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10-02-2001, 07:30 PM | #41 |
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I have a sufi muslim friend that knows the true interpretation of the Q'uran, and below are some examples of the proper way to read all scripture.
interpertation from a non literal perspective. "Surely the worst of beasts in God's sight are the unbelievers." (The Accessions: 8: 55) Following the same pattern as western metaphysical symbols the beast is the flesh or the physical as opposed to the spiritual. Here you can see the physical animal who cannot believe and the physical human who can and refuses. Thus the admonition that the physical that has the capacity to understand and refuses is much lower then the the physical that does not have the capacity to understand. "Evil is that for which they have sold their souls -- that they should deny what Allah has revealed, out of envy that Allah should send down of His grace on whomsoever of His servants He pleases; so they have made themselves deserving of wrath upon wrath, and there is a disgraceful punishment for the unbelievers." <God is an enemy to the unbelievers>. (The Cow: 2: 90) Actually this is quite consistent with the Bible. It is speaking not of punishment from God but the natural effects that come down upon one that is focused on the lower and not the higher. We see what earth has brought upon itself at the present time with both sides looking literally at one another instead of spiritually or viewing the light. The punishment is not from God but simply a natural result of being in conflict with nature. "Surely those who disbelieve and die while they are disbelievers, these it is on whom is the curse of Allah and the angels and men all". (The Cow: 2: 161 ) This follows the Jesus teaching that when an evil spirit goes out from a person it returns and the conditions become far worse then originally. Here it describes that light as being cursed and notice that that it infects angels which are angles of light and living physical people. Again this is why executing criminals is so bad. "Fight those who do not believe in Allah, nor in the latter day, nor do they prohibit what Allah and His Apostle have prohibited, nor follow the religion of truth, out of those who have been given the Book, until they pay the tax in acknowledgment of superiority and they are in a state of subjection" <i.e., humiliate the non-Muslims to such an extent that they surrender and pay tribute> (Immunity 9: 29 ) It does not mean shoot people or blow people up. It means fight against the non spiritual or God precepts. Fight against the Falwells and Bin Ladens of the world who do not follow the natural course of light which brings peace and restoration. To humiliate simply means that someone outside of the faith must be shown their own error and eventually brought to see that in spite of their comittment to their belief they are desparetly wrong. "O you who believe! do not take your fathers and your brothers for guardians if they love unbelief more than belief; and whoever of you takes them for a guardian, these it is that are the unjust" (Immunity : 9: 23) It reminds me of Jesus saying, I have come to pit brother against father and daughter against mother. It also reminds me of the scripture that says that a persons worst enemies will be his own family. This simply warns us about being pulled into the beliefs of family because of a need to keep peace within that family. We must break away to flow with the light even if that means against our family. "O ye who believe! Murder those of the disbelievers .... and let them find harshness in you." (Immunity 9: 123) Murder means to break down the life aspects of a person to where those principals by which they exist actually die. It is what I have been talking about with executing criminals. We have to work, not on killing the body but on killing the negative light within them. Here the admonition is to murder but remember this is metaphysical and never speaks of the physical body. It is speaking of the life force. That is the light. Here that life force is negative and must be killed so a new life force can be put in place. Kill the negative light or blow it out so it can be filled with a new positive light. "Let not the believers take the unbelievers for friends.... whoso does that belongs not to God." (The Family of Imram: 3: 60) Simply put, one who has a positive inner light which flows in harmony with the supreme light can not condone interaction with a negative light. This does not mean you can not go over someones house for dinner, or you cannot go to a ball game. It means in matters of cosmic harmony you can not entertain the religious beliefs of someone who is stuck on the literal or physical because it can damage your own light. As the Bible says what do believers have in commong with unbelievers. zenman |
10-02-2001, 07:44 PM | #42 |
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ChadD:
The Christian will point out the difference between a "straightforward reading", an ignorant reading, and a reading with ill intentions (reading apart from belief on God); although the two later ones quite often go hand in hand. So which category do fundamentalists who read Genesis literally fall into? Which category do Christians who read passages about Satan allegorically fall into? And in each case, do you think the case is clear-cut, and why? In other words, and firstly, there are more types of literature than merely literal, historical accounts. Of course. But on what basis do you decide which is which in the Bible? Secondly, most traditional Christians share a core set of beliefs (dogma), and accept that there are certain issues (doctrine and lastly opinion) where it is generally agreed upon that one's stance on that issue will NOT (edit!) make the difference between damnation and salvation. But presumably the issues are still important even if they do not affect salvation. Do you think there is any basis, aside from personal intuition and one's own church tradition, for deciding them? If not, does it worry you that the Bible is so open to wildly different interpretations? |
10-02-2001, 07:52 PM | #43 |
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Jesse, I can say that the Bible says
don't be a minister of the LETTER. The Letter Killeth, etc. One only has to understand and read the Bible to see these verses. I believe the Q'uran has similar verses, I am still looking for them. Zenman |
10-02-2001, 10:13 PM | #44 |
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The original post was more an attempt to raise a traditional objection than anything else.
