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798.1 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:28 | 110 |
| Words like control and restriction are negative words in today's
American society, except where the law specifies that certain
restrictions and controls are necessary to protect the members of
the community. In this case, controls and restrictions are for the
benefit of the community and ultimately each individual in the
community.
Controls and restrictions help to ensure that others are safe from
the unbridled actions of another. But it also helps to ensure that
the person himself remains safe and comes to become a responsible
adult.
Rules are made to establish control and are implemented and governed
by authority. Authority can either be accepted willingly or imposed
forcefully.
All people have had a problem with authority in their lives and have
opposed it by breaking the rules (Romans 3:23). Difficulty with
authority leads to a natural rebellion. And in the human sense, if
we have had poor examples of authority figures in our lives, the
rebellion to all forms of authority often sets in, and good
(accepted) authority is thrown out with bad (imposed) authority.
In the Christian life, there are several authorities, all of which
lead to the Ultimate Authority: God. The authority of God is
expressed in His Word; not just the Bible, but in the Word that
became flesh, Jesus Christ.
The authority of God is also expressed in God's leaders (in the
church), God's leaders (in the home), God's leaders (in the
community). The person that has trouble (for any number of reasons)
dealing with yielded authority also has trouble with God.
All these things, rebellion, rules, restrictions, and authority are
wrapped up in morality; that is, things are good and bad (or
neutral - amorality).
Who decides whose morals are correct?
To answer this question, we must first ask another question: "Does
God exist?" If the answer is no, then every person defines what is
good and what is bad. Societal morals then come from a consensus or
plurality of individual personal morals.
If the answer is that God exists, then we must also ask, "What is
God like?" If God is dispassionate and disinterested in our lives,
then we are left with the our own definition of morals and it is the
same as there being no God, except for any "natural laws" He may
have instituted from the beginning. These natural laws, in addition
to personal morals, add good and bad to societal morals.
If God exists, and He is a personal and all-powerful God, then how
do we respond to *what He calls good and bad*?
Ultimately, each one of us commits ourself to a faith statement
about God that governs our morals. If there is no God, then morals
have no real meaning since every person has individual morals; and
so there is no absolute good nor absolute bad; its all relative; the
concepts of good and evil (outside of the context of a personal and
all-powerful God) are subjective at best.
Even so, people do declare what is good and what is bad. And it is
this declaration that sets up the societal morals which enacts the
rules and restrictions, which creates the authority, which is
rebelled against by people whose morals do not match the pluralism
or consensus of society.
Since good and bad have no [reasonable] context outside of God,
people who declare their personal morals are god unto themselves;
they have placed themselves in absolute authority by declaring what
is [ultimately] good and what is [ultimately] bad; those who violate
(rebel against) their personal morals commit sin against them.
If God exists, and He is the God in the Bible, then it is He Who
declares what is good and what is bad. By His definition, we are
cast in the darkness of sin, or the light of righteousness, because
He has Absolute Authority to do so. We choose to align and submit
our personal morality to the authority of this God or we choose to
disregard it.
For those who believe God exists and want to know Him, the rebellion
to His rules and restrictions must be quelled, and we must
surrender, submitting to loving authority, for the God of the Bible
will not impose His authority on us until the Judgment Day. As we
all know, submitting our personal morals to God's Absolute Morals is
not easy and especially hard for those of us who have had a problem
with authority on earth. It is not easy because it is in our nature
to have our own personal morals (ideas about what is good and bad)
and some of them do not align with God's morals. We can choose to
keep ours (in rebellion to God, and He will be in rebellion to our
personal morals), or we can choose to adopt God's morals,
requirements, rules, and regulations.
God has said, "I have set before you both life and death, and I
would have you choose life."
Now whether you believe God exists or not, you can continue on with
your own personal ideas about what is right and wrong, good and bad.
If you believe that God exists, then it may be important to know
what God is like, for it may have impact on the consequences of the
morals you have chosen (which govern your actions and attitudes).
Will you live in rebellion to God? Will you cause God to live in
rebellion to your morals?
Will you yield to the authority of God and surrender to His morals,
whatever they may be? Or will you be conquered and submitted on a
day when authority is imposed?
"Who is God that we might serve Him?"
|
798.2 | Absolutes and morality | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:29 | 63 |
| Before we can submit to any authority, we need to determine what
morality is. And towards this goal, we need to ask ourselves if
there is an absolute morality.
The word absolute carries a connotation of final, ultimate, and
everlasting. Therefore, an absolute morality *depends* on the
consistency of the authority (God,
self,
society,
others).
Self is not consistent. We change our ideas of good and bad all the
time. Society is not consistent and changes with the governments.
Others? Like what? Reliance on another's authority? Still
changeable.
If God exists, and He is the omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent God
we read about in the Bible, then He declares an Absolute Morality
and He has been absolutely consistent with it.
Now, with free will, each person also chooses the morality of their
own. As was demonstrated in .0, when any two moralities do not
align, something may be good to one and bad to another. The
morality a person chooses may be in conflict with God's morality.
This is why it is important to know what God is like, if He exists.
When we begin to understand what God is like, we can also begin to
align our morality (concepts of good and bad) with His. So, many
people "come to God" by placing themselves under His authority; that
is to say, they adopt His morality, by doing what God has declared
to be good and eschewing what God has declared to be bad. (To
Christians, this includes the acceptance of God's provision for
salvation - which is good).
So we can see that morality and authority are intimately linked.
Rebellion to authority (in absolute terms) is immorality. (I should
be quick to add that I mean that rebellion to God [the Authority] is
indeed immorality, but it even works for atheists who declare there
is no God. In essence, an atheist is his own god, or supreme
authority.)
Remember that there are two kinds of submission: yielded and
imposed. God accepts yielded submission and responds in love. Why?
Because we willingly adopt His standard of good and bad - life is
without resistance to the Absolute Authority. God will not impose
His authority until Judgment Day (exceptions being Judgments, such
as the one on Herod Agrippa when he was struck dead.) What I mean
is that God will not impose upon the free will He gave us, to be
"robots." Free will enables love to be given as well as received
(or rejected).
If there is a God, and he is the God in the Bible, One Day He will
impose His authority on all the rebellious and morality will be no
more. That is, only bad, or only good. (Now, relative morality
will still exist: I like chocolate ice cream better than butter
pecan; so comparative goods will exist in heaven, and I believe,
comparative bads will be in hell.)
If there is a God, and He is the God of the Bible, Who is
omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent, then this God is an absolute
and ultimate authority. Any morality contrary to His is immorality.
Does God exist? What is God like?
|
798.3 | From where did Jesus get his authority? | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:29 | 38 |
| Matthew 21:23-25 NIV
Jesus entered the temple courts, and, while he was teaching, the chief
priests and the elders of the people came to him. "By what _authority_
are you doing these things?" they asked. "And who gave you this
_authority_?"
Jesus replied, "I will ask you one question. If you answer me, I will
tell you by what authority I am doing these things. John's baptism -
where did is come from? Was it from heaven, or from men?"
They discussed it among themselves and said, "If we say, 'from heaven,'
he will ask, 'Then why didn't you believe him?' But if we say, 'From
men,' - we are afraid of the people, for they all hold that John was a
prophet.
So they answered Jesus, "We don't know."
Then he said, "Neither will I tell you by what authority I am doing
these things."
----------------------------------------------------------------------
What was the point of putting off the chief priests like Jesus did?
I do not think that Jesus was afraid to put himself in a dilemma (if
he said from God, they would accuse him of blasphemy and stone him,
and it wasn't his time - perhaps).
Instead, Jesus uses the same type of questioning on those who would
use it on him. Because of their unwillingness to be honest with
their answer, (to say either that John was a prophet and they were
wrong not to believe John, or to say that John was of men and stand
up for what they believed was truth,) the priests waffled and said
"we don't know." They had their ideas, but instead backed out of the
debate rather than be proven false. Not worthy of a direct answer,
because they gave none themselves, Jesus does not disclose his
authority directly to them.
More to come...
|
798.4 | What is Truth? | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:30 | 40 |
| John 18:37b-38a
Jesus answered, "You are right in saying I am a king. In fact for this
reason I was born, and for this I came into the world, to testify to
the truth. Everyone on the side of truth listens to me."
"What is truth?" Pilate asked.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Like everyone's personal morality (their concepts of what is good
and what is bad), truth can also be personally definable. This is
part of what Pilate was saying in a rhetorical question.
"We both have truths; are mine the same as yours?" (Some of you
will recognize this as a quote from Jesus Christ, Superstar. I'm
not here to debate its value.) The answer to this is also like
personal morality: very often the answer is no, my truths are not
the same as yours.
And so we must ask, is there an Absolute Truth? And again we see
that absoluteness depends on the consistency of the truth for the
person. If God exists, and He is the God of the Bible, omnipotent,
omniscient, omnipresent, then God is absolute in His authority (He
defines truth), He is absolutely consistent, and therefore
absolutely Truthful.
