You said your purpose here was to proclaim your message?
I was just wondering ' what that message was and upon what do you base it? '
e.g. Harry potter book, bible story book, Qu'ran story book etc?
Basically the main message that I would lay on the table to be eaten or rejected, Is that you, the mind/spirit is formed in the physical body of universal elements which is animated by the Logos that was in the beginning, which animating force pervades the entire universal body and all therein. You, the mind/spirit are the product of all the experence and information that is taken in through the senses of that body.
If that body were born without the sense of sight, hearig, smell, taste and touch etc, etc, then you the mind/spirit could not have developed. That malformed lump of animated meat, could be kept alive for a time, but it would never develop a personality of godhead to that body.
It is my belief, that after that body has returned to the universal elements from which it was formed, hair, skin, nerves, muscles, bone, brain matter etc, all that will remain is the mind/spirit that had developed within that body, and mind is, what it believes. If mind believes it will be resurrected into a new body and be reborn on earth, that is as it will be, it will enter into a state of peaceful rest as it awaits its new life, which, whether they know it or not, will be in the next resurrection of the eternal cyclic universal body. But If mind believes that the death of the body is the end of life, then so it will be. That mind will enter into a state of fearfull torment as it awaits the inevitable end that it believes will occur.
I always like to give scriptural referrences to support my belief: Isaiah 57 1: 1-2; "Good people die, and no one understands or even cares. But when they (Good people) die, no calamity can hurt them. Those who lead good lives find peace and rest in death."
Which leaves another state for those who do not lead good lives, as revealed in Jesus' parable of Lazarus and the rich man.
I thought that I might just add this to show, that long before the scientific community began to search out the possibity of an eternal cyclic universe, it was already believed, and taught by the religious community.
Universe after universe is like an interminable succession of wheels forever coming into view, forever rolling onwards, disappearing and reappearing; forever passing from being to non being, and again from non being to being. In short, the constant revolving of the wheel of life in one eternal cycle, according to fixed and immutable laws, is perhaps after all the sum and substance of the philosophy of Buddhism. And this eternal wheel has so to speak, six spokes representing six forms of existence.” ---- Mon. Williams, Buddhism, pp. 229, 122.
The nights and days of Brahma are called Manvantara or the cycle of manifestation, ‘The Great Day,’ which is a period of universal activity, that is preceded, and also followed by ‘Pralaya,’ a dark period, which to our finite minds seems as an eternity. ‘Manvantara,’ is a creative day as seen in the six days of creation in Genesis, ‘Pralaya,’ is the evening that precedes the next creative day. The six periods of Creation and the seventh day of rest in which we now exist are referred to in the book of Genesis as the generations of the universe.
The English word “Generation,” is translated from the Hebrew “toledoth” which is used in the Old Testament in every instance as ‘births,’ or ‘descendants,’ such as “These are the generations of Adam,” or “these are the generations of Abraham, and Genesis 2: 4; These are the generations of the Universe or heavens and earth, etc. And the ‘Great Day’ in which the seven generations of the universe are eternally repeated, is the eternal cosmic period of the eighth eternal day in which those who attain to perfection are allowed to enter, where they shall be surrounded by great light and they shall experience eternal peace, while those who do not attain to perfection are cast back into the refining fires of the seven physical cycles that perpetually revolve within the eighth eternal cosmic cycle.
Origen, , was a Christian writer and teacher who lived between the years of 185 and 254 AD. Among his many works is the Hexapla, which is his interpretation of the Old Testament texts. Origen holds to a series of worlds following one upon the other,-- each world rising a step higher than the previous world, so that every later world brings to ripeness the seeds that were imbedded in the former, and itself then prepares the seed for the universe that will follow it