that Christianity is meaningless.
Ouch. Words are such damn treacherous little demons. I'm not
*sure* that was what I intended to convey, since meaning, like belief,
seems to be contextual in the framework I was using. I seem to be able
to attach *meaning* to anything consistent with the rest of my values and
beliefs-of-the-moment, just as I can *believe* just about anything given
the right context. But then I might just be more gullible than most :*)
(?) .
I think in that framework that whatever is useful for the current purpose
is meaningful, and Christianity has certainly proven useful for a great
many people for a large variety of purposes. Therefore, it is not
meaningless, just a different order of abstraction from the literal
"Faith" notion that I believe belongs MORE to the realm of Personal
Experience, where is is real and not just a symbol. At a different
order of abstraction, religions seem to me to be more of a useful
"consensus model" of personal faith, like a language of faith rather
than a Faith in themselves, as the literal usage sometimes appears,
And since I'm on a quote kick this week ...
"Those who rule the symbols, rule us."
Alfred Korsybski
The practical result for me of this philosophy is the principle of tolerance
for the grand diversity of beliefs with which people express their own
personal faith.
peace,
>Todd>
|
1353.35 | Or maybe you mean we don't need proof? | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Sep 17 1990 11:31 | 13 |
| re: .33 (Joe)
I'm not clear about the meaning of your last statement,
'The moment I think, "what evidence do *I have* of Jesus in my life, so
I can believe," you've lost all faith.' Do you mean that the only
way to have faith is with Jesus? That without Jesus there can be
no faith? That Jesus and faith are synonymous?
If so, I guess I'll never have faith. But I'll never let go
of hope, dreams, aspirations, desires, or any other positive futures.
Frederick
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1353.36 | We dont need proof. | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Mon Sep 17 1990 12:50 | 16 |
|
re .35 (frederick)
No, I was only pointing out that by the action of questioning
the evidence, or ascertaining if any even exists, is when you start
to lose "faith". The context I chose was just so typical; as far
as perhaps many people's ponderings go: "why should I believe in
Jesus when I have nothing besides peripheral evidence that He is
the true savior?" - or whatever. It's like "who am I to think I
could be a computer programmer when I see nothing in me that says
I could do it?"
When you have faith, you believe regardless of the presence
of substantiating evidence.
Joe
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1353.37 | Our experiences are worlds apart | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Mon Sep 17 1990 15:38 | 23 |
| Re: .35
Joe,
My experience and the experience of many that I know is exactly the
opposite that you describe.
I'll stick with myself here. It was exactly when I questioned the evidence
and determined to ascertain what did exist that my faith grew. It is
because I continue to question and research that my faith continues to
grow.
I can show you *many* people who don't (and essentially never have)
question(ed) their faith. In my experience, it is exactly these people
that have *not* grown that are likely to "fall away" from what they
believed.
I still think that "believe" or "trust in" are good synonyms for faith.
My faith (whether it is in this chair that holds me or in the ability of
my car to bring me to work or in the ability and willingness of Jesus to
save me from hell are *based* on evidence and experience.
Collis
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1353.38 | You guard the consensus...I'm crossing the bridge of belief | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Sep 17 1990 17:14 | 8 |
| re: .37 (Collis)
"Our experiences are worlds apart"
...with mine, too.
Frederick
|
1353.40 | What's in a word anyway... | UTRTSC::MACKRILL | Brian @Utrecht | Tue Sep 18 1990 09:10 | 38 |
|
"Faith, the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not
yet revealed" (or something to that effect.)
This was a popular interpretation I grew up with. In the first
instance, physical evidence may not exist, but the act of having this
faith supposedly cultivates in the individual a required spiritual
quality/attribute, and the individual begins to experience the benefits
of having this faith. These "benefits" experienced, become the evidence
for the individual.
An example would be someone walking over hot coals, or piecing their
skin without feeling pain or bleeding . Reasoning would not help you
much in these cases, but the flaw in the philosophy here, is that the person
about to launch himself over the hot coals probably saw someone doing
it previously.
Still, the experience is not within the individual's repertoire of
experiences until he takes those first steps ? If successfully navigated
the evidence thus gained leads to a strengthening of faith, even
though, logically, we would expect the skin to burst into blisters at a
certain temperature ? This principle applies, no matter what the
teaching.
In Christs teachings, it is possible for the reasoning person to obtain
a high level of faith, but it is the harder of the two paths, for you
are opened to much doubt but it could lead to a very strong foundation.
True, the ones who make it through the reasoning path are not easily
put off when the ground gets shaky.
Faith signifies a "letting go" of the earthbound systems.