Jesus declares his purpose for becoming incarnate: to testify to the
truth. The fulfillment of the prophecies, God continues to
demonstrate His consistency and authority to declare absolutes in
morality (good/bad) and in truth.
Jesus further shows that one who would be in truth must listen to
him. The Christian faith places Jesus in the Godhead. He declares a
monopoly on absolute truth. Pilate retorts from the understanding
of personal truth.
Is there an absolute truth? And absolute morality? Jesus said, "I
am the Way, the Truth, and the Life."
More to come...
|
798.5 | Truth and Moraility | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:30 | 31 |
| Mark 10:17-18 NIV
As Jesus started on his way, and man ran up to him and fell on his
knees before him. "Good teacher," he asked, "what must I do to inherit
eternal life?"
"Why do you call me good?" Jesus answered. "No one is good - except God
alone."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
In the passage transcribed in the previous note, Jesus declares
himself to be the Truth. Here, Jesus says no one is good except
God.
Several notes ago, absolute morality was determined only to exist in
an absolute being (if one exists). Jesus affirms this with his
declaration that ONLY God is good.
It is noteworthy here that Jesus never refuted the application of
the word good to himself, especially pointed after his declaration
that only God is good. Jesus places himself in equality with God by
declaring himself to be the Way, the Truth, and the Life. The great
"I am"s of the Bible are God's declaration of His character.
Back to morality: If God is the only one that is good, then all
else is not good and we can never be good unless and until we align
our morality to His absolute morality, align our truths with His
absolute Truth, and submit ourselves to the absolute authority of an
omnipotent, omnipresent, omniscient God (if one exists).
More to come...
|
798.6 | Renewal is the key to aligning with an absolute morality | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:30 | 54 |
| Romans 12:2 KJV
And be ye not conformed to this world, but be ye transformed by
the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and
acceptable, and perfect will of God.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
When we speak of a God that exists as a God that is all-powerful,
always-alive, and all-knowing, we speak of a God Who is absolute in
authority, morality, and love.
In the verse above, we see the goal of transforming our minds is the
good, the acceptable, and the perfect. We see that our ideas of
what is good and what is bad must be aligned with God's in order to
be acceptable. Perfection, as it relates to God, is an absolute.
The renewing of one's mind is a conscious shift from one's personal
morality (which each of us has; everyone of us) to another personal
morality. In the context of Christianity, the conscious shift is to
adopt the Personal Morality of a God we believe to be shown to us by
the Bible and our personal experiences with His Spirit. (Since
personal experience is something not understood by those who do not
experience it, we can suffice to say that the God we believe is the
God of the Bible.)
It seems clear from a scriptural standpoint (at least) that a person
cannot find what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect will of
God on their own personal morality if the renewal of one's mind is
necessary. But what if one's personal morality already aligns with
God's? If we accept Jesus' words, no one is good except for God.
If we accept Paul's words, all have sinned and fall short of God's
morality. Therefore, no one's personal morality begin perfectly
aligned with God's perfect and absolute morality.
And not to skim over an important word: acceptable.
If God exists, and He is the God of the Bible, God has absolute
authority which give Him the power to define an absolute morality
which means that anyone's personal morality that does not align with
His is _unacceptable_ to Him. Where moralities conflict between two
persons, immorality exists. Where our personal moralities conflict
with God's absolutes, immorality exists.
On Judgment Day, those who transform themselves by the renewing of
their minds, adopting the absolute morality as their own and
aligning their ideas of good and bad with His, will be found
acceptable. God will then be able to accept you into His presence.
If one is not acceptable (not aligned), the God will not be able
(another interesting discussion in and of itself) to accept you;
malignment and conflict with His morals is immoral. If God is
consistent, then God is just and holy and cannot be absolutely pure
if impurity is present.
Acceptability is another reason it is important to know what God is
like, if you believe that God exists.
|
798.7 | When authorities and moralities clash | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:31 | 36 |
| Exodus 5:1-2 KJV
And afterward Moses and Aaron went in, and told Pharaoh, "Thus saith the
Lord God of Israel, 'Let my people go, that they may hold a feast unto me in
the wilderness.'"
And Pharaoh said, "Who is the Lord, that I should obey his voice and
let Israel go? I know not the Lord, neither will I let Israel go."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pharaoh was divine to his people, and to himself. Pharaoh
determined what was good and what was bad. We know that Pharaoh was
neither divine, nor consistent with his morality (what human is?).
Pharaoh here epitomizes our own stand against another's morality.
God deemed it good to take Israel out of Egypt; Pharaoh thought
otherwise. Pharaoh epitomizes our own desire to set the course of
our lives and determine good and bad, as a king and even as a god,
deciding right and wrong.
Now, Pharaoh was a religious man. He either believed he was a son
of the gods, or readily accepted his position. So we too place our
own personal moralities in conflict with another. On the human
level, if I told you to eat lima beans because it was good for you
to do so, you might rightfully say, "Who is Mark Metcalfe, that I
should obey his voice? Who are you to tell me to eat lima beans?"
(apologies to those who like lima beans.")
This hearkens back to the question: Who is God? What is He like?
What authority does He have to declare absolute morality?
Remember also that Pharaoh had free will and was given many
opportunities to yield to the Lord's authority. He chose not to
and in the end had God's authority imposed upon him. Thus we see
that God is the authority and established the right to declare the
absolute morality.
|
798.8 | The god of your fathers, or the god of the Amorites, in whose land you dwell | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:31 | 57 |
| Joshua 24:15 Amplified
And if it seems evil to you to serve the Lord, choose you this
day whom you you will serve, whether the gods which your fathers
served on the other side of the River, or the gods of the Amorites
in whose land you dwell; but as for me and my house, we will serve
the Lord.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Joshua knows all about personal morality and he so much as tells
Israel to make their choice and be done with it. It is very
interesting that when Israel responds, "Why, of course we will serve
the Lord!" Joshua says, in verse 19...
------------------------------------------------
Verse 19 Amplified
"You cannot serve the Lord; for He is a Holy God;
He is a jealous God; He will not forgive your transgressions and
your sins, if you forsake the Lord and serve strange gods; then He
will turn and do you harm, and consume you, after having done you good."
------------------------------------------------
Joshua makes it plain that playing church is going to be worse for
those than for those who reject church altogether. More than other
sins, profaning the name of the Lord is very dreadful. This is not
just the utterance of God's name in vain; it is claim of adopting
the morals of God while committing hypocrisy; it is moral adultery.
Back to verse 15: Joshua makes a couple of distinctions: the god of
your fathers (traditional morals) and the god of the Amorites in
whose land you dwell (cultural or situational morals). Both of
these are distinct from the absolute morals of an omniscient,
omnipotent, and omnipresent God.
"My family, or my church, taught me their truth since I was knee
high to a grasshopper." The god of your fathers has determined
morals (what is good and bad). Do they align with absolute morals?
"Everybody's doing it." Three words of excuse that echo down the
ages. The god of the Amorites in whose land you dwell. Do the
morals of the people in whose land you dwell align with the
absolute morals of an Eternal God?
Both of these (like Ignorance and Lack in Dicken's Christmas Carol)
are authorities which we adopt and into which adapt our personal
moralities. Which is the greater foe? The warning to Scrooge was
Ignorance. The warning to us is the same. Both project an ignorance
or unwillingness to see absolute truth embodied in an absolute God.
Lot lived in Sodom and was nearly swept away by making his dwelling
among the rebellious who, like Pharaoh, did not recognize the
Absolute Authority, not His absolute morality. It behooves us all
to question our tradition and the environment in which we dwell in
light of the questions, "Does God exist?" and "What is God like?"
Joshua ends verse 15 with one of the greatest declarations of free
will: As for me and my house (for Joshua was the authority in his
house), we will serve the Lord.
|
798.9 | Adopting a morality makes us a different person | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:32 | 29 |
| 2 Corinthians 5:17 Amplified
Therefore if any person is (engrafted) in Christ,
the Messiah, he is (a new creature altogether,) a new creation;
the old (previous moral and spiritual condition) has passed away.
Behold the fresh and new has come.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
When we adopt another's morality and take theirs as our own, we do
not nor cannot act solely upon our personal morality. It becomes a
shared morality but in the same sense that two people become one
flesh and not in the sense of each bringing pieces for the whole;
completeness versus compromise. (Marriages are human and have an
inherent compromise, but the mystical union of one flesh is what I
am hitting and not the personal moralities of a couple.)
If one shares a morality with an absolute God, then it is we who
share His morality by the fact that God abides by His own morality,
and then we do too, therefore the two moralities, (our personal and
His absolute) become one. Because an absolute God has an absolute
morality, His morality is not corrupted by the mingling of another's
personal morality. (This is where acceptability comes in again.)
