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You can not find God as a physical being

TagliatelliMonster

Veteran Member
I learned how to cook it from an Italian chef, that is Italian enough for me

Yeah... I know those kinds of "italian" chefs.
I bet he uses a cream based sauce as well to make a spaghetti carbonara.

Which is, btw, my go-to meal to judge a restaurant that dares to call itself "authentic italian".
If there's cream in it, they fail! And like a good little troll, I'll tell them as well!

Bunch of heretics, the lot of them!

:D :D



Sorry, I fell in love with italian cuisine years ago and I'm one of those closed minded guys who thinks that one should not mess with classics


And the irony is, I love spaghetti bolognese. Yeah. I'm a hypocrit too.


:p


Anyway..................................
 

Spirit of Light

Be who ever you want
Not so much sharing my view as it is questioning what you wrote.

How is "a being that is not physical" any different from "a type of wood that doesn't come from a tree"?

How is "what i feel inside" any different from "my imagination"?
Faith in other dimension where physical body is not needed to exist.
 

ChristineM

"Be strong", I whispered to my coffee.
Premium Member
Yeah... I know those kinds of "italian" chefs.
I bet he uses a cream based sauce as well to make a spaghetti carbonara.

Which is, btw, my go-to meal to judge a restaurant that dares to call itself "authentic italian".
If there's cream in it, they fail! And like a good little troll, I'll tell them as well!

Bunch of heretics, the lot of them!

:D :D



Sorry, I fell in love with italian cuisine years ago and I'm one of those closed minded guys who thinks that one should not mess with classics


And the irony is, I love spaghetti bolognese. Yeah. I'm a hypocrit too.


:p


Anyway..................................

Absolutely not, he is from southern italy.

And the best carbonara i ever had was in a dingy eat in or take away pizza shop in Certaldo. Pasta, panchetta and a raw egg on top. I make it the same way.
 

It Aint Necessarily So

Veteran Member
Premium Member
With this I mean the God many seeking is not there to be found, the God I become familiar with arise from within the practitioner of a spiritual teaching. So by seeking outward you will not find God, the quality of God is within you. God is a state of consciousness. Only by realizing the God consciousness will you see God. Only when you find God you will know yourself, only by knowing yourself will you know God. Any thoughts?

I would say more or less the same thing, but leave God out of it. Why isn't this a description of one's own mind being mistaken for something else?

I've shared this story before on RF. I had experiences that I interpreted as the presence of the Holy Spirit while I was a Christian that I later came to understand were my own mind when I was discharged from the Army, left my first congregation upon discharge (I converted to Christianity in the Army), and returned to California. I went to about a half dozen congregations there, finding them all lifeless. Eventually, I realized that what I had been interpreting as the Holy Spirit was just a psychological state induced by a gifted and charismatic pastor in Maryland, since that feeling didn't come with me to California.

And there is a great deal of evidence that this is a mistake man has been making for millennia. Before man had a concept that his own mind could be creative, he understood his creative intuitions as muses whispering in his ear. Did you just acquire an idea for a play or a dance? Where did it come from? Muses. Eventually, man came to understand that he was experiencing his own mind's creations, and attributing them to an external source.

Christianity has long depicted the cognitive dissonance that arises when subcortical, more primitive (reptilian) parts of the brain inform one to act one way while a higher cortical center instructs it to act another way (Freud's id and superego). Freud saw these as intrinsic to the mind, but early man framed this as a struggle between the forces of good and evil, which was depicted as an angel and a demon each sitting on a different shoulder arguing through the earholes of the conflicted person, once again mistaking one's mind for what is the equivalent of muses or gods.

This idea accounts for why some people say they find God and others do not. The latter presumably have similar mental experiences, but understand them differently as I do now. When I hear others claiming that they have found God, I understand that to mean that they are misunderstanding their own minds. When they say that if I haven't found God, I just haven't tried hard enough, my answer is that I did find God, but it was my own mind, and I stopped calling it that. Others say that the beauty and mystery everywhere is evidence of God, I understand that to mean that they aren't aware that those experiences are the same ones others have, but don't call God and don't project onto the universe as coming in from without.

But it does annoy me with god questions and I can almost guess an atheist would say "it's all in the mind, FSM, 'I don't believe that," or something.'"

Yes, pretty much what I just said. Why does that annoy you? It's a sound position with supporting evidence such as my personal account above. It's also supported by what I see on RF, where those who believe by faith describe their mental states as experiencing God, but then never have anything to show for it beyond what others who see those experiences differently gain from the experience. Where's the special insight or clarity of vison, or the newfound power from having communed with a deity? What is gained by calling that God? Nothing that I can see, except a comforting belief for those comforted by such things.

