Everything is in the mind. The word is the means to express the mind.

Everything is in the mind. The word is the means to express the mind. But what is expressed must first be a concept in the mind. I believe that the religions of the world are based upon concepts already present in the mind and then expressed through the word. This is why they are so powerful. There is a mental reality behind them. I have yet to achieve perfection. I do not know for a fact that all religions are untrue. I know that i have a deep desire and thirst to achieve perfection. But i do not know which religion if any can give me that. I currently work on my own path. It is a path not expressible through words. That is why it is beyond all others. But some truths i can share. Put in words. "Silence is better than words. Not teaching is better than teaching. Indifference is better than passion." That is all I can share right now. I believe Buddha is a supernatural being. The abrahamic God(s) exist. Brahma exists. Consciousness is supernatural. The soul exists. All this i know for a fact, i can sense it. I can not sense however that Jesus is god, Mohammed was sent by God, consciousness is God, or buddha is the self as taught in Mahayana Buddhism. So I'm free basically. Free of a paradigm. Ultimately free. Is there a god? Yes. He has no attributes, such as doing or being anything. He brings a tranquil feeling into my mind whenever i think of him. I meditate to experience the divine reality fuller. I like sufism. Becoming one with God. The God in sufism being not consciousness as in Hinduism but a being. However i go beyond the sufistic concept. Sufism thinks God is a person. I do not. I believe he is something undescribable. Not a person, or a being, with feelings and the like. With judgement. With wrath. No. I think those are lower, finite concepts. God must be above such things to be God. Indifferent. Absent. Aloof. I meditate, it gives me more and more bliss. Soon i will have achieved absorption, and what comes then i don't know. Perhaps unity with the divine.

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  1. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Copied from Hinduism without literally everything that is from Hinduism. Buddhism is slop.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      Furthermore, j believe it is wise to transcend good and evil. Becoming aloof and dispassionate towards morality.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        YWNbaW

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          Ok. I see many paths that are acceptable. Some, are unacceptable. Evil. I do not accept evil. But it is rather rare to see someone who is worthy of being called evil. Maybe i will transcend even this outlook once I get deeper into my meditation practice. Modern humanity is definitely in many ways saddening. Their behaviour. Their beliefs and views which produce such behaviour. It is all a big play. I realize that. The best standpoint is to be ambivalent towards it all. Even in death and misery. But the other extreme would be to be too kind. It is possible to be too kind. Too kind to foreigners. Letting poor foreigners settle in your own land in the millions. Just because they're poor doesn't mean one can let his own lands be changed morally and ethnically. It is not good to be too kind. That is a result of inner lack of equilibrium. Perfect equilibrium means perfect kindness and honor and truth. Strength and might. Love and forgiveness. Hatred for what is evil.

  2. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    I mean it sounds nice, but it also sounds like it’s not a great way to achieve a home and a family and a decent job and fun life.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      That's correct. My life is solitary. I seek solitude. I do not seek to have a normal life, it doesn't seem like something i want. Jobs are for the ordinary man. I'd rather, if i could choose, be a free soul without binding myself to wife and a home and a job. But i will let life choose for me what comes.

  3. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    As a Christian you are an inspiration OP. But I don’t think anyone can be ambivalent towards the resurrection (provided it occurred). Plus that would prove that Jesus is God’s final prophet

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      Thanks. I believe the resurrection occured, actually. Just that it's part of the christian paradigm and not that important. Lazarus was raised after not only three but four days after his death, more than Jesus.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >Lazarus was raised after not only three but four days after his death, more than Jesus.
        But he still eventually died, instead of ascending to heaven.
        >I believe the resurrection occured, actually. Just that it's part of the christian paradigm and not that important
        Wouldn’t the resurrection prove that Jesus is God’s final prophet? Why wouldn’t it be important to know who God’s final prophet is?

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          >Resurrection proves he's the final prophet
          Weird theory. Doesn't make sense to me. You just need to look at the religions that arose after Jesus. Manichaeism and Islam have said that they are continuations of Christianity. Islam is as anyone with a clear perception can see not a continuation of Christianity, it's clearly a different thing entirely. But manichaeism could be, it is very gnostic, it has christian themes, but it adds a new form of god and view of god and description and so on. But it could very well be a continuation to me. But it died out so it can't be really followed in this age anymore.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            >You just need to look at the religions that arose after Jesus. Manichaeism and Islam have said that they are continuations of Christianity.
            Islam denies the resurrection. Mormonism accepts the resurrection, but still obeys Jesus because of it.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            That is true, that is why I doubt Islam and Mormonism is a masonic cult nothing more.

            >It's not important to me because i can not perceive Jesus as the lord of the universe. I see him as a wise Essene born in the first century to a israeli woman, and who became a God. The rest said about him might be true, but to me, likely not.
            Do you believe in the virgin birth?

            Yes.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            Do you believe he walked on water and stilled the seas? What holds you back from the mystical perception that He is the true Lord?

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            Well ok my statement was oversimplified, i believe in the miracles he did of course yes, but the last drop, the revelation that he is the lord... That i just don't have. Maybe i will have it in the future, God knows, but currently, i can't perceive it. My inner doubts hold me back an inner doubt.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            That’s weird. Thanks for reminding me of how direct mystical experience of His Lordship is the most important piece of the spiritual puzzle.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            You should read the mystery of the cross, a part of the apocryphal acts of John preserved by the church. If you are really as sure as you claim, it will only enlighten you further.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          It's not important to me because i can not perceive Jesus as the lord of the universe. I see him as a wise Essene born in the first century to a israeli woman, and who became a God. The rest said about him might be true, but to me, likely not.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            >It's not important to me because i can not perceive Jesus as the lord of the universe. I see him as a wise Essene born in the first century to a israeli woman, and who became a God. The rest said about him might be true, but to me, likely not.
            Do you believe in the virgin birth?

  4. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    >buddha image
    >hindu garbled trash

  5. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    You need neoplatonism

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