Outside of the spiritual realm, this holds true in that if we adopt
the morality of another we share the same values. Trouble is,
personal moralities shift and change all to easily and we will soon
find ourselves being immoral (on the personal level) even if we do
nothing different, because another's view of good and bad may
change.
|
798.10 | Morality as an intellectual pursuit... | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:32 | 58 |
| Acts 17:16-23 NIV
While Paul was waiting for them in Athens, he was greatly distressed to see
that the city was full of idols. So he reasoned in the synagogue with the
Jews and the God-fearing Greeks, as well as in the marketplace day by day
with those who happened to be there. A group of Epicurean and Stoic
philosophers began to dispute with him. Some of them asked, "What is
this babbler trying to say?" Others remarked, "He seems to be advocating
foreign gods." They said this because Paul was preaching the good news
about Jesus and the resurrection.
Then they took him and brought him to a meeting of the Areopagus, where
they said to him, "May we know what this new teaching is that you are
presenting? You are bringing some strange ideas to our ears, and we
want to know what they mean." (All the Athenians and the foreigners who
lived there spent their time doing nothing but talking about and listening
to the latest ideas.)
Paul then stood up in the meeting of the Areopagus and said: "Men of Athens!
I see in every way you are very religious. For as I walked around and looked
carefully at your objects of worship, I even found an altar with this
inscription: TO AN UNKNOWN GOD. Now what you worship as something unknown
I am going to proclaim to you.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paul adopted the morality of an absolute God, a morality that
created a dispute among people in a city full of idols. Each idol
represented an authority, an authority as dependable and consistent
as the god itself. The Good that Paul proclaimed was different
enough for some to sneer and call him a babbler (one who utters
nonsense); they did not understand it.
However, some were curious enough to want to know more. Alas, it
seems that they wanted to add to their intellectual library instead
of possibly finding what God is like so that they can align their
morality (be justified) with God. They "spent their time doing
nothing but talking about and listening to the latest ideas." This
might be well and good for Ben Franklin and Thomas Edison if they
spoke of the possibilities of electricity. Remember the context
here is many idols, many gods, and an unknown god.
It is extremely important to note that Paul understands that these
men are very religious; not merely philosophers, but religious
philosophers. Each philosopher had an idol, or perhaps themselves
(or their intellect) were the object of worship.
The men of Athens brought Paul in to hear the morality of the
Authority that Paul adopted. It conflicted with some of the
moralities they adopted for themselves. Paul proclaimed the unknown
God in verses 24-31 and like the parable of the soils, it yielded
some fruit while others rejected it, while still other withheld
their judgment and said they wanted to hear more.
I wonder if those others got to hear more. The Scripture says Paul
left Athens in the next paragraph. We don't know the time between
the events but of those people who hadn't made their mind, or simply
wanted to continue stocking their intellectual library, had they
passed their opportunity. (For the Christian, we believe that God
can enable the proclaimed word of God to live on in the minds of
those who are ready to accept it, but hasn't taken root yet.)
|
798.11 | Authority is only as good as its higher Authority | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:33 | 67 |
| Acts 19:13-17 NIV
Some Jews who went around driving out evil spirits tried to invoke the
name of the Lord Jesus over those who were demon-possessed. They would
say, "In the name of Jesus whom Paul preaches, I command you to come
out."
Seven sons of Sceva, a Jewish chief priest, were doing this. The evil
spirit answered them. "Jesus I know and Paul I know about, but who are
you?" Then the man who had the evil spirit jumped on them and
overpowered them all. He gave them such a beating that they ran out of
the house naked and bleeding.
When this became known to the Jews and Greeks living in Ephesus, they
were all seized with fear, and the name of the Lord Jesus was held in
high honor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Authority belongs to those who can wield its power. This is a
passage that speaks of a spirit world, so it does not ask the
question, "Does God exist." This passage does speak a bit about the
authority structure of spirit world where morality has taken sides
in Good versus Evil. It shows that Good has rule over Evil, and
Evil has rule over stupidity.
Rightfully, as can be demonstrated in Scripture, the name of Jesus
has the power to cast out demons. So why is it the seven sons of
Sceva could not? They invoked the name of Jesus whom Paul preached.
Authority must be bestowed by a higher authority. The Sceva seven
plied their trade with a prescription but no responsibility to its
Prescriber. It brings God down to the level of circus performer,
making the writhing crazy man sane again. God had no part of it.
Absent the authority given from a higher authority, its seven
against one and the seven are out-matched. "Jesus I know" [the name
with authority] "and Paul I know about" [the man given authority]
"but who are you?" [Who are you that have no authority over me?]
The story goes on to say that God was glorified because many
believed in the name of Jesus and burned their sorcery scrolls.
Even the demons know the authority, the Absolute Authority God has
to grant.
Because authority is only as powerful as the higher power that
grants it, the Sceva seven had no power because they had no
authority. Those of us empowered by God's authority have the power
He grants us. (A lesson should be taken from Moses who struck the
rock against God's command to speak to the rock. Moses went beyond
God's granted authority. We should do no less and no more than God
requires.)
If God is the absolute authority, and authority is only as good as
its higher authority, then who or what is God's higher authority?
The answer is obviously that an Absolute Authority is the end of the
chain. In Scripture God swears by himself with binding covenants
because there is no greater authority on which to establish the
contract between God and man or God and nation. By doing so, He
uses Himself as collateral in the deal. It is only as valid as His
consistency and His power to follow through.
If God is a disinterested god, then perhaps he doesn't care.
If God is the God of the Bible, then He has demonstrated an absolute
consistency, and absolute power, and an absolute authority to do
exactly as He says. Absolute Authority has the power to declare and
enforce an absolute morality.
|
798.12 | Why believe in the God of the Bible over another god? | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:33 | 87 |
| Luke 16:27-31 NIV
He answered, "then I beg you, father, send Lazarus to my father's house,
for I have five brothers. Let him warn them, so that they will not also
come to this place of torment."
Abraham replied, "They have Moses and the Prophet; let them listen to them."
"No father Abraham," he said, "but if someone from the dead goes to them,
they will repent."
He said to him, "if they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they
will not be convinces even if someone rises from the dead."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
In this passage of Scripture we understand that a rich man no longer
has to rely on a faith statement to know what happens to mankind
after death. With this reality, he takes pity on himself and also
realizes his brothers are headed for the same danger. (It is
interesting that compassion flows from this man in torment.)
The rich man calls Abraham, father twice. He is identifying himself
as one of the "in" crowd and yet find himself cast into the
compartment of torment while Abraham and Lazarus exists in the
compartment of comfort where there is a fixed chasm between.
Although he has identified with Abraham (the father of the faith),
he evidently did not heed Moses and the Prophets himself, or he
would not be in this place of torment.
That Abraham, through Jesus, says for the five brothers to heed
Moses and the Prophets places the written word in authority for
right living. The written text has authority to test the spirits
that would speak to you and counterfeit His voice.
I will be quick to point out that Moses and the Prophets point to a
Messiah, by which we can test Jesus as Messiah through the
prophecies.
Some people wonder why God spoke directly to Abraham, and Moses, and
the Prophets and why they were recorded, and how the Bible was
chosen from many parts of literature. Moses and the Prophets are a
starting point. They were accepted as Scripture. (Those who do not
believe God exists don't have to concern themselves with this.)
Literature that was consistent with Moses and the Prophets and was
believed to be inspired writings as well were added by a group of
religious men to make up our Bible. If all we had was Moses and the
Prophets and a plethora of other writings, we could make our own
assessments as to which pieces of literature meets the criteria.
We would find that the gospels of Jesus Christ are perfectly
consistent with Moses and the Prophets.
But some of us do not want to rely on the writings, especially Old
Testament stuff like Moses and the Prophets. That's storybook
material. Yet, it was accepted as Scripture, which pointed to a
Messiah, showed the absolute morality of God, and portrayed God's
authority.
Abraham says, if they don't believe this, then they cannot and will
not believe the miracle of someone rising from the dead. In other
words, they have made up their minds.
Some people who call themselves Christians, like the rich man
identifying with Abraham as those Jews in front of John the Baptist
declared "we are sons of Abraham, cannot be followers of Christ
unless the are consistent with Christ. How do we know what text to
believe to tell us about the Christ? How do we know that Moses and
the Prophets point truly to Jesus as the Messiah?
The fact of the matter is that we do not know. Neither did the rich
man until after he had descended. What we have is a preponderance
of evidence that enables us to make the faith statement, "I
believe." We can say I believe based on the testimony of millions
of people who have tested the Scriptures of Moses and the prophets
and found Jesus to be the Messiah. We can say I believe, based on
the fulfillment of the prophecies and promises God makes.
To say, I believe in a God that demonstrates himself to be
inconsistent with the written text is to believe in a different god
altogether. If God is inconsistent, then there may as well be no
God. Every man should follow Joseph Campbell and follow their bliss
for no one can know for certain whether their personal morality
aligns with God's inconsistent morality. Make the best of it, close
your eyes real tight and wish as hard as you can, hoping to align
your morality with an inconsistent God.