Occam would say that my understanding of the evidence is the preferred one, as it is more parsimonious. It doesn't require gods to exist. Plus, it's probably correct, just as it was correct to fire the muses.
 

firedragon

Veteran Member
Its remarkable how similar our paths are.
In Advaita (non-dual hinduism) God is not a physical being who is to be found in the external world or in heaven. He is instead universal consciousness. And this consciousness is none other than our higher self that needs to be realized by seeking within.
Does Sufism also says that this consciousness is our higher self? :)

Sufism in some strands has a pantheistic view. After mystiques like Ibn Arabi the view grew stronger and widespread.
 

firedragon

Veteran Member
You're going at it wrong (imo). Spirituality isn't a theology. It's highly experiential. Assuming people respect your experiences and think outside their box, you'd have to explain it (in interfaith) via what you experience.

If you want to tell someone about love it's great theology but just words. You'd have to show them or describe it in a way that shows. People relate to experiences.

This of course assumes you'd like to converse with people of all walks in life not limited to those who speak your language.

I noticed the pattern and I kinda think you're stuck. Just judging from your posts.

Brother. Though you may have some truth in what you say, you must understand Sufism. I am not a Sufi, but I am just telling you that for them, there absolutely no difference between spirituality and theology.
 

Clara Tea

Well-Known Member
With this i mean the God many seeking is not there to be found, the God I become familiar with arise from within the practitioner of a spiritual teaching.

So by seeking outward you will not find God, the quality of God is within you.
God is a state of consciousness. Only by realizing the God consciousness will you see God.

Only when you find God you will know yourself, only by knowing yourself will you know God.

Any thoughts?

God is all powerful, and he is supposed to be able to do anything.

God made Jesus (and put in Christ...the spirit within Jesus).

Jesus was there to be found.

Did the quality of God within us make the universe and everything in it?

Perhaps God exists outside of us, and through his teachings we can do good things? Why should we learn God's teachings if God is already inside us?
 

viole

Ontological Naturalist
Premium Member
Knowing oneself means to understand ego is not the self
Yes, but if that leads me to God, then that would confirm a prejudice I always had. Namely, that I am God. Although I prefer "Goddess" for obvious reasons.

As I said, I always rated my ego to be pretty high. Wouldn't you agree?

Cia0

- viole
 

Spirit of Light

Be who ever you want
God is all powerful, and he is supposed to be able to do anything.

God made Jesus (and put in Christ...the spirit within Jesus).

Jesus was there to be found.

Did the quality of God within us make the universe and everything in it?

Perhaps God exists outside of us, and through his teachings we can do good things? Why should we learn God's teachings if God is already inside us?
The spiritual practice is what awakens God from within us ( in my understanding) so if you do not practice any spiritual teaching it won't happen.
I speak only from my belief on this topic so others understand it differently than I do
 

Spirit of Light

Be who ever you want
Yes, but if that leads me to God, then that would confirm a prejudice I always had. Namely, that I am God. Although I prefer "Goddess" for obvious reasons.

As I said, I always rated my ego to be pretty high. Wouldn't you agree?

Cia0

- viole
I have no intention to "rate" your ego :)
 

Clara Tea

Well-Known Member
You're going at it wrong (imo). Spirituality isn't a theology. It's highly experiential. Assuming people respect your experiences and think outside their box, you'd have to explain it (in interfaith) via what you experience.

If you want to tell someone about love it's great theology but just words. You'd have to show them or describe it in a way that shows. People relate to experiences.

This of course assumes you'd like to converse with people of all walks in life not limited to those who speak your language.

I noticed the pattern and I kinda think you're stuck. Just judging from your posts.

People get slapped when they show love.

When I converse with people who speak a language that I don't, they usually don't disagree.
 

Lain

Well-Known Member
With this i mean the God many seeking is not there to be found, the God I become familiar with arise from within the practitioner of a spiritual teaching.

So by seeking outward you will not find God, the quality of God is within you.
God is a state of consciousness. Only by realizing the God consciousness will you see God.

Only when you find God you will know yourself, only by knowing yourself will you know God.

Any thoughts?

I do not think God is a state of consciousness or a quality of myself. I think I can learn about God dimly from myself and other things. I think when one's heart is purified then they will see God, as the Lord Jesus said. Or even those in the way.
 
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