Dave2112 said:
And by the way, Jim, you made an interesting point about religion, death in the name of God and narrow-mindedness. But I wouldn't apply that to everyone with a belief in God. You've referred to me in the past as a relatively wise person (shows how much you know, eh?) and I have a very deep-seated faith. The thing is, I have no need for, or trust in, any organized religion. And that's what I think you were talking about. BIG difference between Faith and Religion. 😎
I wouldn't apply it to everyone either; especially as I count myself as someone with a "faith" of sorts. The difference between my spirituality and most others who'd use the word "religious" to describe themselves, is that I give more credit and power to God than they do. Religious people tend to regard "God" as the chief/king/boss of a pantheon of spiritual beings, inhabiting some other sphere of existence; call it heaven/ nirvana or the seventh dimension, you get what I'm driving at. When I think of "God", it represents the super-consciousness that is the sum total of all consciousness in ALL spheres of existence. Guess why that's the reason the old bastard can have eyes everywhere, eh? I choose not to put a name to either me or my faith, as that would build walls and border it's potential. I just am; I am One, part of the Infinite, a single cell in the body of the Almighty, etc.
I would almost agree with your last sentence if you'd said "BIG difference between
spirituality and religion." Maybe that's just because organised religion has monopolised the word "faith" over time. I find spirituality and religion to be diametric opposites; with religion often bordering on psychological fascism. Even when
I was a Christian it was like you; no need for it to be organised. My church was my house. I still found it limiting though. It constrained me. It didn't allow me to sail freely on the ocean of Spirit, only paddle in the shallows of one particular beach. Anyway, in thew end it doesn't matter. As I said the day before yesterday on Tickle Theater, I feel sympathy for those people who are devoutly religious and live for their church. If I'm wrong and they're right, I could give 50% of my wages to charity, spend my spare time doing volunteer work for the local pensioners forum and be kind to all sould I meet, I'd still go to hell because I'm not washed in the blood of the Lamb. But if I'm right in
my belief, then it doesn't matter what name you give to God, what religious building you pray in, what you call your holy man or even if you HAVE a holy man; you'll go home to "heaven". So either they're wasting their lives depriving themselves needlessly of stigmatised things that they'd enjoy (just ask bloody Scott!), or their God is a picky, fascist bastard.
At the end of the day, it doesn't matter to me what faith someone has, or how deep it runs in them. They have the absoloute right to believe whateevr they want to and I have no right whatsoever to insist that they believe what I do. The biggest thing is that differences are something we can celebrate and compare, not bitch over. The way some people act, you'd think diversity was a crime! (And indeed, some people have tried to make it so.) If we can compare the differences in what we believe and then buy each other a pint of
Old Mother Arkwright's Feotid Dog Testicle, we're halfway to heaven already.