Rather, I choose to align myself with an Absolutely Consistent,
Absolute Authority.
|
798.13 | Judgment of the [im]morally responsible | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:34 | 39 |
| Malachi 3:5-6 KJV
And I will come near to you to judgment; and I will be a swift witness against
the sorcerers, and against the adulterers, and against the false swearers,
and against those that oppress the hireling in his wages, the widow, and
the fatherless, and that turn aside the stranger from his right, and fear
not me, saith the Lord of hosts. For I am the Lord, I change not; therefore
ye sons of Jacob are not consumed.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
God did not wholly consume Israel in their sins because of the
hireling who was unjustly oppressed, the widow, the fatherless, and
the cheated stranger. God justice is absolute. When he comes to
judge, He will judge each person and the whole community is not
consumed for the sake of even the vast majority of sinful people.
Look back to Genesis 18:23-33 (selected verses from this passage):
[Abraham said to God] "Wilt thou also destroy the righteous with the
wicked?... Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?"
And the Lord said, (v32) "I will not destroy it for ten's sake."
We live in a society where personal morality reigns supreme. And
many of us wonder when judgment will come upon our land. To be
sure it has already and will continue to come until the people who
are called by His name will humble themselves and pray. (2 Chron.
7:14)
That is, people who claim to have God must humble themselves by
discovering God's absolute morality and aligning their personal
morality to it.
How do we know what God's absolute morality is? The Christian
answers according to the authority of Scripture from the faith
statement that God's morality is contained therein based on the
preponderance of evidence for its consistency and validity. Other
faith statements have less sure footing for lack of means by which
to test their hypothesis.
|
798.14 | Contextual morality and non-morality | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:34 | 71 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There are two types of morality not yet discussed: contextual
morality and non-morality (amorality). They are almost the same.
Contextual morality says that something is moral or immoral
depending on the context. The sun melts wax and hardens clay. Here
morality is dependent on the object to which it is applied. and
demonstrates the interdependent relationship between personal and
absolute morality. Without a two-person interaction between moral
authorities, there is no agreement nor conflict. Without the Law,
there can be no breaking of the Law. (Where is the law written? On
our hearts, so ignorance will be no excuse when we match our
personal morality to His absolute morality.)
Amorality says that something is neither moral nor immoral; no value
is placed on it; it does not depend on a context. Non-moral things
often are used in contextual morality and are sometimes confused
with being good or bad themselves. Inanimate objects are best
understood to be neither moral nor immoral; they retain no implicit
moral value. For example, alcohol is non-moral, possessing neither
good nor bad properties *unless used* (action) for a purpose that is
deemed of benefit (good) or detriment (bad). A gun possesses no
moral value unless used for killing for food (good; morally
dependent) or for killing another (bad; generally thought so,
anyway) or for war (morally dependent).
Actions are less understood because actions can have concepts of
"good" and "bad" placed on them because of their consequence. But
it is the consequence of an action that makes it good or bad.
Sometimes the action is neither good nor bad, except in context.
For example, eating meat may offend someone. For others it is a
non-issue. The value (good/bad) is placed on the action, not the
meat. The meat is the object on which the action occurs. The
reason the action of eating meat is bad is the moral judgment that
killing animals is wrong. The reason the action of eating meat is
good is the moral judgment that killing animals is not wrong, nor
right, but permissible and meat tastes good (another value).
Another example: the act of sex is condoned and encouraged only
inside the marriage bonds but explicitly condemned outside of the
marriage bonds. The Bible understands contextual morality by
spelling this out in explicit terms. To say that lustful sex is
wrong but loving sex is right flies in the face of the context which
is the marriage bond. By definition, all sex outside of marriage is
lustful and none of it loving. Why? Because it conflicts with the
moral authority of the Bible and its God. Conflict with a morality
is an immorality. Therefore in context of the Bible's moral
statement, there is no such thing as loving sex outside of marriage,
no matter how much the two people who participate agree in their
personal moralities; the two people exist in conflict to the other
morality.
Are people who commit immoral acts immoral people? Remembering
that immorality is something in conflict with another's morality,
immorality is like dirt that clings to a person. The conflicting
moral act is immoral. While the dirt is not part of the person, the
dirt remains on a person unless removed. By aligning with the
morality of another, the immorality disappears because the
moralities become the same. In actuality, either two become dirty
in the same way or two become clean in the same way.
If one believes in a Holy God, who is absolutely clean, then we can
only become clean like God in our actions, so as not to conflict
with His morality. So again we see how important it is to know what
God's morality is.
Is God such a Person not to make his morality clear? If the
Absolute Authority does not make morality clear, then we are
abandoned to our personal moralities and must all cross our fingers.
This would not be a God of love.
|
798.15 | Guilt and the Absolute Authority | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Dec 16 1993 09:35 | 57 |
| Guilt.
I've heard several people describe their upbringing in religious
organizations as having been based on guilt feelings. And I
discovered for some, this was more than humorous anecdotes of
childhood but actual impaction on their lives.
Modern society has chosen to deal with the guilt feelings,
stemming largely from these childhood persuasions of religion.
But modern society, especially through psychology, has thrown the
baby out with the bath water, dismissing all guilt.
There are several kinds of guilt. One is the condition of guilt
which is completely devoid and separate from feelings. It doesn't
matter how anyone feels, because a person is either guilty or innocent.
Another kind is the guilt we feel, a "remorseful awareness of
having done something wrong."
Dealing with guilt feelings, we need to understand the difference
between "appropriate guilt" and "inappropriate guilt."
Appropriate guilt should be felt when we do something wrong.
Inappropriate guilt is felt because we think we [may] have done
something wrong, when in fact we have not.
Psychology tends to paint all guilt as inappropriate guilt,
especially by saying that there is almost nothing that is *wrong*
to feel guilty about. This is the message of moral relativism: we
define right and wrong and therefore if something is "right for
us," there is no need nor room for guilt feelings.
But this is not something the Christian needs to be involved in.
A properly balanced person feels guilt when something wrong is
done. An unbalanced person has his conscience desensitized
(seared). And we have desensitizing influences all around us.
The fact is, we are ALL guilty. "All have sinned and come short
of the glory of God." We cannot be made innocent; we can only be
declares "not guilty" by reason of pardon. "The wages of sin is
death, but the gift of God is eternal life." Eternal life is a
gift not meeting with out just desserts.
So how do we know which wrongdoings we've done (guilt condition)
for which to feel remorse (guilt feeling)? You cannot know unless
you have an Absolute Morality (See note 31.*) as a point of
reference: "for by the law is the knowledge of sin. But now the
righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being
witnessed by the law and the prophets; Even the righteousness of
God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them
that believe: for there is no difference: - Romans 3:20b-22" The
Absolute Morality that was bound up in the law is based in the
"righteousness of God" Who is the Absolute Authority.
Getting close to God, (and He has provided a way for us to be
intimate and personal with Him), will make us more sensitive to
Right and Wrong, Good and Evil. And we will (and should) feel
guilty (because we are) when we do wrong, sinning against God
first, and against others secondarily.
|
798.16 | just wondering... | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Thu Dec 16 1993 16:24 | 6 |
|
Mark,
Did you study philosophy in college, by any chance?
Cindy
|
798.17 | | TLE::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Thu Dec 16 1993 17:10 | 7 |
| I don't know about Mark, but I sure did.
What a breath of fresh air, Mark. Thank you for entering
clear, concise messages that are thorougly grounded both
in the Bible and reason.
Collis
|
798.18 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Fri Dec 17 1993 12:50 | 12 |
| I did not study philosophy (as a major). Had one class (B-, I think).
Balance was the one word the professor wanted his students to understand.
Let's see, college was some 10-17 years ago. ;-) (I got married and
postponed some of my studies to start a family)
I graduated with a BA in Computer Science.
However, Cindy, college is not the only learning ground, as you well know.
Proverbs 1:7a The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge.
Mark
|
798.19 | PH101 | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Dec 17 1993 13:37 | 10 |
|
I was asking for a different reason, Mark. Next semester I'm taking
PH101 at Rivier College, and given that you live in the area, I was
wondering if perhaps you had attended there...and taken that course.
(So, did you?)
Yea...it's been about that long for me too. (;^) Though I've been
back off and on through the years.
Cindy
|
798.20 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Sun Dec 19 1993 18:18 | 50 |
| Re: .1 Mark
> Rules are made to establish control and are implemented and governed
> by authority. Authority can either be accepted willingly or imposed
> forcefully.
... or successfully evaded, or overthrown.
> The authority of God is also expressed in God's leaders (in the
> church), God's leaders (in the home), God's leaders (in the
> community).
Does God have leaders in every church, home and community or just in some
of them?
> To answer this question, we must first ask another question: "Does
> God exist?" If the answer is no, then every person defines what is
> good and what is bad. Societal morals then come from a consensus or
> plurality of individual personal morals.
Would you agree that societal morals in this situation (i.e. where God
doesn't exist) are relative rather than absolute?
