Wednesday, December 08, 2004

A Perfect God

(from a conversation with rsjm)
There's probably no way to express my thoughts on sin without offending, so I'm sorry in advance.

A perfect god doesn't need sin. Nor does god need worship or sacrifice or dietary laws any of those other things humans do to try and show god (and themselves) that they believe.

What most people think of as sins, are either just rules made by priests and leaders as ways to keep the population in line, making them think the way the people in power want them to, or rules we make for ourselves so we feel we're in step with 'God's Will'. Even the Ten Commandments boil down to the concept "play nice". It's a simple truth. Play nice.

Why would a perfect god care if you wear your hair long, or eat meat on Friday or not, or if you've ever been married before? Why would god care about my sex life? These things are so far beneath god. A perfect god takes us one on one, yet sees us as part of the whole. A perfect god has no need to judge or punish, because those things are human concepts. A perfect god sees and measures us in ways we can't possibly imagine. And a perfect god can reach into us, reguardless of what we believe.

I think what we, as humans, can do, is find that spark of the perfect god inside of us. Each of us will find it in different ways. R's found it in Christianity, and it's good for him. Even an internet bystander like me can see that joy and strength it brings to his life. He's reached the spark. And there are places you can go, churches, mosques, forest shrines, rivers, where you can feel the tangible warmth of that spark, even if it's not a place of faith for you.

I feel it is wrongwrongwrong to follow a religious path that brings you no joy, and doesn't cause that upwelling of spirit. If following your path's steps doesn't make you feel closer to god, on a personal level, then you need to re-examine your path.

Father Greeley talks about it in his books (from a Catholic perspective) as a "passionate love affair with God". If you're not feeling that, you've not found god.

When I touch that spark it is the most powerful, amazing, all encompassing sence of warmth, peace and perfection you can possibly imagine. My heart and soul knows I've touched eternity. I know, and I believe with my whole being in that spark, I'm just still learning how I want to express my connection to that spark in an outward way.

4 comments:

EleriCooks said...

rsjm:
My own personal thought is that we all return to the source of the spark, but I can't begin to comprehend how that'll manifest.

Haph:
This'll just have to be an area where we agree to disagree. For me, the Bible is a historical text, and a spiritual tool, just like the Koran, or the Vedas. I do believe that many parts of all those texts were written by people that have reached what we call god, and there are writings about people who touched that devine spark, but that there's been thousands of years for those texts to be edited and translated and retold and mussed with.
~~~~
And just so you know...my husband took religious studies in college, and I was raised Catholic, and was a Methodist as a young adult. So I'm not without some background. You should hear some of the discussions we get into around here! :)

EleriCooks said...

But even Biblical scholars agree that the work has been changed over the millenia. Yeah, it may *say* not to mess with it, but it has been.

EleriCooks said...

You yourself seem to be making the assumption that I'm unfamiliar with, and haven't read thoroughly, the Bible.

I have, both as a believer and a skeptic, and I found it to be a very interesting historical document, with insight into the beliefs and growth of Judaism and Christianity.

I DO believe that it's a valuable spiritual tool for anyone, and that it is possible to live ones life based on what's in there. But I'm also completely squicked by the idea of taking it as the be-all and end all of God's word. For me, it would be like handing over my right to think for myself, and never question, never explore, never challenge.

Vax posted a link to the Document Hypothoses, which discusses the authorship of the Books of Moses, I'll add this site:

http://www.bible-researcher.com/

Its a nicely layed out site for Biblical scholars.

Here http://www.wls.wels.net/library/Essays/Authors/R/RaddatzRich/RaddatzRich.htm
is a well written essay from the Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, on the different literary elements in the Bible.

Here
http://alpha.fdu.edu/~jbecker/bible/gulfscholarspew-condensed.html
is an article from Bible Review on the difference between what scholars have learned, and what it usually preached.

You'll also want to check out websites about "The Synoptic Problem", which discuss the similarities in the books of Matther, Mark and Luke.

Please believe that my intent in giving you these links is not to question or belittle your faith. It is, however, to show that someone can accept the Bible at face value, undertand its historical orgins as a work of man, and still be devout and faithful.

EleriCooks said...

"I think I'm gonna have a heart attack and die from not surprise!"

*grin* Never stop learning and exploring, M'buhirling, it's what makes us human :)