There are many paths... "Even if we fall, we were born to fly..."
?????
Brian
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1353.41 | Changes your lenses? | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Tue Sep 18 1990 09:12 | 21 |
|
Okay, "belief without conclusive evidence"...a "personal visit"
I can understand that when you already believe, it's easy to
bolster your beliefs with evidence, making your beliefs - and your
faith - stronger. My guess is that initially, one doesn't say "Gee,
there sure are a lot of churches around!" and decide to have faith
in God based on "the evidence".
My guess is that initially, one can decide to have faith in
Christ without having, say, the overwhelming evidence of a personal
visit by Him to do so. One can decide to have this faith without
such evidence or such an experience. One can do this simply because
they want to, that is their choice and their own personal decision.
After making this decision, the evidence of "Christ at work"
or whatever becomes much more clear and understandable, than it
was beforehand? Like, you can see what you were missing out on?
Joe
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1353.42 | RE: .40 | ELMST::VERMA | Virendra, MRO4-3/H10, DTN 297-5913 | Tue Sep 18 1990 10:08 | 3 |
| RE: .40 (UTRTSC::MACKRILL "Brian @Utrecht")
Well said Brian. I like that. - Virendra
|
1353.43 | Or perhaps just Orni-theology! ;-) | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Mission of Mercy | Tue Sep 18 1990 19:07 | 7 |
| I always liked this one:
"Faith is a bird that sings in the darkness
because it *feels* the light."
Peace,
Richard
|
1353.44 | feels good to me! | NSDC::SCHILLING | | Thu Sep 20 1990 15:20 | 0 |
1353.45 | Tamso ma jyotira gamah | ELMST::VERMA | Virendra, MRO4-3/H10, DTN 297-5913 | Fri Sep 21 1990 11:27 | 19 |
| RE: <<< Note 1353.43 by CSC32::J_CHRISTIE "Mission of Mercy" >>>
{ I always liked this one:
"Faith is a bird that sings in the darkness
because it *feels* the light."
Peace,
Richard }
Nothing wrong with this as long as faith knows the difference between
darkness (ignorance) and light (knowledge). There is a saying in Sanskrit:
"Tamso ma jyotira gamah".
O Lord! take me from drakness (ignorance) to light (knowledge). It is a
good faith indeed!!
- Virendra
|
1353.46 | As the prana flows (;^) | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Sat Sep 29 1990 22:14 | 14 |
|
Good heavens - Ernie, I know exactly what you mean by your personal
name! Are you familiar with Gurudev's works by chance (a.k.a. Amrit
Desai)? I'm so happy for you - that's wonderful.
Hi Joe Jas! Long time no see.
Virendra - I just got back from the Kripalu Center. See you in the
Yoga topic as time allows. I have some wonderful firsthand
realizations to share...and I only went to their Welcome Weekend. (;^)
Jai Bhagwan [I honor the spirit within you],
Cindy
|
1353.47 | Levels of Faith (Belief) | REGENT::WAGNER | HOW CAN I HELP | Sun Sep 30 1990 23:11 | 34 |
| From The Experience of Insight , Joseph Goldstein:
There are several different kinds of faith which may arise. The least
skillful is that trust or devotion in someone or something simply
because it makes us feel good. We get a pleasant feeling, a high, and
so put our faith in that person or thing. It is easy for that kind of
devotion to become blind. A higher kind of faith arises when we
experience and appreciate certain qualities in a person such as wisdom
and love and compassion. This kind of confidence is helpful because
the appreciation is a recognition of wholesome qualities of mind which
inspire us to develop those same qualities in ourselves.
There is also the faith and devotion that comes from our own
experience of the truth. As we begin to experience on deeper levels
how the mind and body are working, we feel a tremendous joy and
confidence in the Dharma. It is not based on blind feelings nor
appreciation of qualities in another but comes from insight into the
nature of reality. And this leads to the highest confidence of mind
which comes from the experience of enlightenment. By penetrating to
the ultimate truth, faith becomes unshakeable.
As the Buddha was dying, Ananda asked who would be their teacher
after his death. He replied to his disciple; "Be lamps unto
yourselves. Take yourselves to no external refuge. Hold fast to the
truth as a lamp. Hold fast to the truth as a refuge. Look not for a
refuse in anyone besides yourselves. And those, Ananda, who either now
or after I am dead, shall be a lamp unto themselves, shall take
themselves to no external refuge, but holding fast to the truth as
their lamp, holding fast to the truth as their refuge, shall not look
for refuge in anyone but themselves, it is they who shall reach the
very topmost heights; but they must be anxious to learn.
Ernie
|