> If there is no God, then morals
> have no real meaning since every person has individual morals; and
> so there is no absolute good nor absolute bad; its all relative; the
> concepts of good and evil (outside of the context of a personal and
> all-powerful God) are subjective at best.
Yes, if there is no God then morals and relative and concepts of good and
evil are subjective. This doesn't mean that they have no real meaning,
though. They are extremely important because they determine the actions of
every person on the planet.
> Since good and bad have no [reasonable] context outside of God,
> people who declare their personal morals are god unto themselves;
> they have placed themselves in absolute authority by declaring what
> is [ultimately] good and what is [ultimately] bad;
This might be true of a sociopath. It's not true of most people. We are
influenced by what society says is moral, as well as by several other
factors.
> those who violate
> (rebel against) their personal morals commit sin against them.
That's an odd way of looking at it, but I guess it's consistent with your
claim that we are gods unto ourselves.
-- Bob
|
798.21 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Dec 21 1993 13:09 | 5 |
| > PH101 at Rivier College, and given that you live in the area, I was
> wondering if perhaps you had attended there...and taken that course.
> (So, did you?)
Nope. Eastern Nazarene College. Liberal Arts.
|
798.22 | guilt | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Tue Dec 21 1993 13:25 | 18 |
| re: Note 798.15 by Mark "Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers"
> Psychology tends to paint all guilt as inappropriate guilt,
> especially by saying that there is almost nothing that is *wrong*
> to feel guilty about.
References? My experiences with the world of psychology paints a far, far
different picture. True, they generally use slightly different terms, guilt
and shame instead of appropriate and inappropriate guilt, but as far as saying
that there is almost nothing that is *wromg* to feel guilty about. Quite the
contrary. While a therapist may oftentimes appear to have little to say on
such a subject, it is usally because they are tying to help a client *figure
it out be themselves*. It is far more helpful to learn about oneself than
to be told about oneself.
Peace,
Jim
|
798.23 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Dec 21 1993 13:32 | 78 |
| .20 Bob M.
>First two questions
It seems as if you are asking whether one colored pixel colors the
whole screen. When one describes a room full of furniture, it doesn't
help to ask whether it is actually full with no room for air, carpet,
or light fixtures. Your questions, as are the following, are addressed
in the text.
>Would you agree that societal morals in this situation (i.e. where God
>doesn't exist) are relative rather than absolute?
I have always said as much... in the very next sentence:
>> If there is no God, then morals
>> have no real meaning since every person has individual morals; and
>> so there is no absolute good nor absolute bad; its all relative;...
>Yes, if there is no God then morals and relative and concepts of good and
>evil are subjective. This doesn't mean that they have no real meaning,
>though. They are extremely important because they determine the actions of
>every person on the planet.
Ah, but it does have no real meaning, where real is applicable to all.
If something isn't applicable to me, then it isn't real. It's *your*
reality. Yes, we can all have our realities, Bob. And yes, our
personal morals have ALL the meaning in the world to us. But that
[meaning] ONLY exists inside our personal universe, and happenstancely
coincides with those who share our personal morals (thereby giving a shared
meaning - or societal morals).
>> Since good and bad have no [reasonable] context outside of God,
>> people who declare their personal morals are god unto themselves;
>> they have placed themselves in absolute authority by declaring what
>> is [ultimately] good and what is [ultimately] bad;
>
>This might be true of a sociopath. It's not true of most people. We are
>influenced by what society says is moral, as well as by several other
>factors.
But influence is the dynamic of the greater power defining what is good
and bad, and enforcing that definition, which can be changed if greater
power is exerted to enforce a different definition. This can only
be done if individuals are collected by some common definition to proclaim
and enforce that definition. Each individual has declared what is good
and what is bad. They may have adopted the definition of another (through
influence or coercion) or (unlikely as it may be) vreated their own
definition. While ALL people are influenced by other definitions, especially
societal and cultural ones, you know as well as I that most people test
these definitions, especially during adolescence (the onslaught of
independence), and sometimes reject them for other definitions.
>> those who violate
>> (rebel against) their personal morals commit sin against them.
>
>That's an odd way of looking at it, but I guess it's consistent with your
>claim that we are gods unto ourselves.
Is it? Sin is merely rebellion against a known definition. If I know that
you think it is bad to brush my teeth at the dinner table, and I do so
at your dinner table, I commit and offense (rebellion) against you.
A sin. Perhaps you think it odd because of the context in which you
usually see the word "sin" (which is usually found in religious terminology,
or in colloquiallism about chocolate cakes).
Further, sinning against another has little to do with [what I think you
think about the phrase] being gods unto ourselves, except when
you consider that the term "god" is ultimate authority. In other words,
we determine our destiny, especially if God does not exist. In the
Christian faith (strict Calvinist predesintationalists, notwithstanding),
this remains true with the God of the Bible; we choose our destiny.
The variation is that with the God of the Bible, we have a multiple choice,
and not whatever we want, but this is a matter of ultimate authority and
power.
Mark
|
798.24 | The risk and hazard of a generalization... | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Dec 21 1993 13:38 | 20 |
| >> Psychology tends to paint all guilt as inappropriate guilt,
>> especially by saying that there is almost nothing that is *wrong*
>> to feel guilty about.
>
>References? My experiences with the world of psychology paints a far, far
>different picture. True, they generally use slightly different terms, guilt
<and shame instead of appropriate and inappropriate guilt, but as far as saying
>that there is almost nothing that is *wromg* to feel guilty about. Quite the
>contrary. While a therapist may oftentimes appear to have little to say on
>such a subject, it is usally because they are tying to help a client *figure
>it out be themselves*. It is far more helpful to learn about oneself than
>to be told about oneself.
No text references; second-hand experience and reference with some of the
products of the profession, on both sides of the couch. I'll be glad to
take your word for it, though, because I also know some (really just a few)
psychologists in whom I would have confidence. It is the *tendency* to which
I have been exposed, especially in the area of certain moral definitions.
Mark
|
798.25 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Dec 21 1993 14:06 | 8 |
| Having been very intimate with both psychologists and Christian
counselling, I can say that Mark is not far off with his statement.
In psychology guilt is passed onto others, in Christianity guilt is
appropriately placed.
Nancy
|
798.26 | with anecdotal evidence, your mileage may vary | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Tue Dec 21 1993 22:24 | 30 |
| re: Note 798.25 by Nancy "Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze"
Having been very intimate with both psychologists and Christian
counselling, I can say that Mark is rather far off with his statement.
In psychology guilt is usually appropriately placed, in Christianity guilt is
usually appropriately placed as well.
My issue with Mark's statement was it's sweeping nature.
Nancy presents anecdotal evidence of the direction of psychology.
I as well am all too familiar with pastoral cunselors, therapists,
psychologists, and psychiatrists, having had numerous client relationships
with quite a range of care givers and can supply a wealth of anecdotal
evidence as well. Basically, Your Mileage May Vary. Be careful, prayerful,
and discerning when employing the services of such.
Yes, there are psychologists who may suggest that the client is never guilty
of anything. Then again there exist "Christian" professionals who insist that
a wife stay with her abusive husband, blaming her for the abuse. NEITHER
exteme is likely to be helpful and NEITHER extreme should be exemplified to
characterize an entire profession.
It is such broad characterization with which I take issue.
Now back to the topic...
Peace,
Jim
|
798.27 | | TLE::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Wed Dec 22 1993 13:47 | 9 |
| Psychology covers a lot of beliefs.
However, my impression is that popular psychology misses
the mark quite a bit when it comes to guilt and how to deal
with it. I think it is often misdefined and rarely
does the need for confession and forgiveness from God
find its way into the list of action items.
Collis
|
798.28 | it's on many lists | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Wed Dec 22 1993 14:35 | 25 |
| re: Note 798.27 by Collis "DCU fees? NO!!!"
Collis, thank you for sharing your impression.
A question: what do you mean by the term "popular psychology"?
(As opposed to, say, serious clinical psychology.)
This reminds me also of the several "12 Step" groups which exist based upon
Alcoholics Anonymous and might well be included under the umbrella of
"popular" psychology (many therapists recommend joining such groups as an
important adjunct to conventional one on one therapy). AA borrows much from
psychology as well many facets of religious thought.
Two of the major steps is making an accounting of all the times you've hurt
people (sinned) And sharing that accounting with another person. After that
it is suggested that one make amends to those you have injured (without
injuring them further.) A step after that is to become more aware so that you
can make more immediate amends, or avoid the hurtful behavour in the first
place.
Considering the sheer number of people involved in these groups, I would not
call this area of belief "rare".
Peace,
Jim
|
798.29 | | TLE::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Wed Dec 22 1993 16:10 | 8 |
| I agree with you, Jim, that 12 step groups do indeed
address this issue. I had not considered them and
perhaps my statements were too harsh. I was thinking
much more of typical secular, one on one counseling
and the (admittedly few) books written by such people
that I have read.
Collis
|
798.30 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Wed Dec 22 1993 16:31 | 8 |
| Collis,
Try Scott Peck's book, The Road less Travelled.