Jesse said: Of course. But on what basis do you decide which is which in the Bible? Well, the Biblical scholarship of the past 100 years would have us make all attempts possible to determine what the document would have meant to the original audience by investigating both the time and culture it was written in. This information in addition to clues found within the text such as: sections characteristic of poetry from the author's culture, purpose in context, and narrative perspective amongst other things can, ...so this line of thinking goes, lead us to the truth. Unfortunately there are ambiguities in the application and validity of this information, and even were we to find the information perfectly consistent, we would have no assurance that we had not missed something. It is a 'dead' end. Jesse said: Do you think there is any basis, aside from personal intuition and one's own church tradition, for deciding them? I feel as though my first paragraph of this reply was a waste, because as you well know, it ultimately must come down to one thing. I accept that when one is a believer, God abides with them. I believe that this is manifest namely in that the believer can not be deceived unto losing salvation. If you would like, I can expand upon this to address something specific, but it will be theology like the above, and likely not relevant to this forum. If however you merely wished to question me until I stated something as the above, I will not go any further. |
10-03-2001, 12:09 AM | #45 |
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ChadD:
I feel as though my first paragraph of this reply was a waste, because as you well know, it ultimately must come down to one thing. I accept that when one is a believer, God abides with them. I believe that this is manifest namely in that the believer can not be deceived unto losing salvation. But as I said, I wasn't addressing questions that Christians believe are relevant to salvation, only "side issues" like Genesis, the existence of Satan, etc. I'm questioning whether there's any particular reason for a Christian to choose one side or another on these issues, aside from personal preference. |
10-03-2001, 01:13 AM | #46 | |
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Ok then, I shall give it a second go.
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For myself, I think that the focus should be on practical living and doing, and if theology, then theology to serve the former two. I also believe strongly in the importance of personal conviction in matters such as these, so I shall take leave of the pulpit, so to speak... I believe that this also holds true for the issue of Satan, and that the clarification lies in the pratical effect upon how I must function being unchanged. As I recall, I presented the beginings of this in a post on the first page of the thread. [ October 03, 2001: Message edited by: ChadD ] |
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10-03-2001, 10:23 AM | #47 | |
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http://www.bibleorigins.net/NewTestament.html If you have a Netscape Browser, be aware it may hangup or freeze attempting to access my tracker. Wait 10 seconds then hit STOP from the browser bar and the url/article should be delivered to you. All the best, Walter R. Mattfeld |
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10-04-2001, 10:30 AM | #48 | |
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MEta =>NO, not as such. Btw calling nomad is not a liberal. I went I seminary with liberals, Nomad is no liberal. e.g. what about when we say how "Mother Nature" is being hurt by our pollution, or "Lady Luck" is on our side? Perhaps the concept of "Satan" is the same. It could be temptation metaphorically personified. NO it's not like that either. So is there a supernatural person called Satan who can simultaneously tempt many people all over the world? Or do these temptations just come from natural human nature, and Satan is just a metaphorical source of it? e.g. These days we might say someone opened Pandora's box, even though Pandora doesn't literally exist, etc. And when Satan is locked up forever in Revelations, maybe it means that when people reach a heavenly state of mind, temptation ("Satan") leaves them. Meta => Its a mind virus (that's said tounge in cheek). BTW, I think it isn't necessary to believe in a literal Satan to have the Gospel message. The fall, which you already say is a metaphorical story, could involve internal temptations (no third party involved) which sets a precedent for our sinful human nature, and then the gospel is really about surrending to God and being forgiven for your sins. I could argue that it isn't necessary to believe in a literal Jesus or even a literal God if you look at it in a very liberal/metaphorical though still "spiritual" way. If you believe that Satan is a literal person, could you try and prove why references to Satan are definitely not a metaphor for temptation/sin/evil.</STRONG>[/QUOTE] MEta =>Satan does more than tempt. In the OT his funcition was sort of like that of a prosecuting atterney, he wasn't the prince of darkness, and in a sense sort worked for God; his function was "accuser" of the brethern that's why it calls him that. In the NT he's more fussed with pagan sources picked up in the exile. That is where the notion of the eternal war fare of theforces of God against the forces of evil, fought out by angels and each led by their own commanding angelic princes comes from. So he's a much more dynamic symbol than just "temptation." |
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10-05-2001, 03:59 PM | #49 | |||||||||
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I have been asked to resume this particular conversation, although, as I have said in my previous posts, I do not see much point to it. Thus far the Emperor has offered nothing more than insults and assertions, and this does not make for productive converstations. That said, as he wishes to try again, I will also.
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Now, personally, I have little faith in the ability of science to examine the supernatural, as the supernatural is, by definition that which is not nature. Since science studies nature, then anything that is not nature cannot be studied by science. This is simply a truism. Perhaps you have a scientific explanation for concepts like love, justice, honour, fairness and the like, but I see no reason to accept the conclusions produced by such experiments. None of these concepts are natural phenomenon subject to scientific study. By the same token, science cannot study the metaphysical, so I do not see why you would insist on forcing this square peg into such a round hole. Quote:
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I have agreed to reopen this discussion EU, but I still do not see where you hope to take it. I have already told you what I believe. Clearly you disagree with those beliefs, and such is your right. But I do not see you offering anything by way of actual debate in your rejection. That made the conversation unproductive and I dropped it. Once again I will ask: What would you like to talk about? Nomad |
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10-28-2001, 07:22 AM | #50 | |
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Well I've found some more surprising statistics...
they're from the Christian Barna Research Group: Statistics about belief in a literal Satan: Quote:
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