The book is truly inspiritational.
Patricia
|
798.31 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Dec 22 1993 16:50 | 16 |
|
Collis,
Try also John Bradshaw's works, if they haven't already been mentioned.
Highly recommended is: Bradshaw On: The Family. For a preview of what
he talks about, you can read excerpts from this book in the DEJAVU
conference, note 688. He is a former Catholic priest, actually.
Psychology, as you have described it, is changing rapidly. The
movement began with Carl Jung back many decades ago, when he broke
from Freud's teachings. The 'at large' western psychological
society is still back in the dark ages in many ways, as is western
medicine. But you're going to see a rapid shift in the coming years.
Stay tuned. (;^)
Cindy
|
798.32 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Dec 23 1993 11:54 | 15 |
| .31
John Bradshaw is a heretic. He's a psychologist first, a spiritual
time warp second.
His teachings are humanistic from every point of view and very
dangerous. He encompasses mysticism as part of his healing
prescription and God could be the ant in the ground should you so
decide that is your higher power.
I think he is dangerous because his psychological assessments are right
on, but his lack of true spirituality strays so far from the course, I
fear he himself has become a god of sorts to many.
Nancy
|
798.33 | bradshaw | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Thu Dec 23 1993 12:32 | 13 |
| Nancy,
I find John Bradshaws spirituality as discussed in "Homeward Bound" to
be wonderful. I love his image of when we strip away all of our
defenses we get to the Core of our own being our "i am-ness" our wonder
child inside. When we find our authentic self, we get to participate in
the Big "I AM Ness".
Yes Bradshsaw is mystical.
Do you think mysticism in general is errant?
Patricia
|
798.34 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Friend will you be ready? | Thu Dec 23 1993 12:41 | 9 |
|
"The Big I AM ness"?
Jim
|
798.35 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Dec 23 1993 12:47 | 4 |
| Define mysticism for me so that I know we are talking about the same
thing, if you will.
Nancy
|
798.36 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Thu Dec 23 1993 13:07 | 5 |
| See topic 39 "Mysticism."
Peace,
Richard
|
798.37 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Thu Dec 23 1993 13:13 | 9 |
| I do not like Bradshaw, but for none of the reasons mentioned so far
(And I do not care to elaborate on my reasons).
I don't find Bradshaw heretical, nor are his books and lectures
completely valueless.
Peace,
Richard
|
798.38 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Dec 23 1993 13:36 | 1 |
| My maiden name is Bradshaw. :-}
|
798.39 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Friend will you be ready? | Thu Dec 23 1993 13:44 | 11 |
|
Well, I wouldn't say you're heretical....
:-)
Jim
|
798.40 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Dec 23 1993 13:47 | 10 |
| .39
I wuv u 2 Jimbo! :-)
I know, most folks in notes think I'm some hispanic woman, and I'm as
white as snow. :-) Freckles and all!
hee hee.. oh yeah you've seen me.
Nancy
|
798.41 | Please see Mr. Pibbs | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Dec 23 1993 13:50 | 9 |
| Richard,
I'm asking for her particular definition not the topic's message... and
it will make for a better flow in the string if it's here, so if you'd
like to repost something, please feel free to put it in here should her
name be attached to the note.
Thanks,
Nancy
|
798.42 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Thu Dec 23 1993 13:52 | 15 |
| Nancy,
actually your personal name appears mystical to me. "Sweet Spirit's
Gentle Breeze." Mystical for me means that we can know God directly.
That we can participate in the divine through our everyday activities
and reflections. That God is all about us and can be felt and known
all about us. Like a Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze. Like the mist on a
fall day.
I asked the Church school class one day "What does holy feel like" One
boy answered it feels like when you are in the lake water on a summer
day and try to pick up the water. You can touch it, it flows all
around you but you cannot hold onto it. That is a mystical answer.
Patricia
|
798.43 | I will only crosspost my own note | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Thu Dec 23 1993 14:07 | 16 |
| <<< LGP30::DKA300:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CHRISTIAN-PERSPECTIVE.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Discussions from a Christian Perspective >-
================================================================================
Note 39.4 Mysticism 4 of 37
CSC32::J_CHRISTIE "A Higher Calling" 9 lines 3-OCT-1990 11:04
-< Divine Presence >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The most useful definition I've encountered is that mysticism
is the direct and immediate awareness of the Presence of God.
It sneaks up on me, too. At the same time, I've made deliberate
efforts to become more sensitive to the Presence which I believe
have been worthwhile.
Peace,
Richard
|
798.44 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Dec 23 1993 14:18 | 22 |
|
Based on your definition, No, I do not find mysticism in general as
being errant. However, for me, that is not the definition of
mysticism... lessee what Webster says [now where is that
dictionary!?]
Ah here it is...
Websters
Mysticism - A spiritual discipline aiming at direct union or communion
with god or with ultimate reality in a trancelike contemplation or deep
meditation.
"Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze" is based on the Biblical description of
the Holy Spirit being like the wind.
It is also the words to the chorus of a song I've composed.
|
798.45 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Dec 23 1993 14:26 | 7 |
|
> "Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze" is based on the Biblical description of
> the Holy Spirit being like the wind.
And as an aside, it must be remembered that not every blast of air is from
the Holy Spirit.
|
798.46 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Dec 23 1993 14:34 | 5 |
| .45
hee hee hee hee hee hee hee hee hee hee
Rolling!
|
798.47 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Thu Dec 23 1993 15:31 | 7 |
| re .45
Is not God creator of all things?
Does that not include every blast of air?
I am surprised at the Polytheism in here being described as
Christianity.
|
798.48 | Explanation | TLE::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Thu Dec 23 1993 15:47 | 6 |
| God did indeed create air. However, that does not make Him
responsible for every blast thereof.
I can understand your confusion considering the society we
live in. :-)
|
798.49 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Thu Dec 23 1993 17:30 | 13 |
| Note 798.45
>And as an aside, it must be remembered that not every blast of air is from
>the Holy Spirit.
Yes, that's been amply evident. But, we don't restrict anyone's participation,
orthodox or otherwise.
We reserve the right to minister to anyone.
Shalom,
Richard
|
798.50 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Thu Dec 23 1993 20:01 | 45 |
| Note 798.35
> Define mysticism for me so that I know we are talking about the same
> thing, if you will.
Note 798.41
> I'm asking for her particular definition not the topic's message...
Note 798.44
> Based on your definition, No, I do not find mysticism in general as
> being errant. However, for me, that is not the definition of
> mysticism...
If you're just going to toss out somebody's definition in the next breath,
why did you even bother to ask?
> Websters
If you're going take the dictionary definition as the only one that is
legitimate, again, why bother to ask? Why not just go to the dictionary
and skip asking? Why not just give us the 'correct' answer?
Look, the dictionary has its place, but in some instances it captures
only a superficial or incomplete description. Besides, I can find
dictionaries which would agree with Patricia's definition, if you want
to play that game.
> Mysticism - A spiritual discipline aiming at direct union or communion
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> with god or with ultimate reality in a trancelike contemplation or deep
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> meditation.
While the above is not incorrect, neither does it encompass encountering the
living Christ outside the parameters of "a spiritual discipline" (which could
include prayer or going to church), or outside a "trancelike" state of
consciousness.
Mysticism, as I use the term, refers to the portion of the definition I've
underscored.
Richard
|
798.51 | | COMET::DYBEN | | Fri Dec 24 1993 06:55 | 6 |
|
> I am surprised at the Polutheism
Huh, how did you get that?
|
798.52 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Wed Dec 29 1993 11:34 | 18 |
| .50
Richard,
Do you have a beef with me that we can just duke out once and for all?
Why do you say something so critical about my noting with Patricia? I
wasn't throwing out her definition, I was "coming to terms" with *OUR*
definitions so we could properly communicate.
I even answered her question to me based on her definition, and so that
we completely understood each other, explained mine. Sheesh!
I gss good communication is something less then desired for you, eh
Richard? Again, you got a problem with me, let's just go ahead and air
it and either get over it, or at ast stop the constant breakdown of
every little thing I write!
Nancy
|
798.53 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Wed Dec 29 1993 13:06 | 8 |
| .52 I'm a lover, not fighter. ;-)
That doesn't mean I won't call you, to use a poker expression.
Thanks for explaining your previous entry, Nancy.
Shalom,
Richard
|
798.54 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Wed Dec 29 1993 15:45 | 8 |
| .53
Poker expression, as I'll poker every time I get the chance! :-) :-)
Yeah, well I was married to one of those Richard, you do like a good
fight, come on admit it! :-):-)
Nancy
|
798.55 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Wed Dec 29 1993 16:49 | 10 |
| .54
The one thing you and I seem to share in common is a sense of humor,
bad puns and all.
I may be a bit of a rebel, but I'm not itchin' for a fight.
Shalom,
Richard
|
798.56 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Wed Dec 29 1993 17:15 | 5 |
| .55
Okay, Richard, peace. I'll only fight when you start it. :-)
Nancy
|
798.57 | knowing each other | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Thu Dec 30 1993 09:48 | 6 |
| Richard throws a jab and then backpeddles, Nancy. How
far he backpeddles depends on how far you are willing to
pursue. After his last jab at me, he backpeddled out
of the ring stopping the bout.
Collis
|
798.58 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Dec 30 1993 15:06 | 9 |
| How many teenagers today have morality and authority in their lives?
Think of the consequences of a society that instilled these values into
our youth... I can still remember when it was the norm and I'm only 35.
I never dreamed in my lifetime that this world would be as it is
today.... my neighborhood just was so atypical American tradition.
Nancy
|
798.59 | | NITTY::DIERCKS | We will have Peace! We must!!!! | Thu Dec 30 1993 15:13 | 7 |
|
>>How many teenagers today have morality and authority in their lives?
I believe the majority of them still do, quietly. The "bad kids" just
get all the press and attention.
GJD
|
798.60 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Thu Dec 30 1993 15:20 | 6 |
| My teenagers have morality and authority in their lives. Some might
say even too much.
Peace,
Richard
|
798.61 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Dec 30 1993 15:36 | 23 |
| Are we blind? I work in the streets as a ministry in neighborhoods
with highest density of people. I can attest to the fact that 1 out of
20 have morality and authority in their lives... Those kids that do
have at least one VERY strong authority in their lives... either a
parent or guardian. And I don't be strong discipline, I mean an
authority that is respected. The discipline is merely a fruit of that
individual's ability to train the child.
Tell me how many neighborhood's have spent time in, really getting to
know the teens there? Most of the kids I work with are pre-gang era
and some are in gangs.
All the teens I talk to that are in gangs, again *ALL* the teens I talk
to say that the gang is their *family* because their own families don't
really care for them. Is this simply a state of mind and not a reality
for teens who say this? Partially, yes. The parents I meet love and
care for their kids... but they don't know HOW TO PARENT... Many are
addicts of all kinds and some even introduced the drugs to their
children themselves. They figured it part of parenting to smoke pot
with their teen... sorta like safe sex, safe drugs...
I'm not kidding about this... this is TRUTH and REALITY in the streets
of America.
|
798.62 | On Psychology... | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Sat Jan 01 1994 20:28 | 47 |
| Boy, miss a few days and the topic replies double!
Note 798.28 TFH::KIRK
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
! A question: what do you mean by the term "popular psychology"?
! (As opposed to, say, serious clinical psychology.)
"...when the Eysenck study was released at the University of London, there
was a furor. Eysenck's study simply showed that among neurotics divided
50/50, those that underwent psychoanalysis had no better recovery rate than
those who just lived life and saved the massive therapy fees. The recovery
was the same, plus or minus a .02 percent statistical error factor. In other
words, psychoanalysis did nothing. Eysenck drove home the fact that
psychoanalysis was anything but scientifically proven. All it could do was
hide behind its terminology and verify itself by its own closed definitions
of reality. Freudian psychoanalysis became discredited among all but the
most loyal followers and/or those who had spent $20,000 in training to become
highly-paid psychoanalysts."
"When the World Will Be As One" -- Tal Brooke
================================================================================
Note 798.31 TNPUBS::PAINTER
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Psychology, as you have described it, is changing rapidly. The
movement began with Carl Jung back many decades ago, when he broke
from Freud's teachings. The 'at large' western psychological
society is still back in the dark ages in many ways, as is western
medicine. But you're going to see a rapid shift in the coming years.
Stay tuned. (;^)
I've been reading about this (rapid shift - stay tuned) in a book over the
vacation entitled "When the World will be as One" by Tal Brooke. In reference
to Carl Jung and his parting from Freud, he says:
In the end, the gurus of human nature, the psychotherapists, are forced to
generalize. They must play the role of wise pundits, and so they claim to
be. But when they disagree, as when Carl Jung parted ways with Sigmund
Freud, what court of wisdom is able to prove which one is right? Again,
psychotherapy is no science at all; it is a battleground of different schools
of belief. Inevitably, it comes down to a faith issue about the nature of
human identity and ultimate reality.
It goes on to say that Jung was only in the "Second Force" psychology; Freud
being in the first force. Jung had no spiritual connection that the humanists
brought into the third force psychology.
|
798.63 | On Psychology and [not] guilt... | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Sat Jan 01 1994 20:29 | 37 |
| More:
As Barbara Ehrenreich observed in her article entitled "The Psychology of
Growth," which appeared in _Mother Jones_, April 1983: "If the human
potential was intrinsically good, then there was no firm ground left from
which to attack the deviant or nonconformist. All trajectories were possible
as each unique and groping 'self' reached toward fulfillment." Thus there
were no standards left to judge what desirable growth was. As long as self
was doing its own authentic thing, it was okay. Growth and fulfillment were
life's new ideals." ...
..."The creed of the Third Force psychology indeed sounds like the slogans of
the sixties... Christopher Lasch's _The Culture of Narcissism_ spells them
out: nonbinding commitments, freedom of guilt or failure, personal
fulfillment, the neurotic need for affection, reassurance, and gratification,
as well as the inability to internalize clearly defined criteria of right and
wrong. Under these new rules what you end up with is manipulators who are on
the take. They quickly assess how to use others to get what they want from
them, then dump them as soon as they have used them. Loyalty is not their
strong point..."
And still more:
One of the psychologists at the conference commented that it (_Profound
Simplicity_) was a great book. He too was in the business of past-life
therapy. (William) Kilpatrick was not so sure. He relates:
I asked if he thought there was anything of value in the Western
tradition or in Christianity. Christainity, he explained with an amused
smile, makes people feel guilty; guilt is a crippling emotion. The
others at the table nodded assent, and the psychologist settled
comfortably back in his chair. It was an open and shut case.
--William Kirk Kilpatrick, _The Emporer's New Clothes_ (Westchester:
Crossway Books, 1985), p. 27.
|
798.64 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Sat Jan 01 1994 20:30 | 1 |
| Oh, and Happy New Year!
|
798.65 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Sat Jan 01 1994 23:06 | 6 |
| .64
Happy New Year to you, too, Mark! A prosperous and blessed one, also!
Shalom,
Richard
|
798.66 | can't see the baby for the bath water | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Mon Jan 03 1994 19:56 | 25 |
| re: Note 798.63 by Mark "Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers"
Mark,
I have heard of _Mother Jones_, but I don't know much about it in re
psychiatry. How does it compare to, say, _The American Journal of
Psychiatry_? (official journal of the APA.) What sort of paper review
process do they have? Editorial slant, et cetera? (I wouldn't deny that the
AJoP has its own particular bias as well.)
As I've said previously in this string, "your mileage may vary". I have not
denied that there is some amount of error in the world of psychiatry, only
pointing out the use of a very broad brush (which you have previously
acknowledged, thanks).
I wouldn't pursue this, as it's rather a tangent from the basenote, but I
noticed that it is your string, so I don't feel so guilty about continuing the
thread, though at this point it seems to me that bashing psychiatry had taken
over the focus.
As far as the other sources you cite, I'd ask the same questions of them.
Peace,
Jim
|
798.67 | Cross-posted with permission of the author ;-) | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Wed Jan 19 1994 14:09 | 87 |
|
<<< YUKON::DISK$ARCHIVE:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CHRISTIAN.NOTE;1 >>>
CHRISTIAN-V7
Created: 16-FEB-1993 10:04 379 topics Updated: 19-JAN-1994 13:35
-< There's room at the cross for you >-
================================================================================
Note 31.15 Morality and Authority 15 of 15
TOKNOW::METCALFE "Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers" 75 lines 12-JAN-1994 13:04
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-< The Word is the Absolute Authority >-
John 1:1-3 ------------------------------------------------------------
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made
by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
For weeks now, I have been thinking about these verses, and most
especially the Word. In discussing the philosophies of morality and
authority we now understand that the greater power defines what is
right and what is wrong; that in the absence of an absolute authority
(God), morality is based on the integrity of the greatest (power)
authority until that authority is usurped, rendering it a weaker power
than the one that usurped it.
However, in the presence of an Absolute Authority, the definition of
right and wrong is based on the integrity of the absolute, and
therefore is defined absolutely as right and wrong.
Upon this foundation we have the Word. We refer to the Word of God as
the Bible in some cases, as the spoken word of God, and in John 1 it
refers to Jesus, the second Person of the Godhead, the Word.
The Word is the defining power. Nothing is defined (made) without Him;
and everything is defined (made) by Him. Definition by the Word is the
beginning of creation.
It is extremely important that we see the Word not only as a defining
mechanism, or a communication of an idea, but as that which comprises a
comprehensive attribute of God: Absolute Authority to define all
things, whether it be material or invisible things, or the definition
of ethics, morality, contrast, power, dimension, and so on.
"The Word was God." God's creative power speaks worlds into existence.
"And God said, 'Let there be light.' And there was light." There is
no way we can comprehend this beyond what it says: God spoke and it was
so. We can never know what generates God's creative power as if God
was a specimen to be studied.
When Moses asked about God, God responded by saying, "I AM THAT I AM."
There are no comparisons that could convey the unique and vast nature
of God. There is no amount of time that could be spent in describing
all there is to know about the Infinite and the Absolute; the Absolute
Infinity.
When God initiated covenants, He swore by His own name because there
was no higher authority to back up His claim. God staked His covenants
on the integrity of absolute authority. And this is why we have
assurance, often in the face of earthly opposition to God's
definitions.
Hebrews 11:3 and 6 say, "Through faith we understand that the worlds
were framed by the word of God, so that things which are seen were not
made of things which do appear. But without faith it is impossible to
please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that
he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him."
Tying back to the very first note, we ask "Does God exist?" The Bible
accepts this as fact but acknowledges that the reader may or may not.
"He that comes to God must believe that He exists..." This is not to
say that God existence is dependent on my believe; that if I do not
believe, he will not exist. This is as foolish as a child who hides
under a blanket thinking that the child is hidden from the view of
others. This is saying that answering the question "Does God exist" in
the affirmative is the _first_ step. And Hebrews 11:6 defines what the
next step is! "God is a rewarder of them that _diligently_ seek Him."
God exists. Whether you believe it or not doesn't change the fact.
However, believing is the first step; only the first step, but the most
important step to make.
"For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that
whosoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting
life." John 3:16
He is the Absolute Authority; the Word.
|
798.68 | some more thoughts on The Word | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Jan 19 1994 18:26 | 17 |
|
Very interesting.
I believe that 'the Word' is Om. Not as a word, specifically, or
belonging to any particular religion, but as a reference to a
vibration. Amen, Amin...all the same idea. Om just happens to
be older.
Everything that is manifest, vibrates at some level. To bring
something into existence, is to set up a vibration - a 'second'.
Using vibration, God created the manifest universe.
We have the delineation of time as a 'second', because it is only
when there is a 'second' that time exists. 1,2,3... In the
unmanifest, there is no time, no space, no 'second'. God is One.
Cindy
|
798.69 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Jan 20 1994 01:16 | 6 |
| The word is Jesus. :-)
The Bible declares "and the word was with us" and "the word became
flesh" ... the word was referring to Jesus.
Nancy
|
798.70 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Thu Jan 20 1994 09:19 | 9 |
| The word is not defined as Jesus. The Word is the preexisting divinity
that became incarnate in the Historic Jesus. The Word, the preexistant
Christ, Divine Wisdom, Om, Sophia, Holy Spirit, Divine Spirit, in my
opinion all express that same idea. The power of God to become physically
and actually alive in the human world of space and time. And the Word
became flesh. And the Word continually becomes flesh in the form of the
Holy Spirit entering each one of us.
Patricia
|
798.71 | | DEMING::SILVA | Memories..... | Thu Jan 20 1994 09:33 | 8 |
|
Pat, how do you consistantly do it? Thanks for writing that note. It
was not only very informative, but so well written too! :-)
Glen
|
798.72 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Jan 20 1994 11:29 | 4 |
| The word becomes flesh is referring to Christ. The Holy Spirit wasn't
poured out to man until after Christ's resurrection.
Nancy
|
798.73 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | On loan from God | Thu Jan 20 1994 13:09 | 9 |
| The word being translated Word in the Gospel of John is Logos. And
there is such a thing as "Logos theology" in which I am not well enough
versed to be able to articulate. Know that it exists, anyway.
"Logos" has a whole glorious spectrum of meaning. At the same time, as
John uses it here, it's clear that he is pointing to Christ.
Richard
|
798.74 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Thu Jan 20 1994 13:26 | 7 |
| Post resurrection though, the Holy Spirit is the way that the Divine
breaks into human life.
I'm not clear on the difference between the post ressurection Christ
and the Holy Spirit.
Patricia
|
798.75 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Jan 20 1994 14:44 | 9 |
| > I'm not clear on the difference between the post ressurection Christ
> and the Holy Spirit.
Hi Patricia, according to Scripture, the Holy Spirit is the conduit
through which our 6th sense is activated in Truth, Comfort, Conviction
and Guidance. There are counterfeits that activate this sensitivity as
well.
Nancy
|
798.76 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Thu Jan 20 1994 17:11 | 9 |
|
Hmm.....6th sense...6th chakra...thanks, Nancy! (;^)
More on 'Om' - last night I was at dress rehearsal for an upcoming
concert this weekend, and came across 'omnis' in Latin. Underneath,
the English translation for the 'om' syllable was 'all'. I thought
that was interesting.
Cindy
|
798.77 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Jan 20 1994 17:32 | 7 |
| .76
chuckle, grumble, grumble, chuckle
Okay what is a CHAKRA... define 6th... help!! I'm lost in a world of
mysticism [lets not get off on that topic again]. :-)
|
798.78 | a *very* brief overview on chakras, etc. | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Thu Jan 20 1994 19:08 | 63 |
|
Nancy,
It's really not mysticism, although using funny terms like that, it
could sound that way.
Like the physical body with it's nervous system, circulatory system,
skeletal system, etc., we also have an energy body that surrounds us.
This energy body extends past the physical body, and like the physical
body, it has its own 'systems' too. Whether you believe in the
existence of the energy body or not, it makes no difference since it's
there anyway. Some people can 'see' it, and others can 'feel' it. I
can feel it, to some degree.
In one of the energy body 'systems', there are things called 'energy
centers'. Of the thousands of energy centers that we have in this
system, there are typically 7 major energy centers that are referred to
as 'chakras' (I believe this is a Sanskrit word.)
The first chakra is around the base of our spine.
The second is below our naval.
The third is around the solar plexus.
The fourth is around the heart.
The fifth is around the throat.
The sixth is at the forehead.
The 7th is at the top of your head.
At the 'healing' level, what all this means is if you have blocked
chakras, these blocks may eventually work their way into the physical
body and cause disease. Although it is not always the case, a blocked
heart chakra, for example, can eventually cause blocks in the arteries.
And so on.
A 'healer', using techniques as the Christian 'laying on of hands', for
example (to use a model you may be familiar with), actually helps to
straighten out and clear blocks in the energy field, this helping the
patients to heal their own selves. [That should have been 'thus'
helping....]
All alternative medical techniques, such as accupuncture, accupressure,
chiropractic, (the list goes on an on), and even *prayer* is based on
the existence of the energy body.
Things like, 'if you feel in your heart that it's true' - it's not the
physical heart, but the 4th chakra, that is actually producing real
feeling/sensations.
I became absolutely convinced, and helped greatly, by someone who
worked on my energy field a few years ago, cleared out my 6th chakra,
and for the first time in many years I was completely free of any
traces of migraine pain (which is something I live with, though
fortunately it's been infinitely better in the last few years). Now,
the center closed up later on, and I still rely on 'modern medicine' to
control them through medication when necessary, however I still go back
and get it worked on, on occasion which also helps. I don't advocate
tossing our current medical profession out the window, but it would be
nice if they would work with those in 'alternative medicine' more than
they do.
To make this story short, when you have a direct experience like this,
it makes all this 'mysticism' stuff quite real, tangible, and practical.
Cindy
|
798.79 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Thu Jan 20 1994 23:17 | 16 |
| .78
I have absolute no trouble believing in chakras... I am proponent of
holistic health as long as it doesn't cross over into a religion of its
own... which I have seen in some "health centers". I've heard the
term chakra before, but have not had an expnation. For instance, I do
something called muscle testing to demonstrate to children that what we
think, put in our minds, effects our body. If you say hate hate hate
and do the muscle test, muscles are weak and easily over powered, if
you say love love love and perform the muscle test, you are not easily
over powered. Its not magic and it works. Muscle testing also helps
to determine what organs in the body or areas in the spine that are
weak. And yes I do believe that someone filled with the Holy Spirit
produces a power or energy that can heal. :-)
Nancy
|
798.80 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri Jan 21 1994 12:30 | 12 |
| p.s.
I believe also this is supported by the Phillipians verse where God
tells on what we should be mediating, pure, lovely, of good report,
Truth..
In another verse in the Bible, it says that we are to "SET OUR MINDS on
things ABOVE"...
I'd say God's word is definately supportive of holistic medicine as
well... again as long as we continue to worship the CREATOR, who
created our magnificent bodies. :-)
|
798.81 | some references | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Jan 21 1994 13:27 | 17 |
| Re.79,.80
Nancy,
If you ever want to read up more on these things, there is a wonderful
book on this kind of healing entitled, "Light Emerging", by Barbara
Brennan. She is a former NASA physicist. A friend of mine is
attending her school in NYC, and has worked on me several times. He
does a great job.
Another good book is "Vibrational Medicine", by Dr.Richard Gerber. I've
met Richard, actually. Really nice person. He's a medical doctor who
has a practice out in the midwest.
We do agree...it should not become a religion of its own.
Cindy
|