CAKCy
Member
- Location
- Cyprus, East Mediterranean
Thank you for your kind words.
Please don't thank me...
Words mean nothing...
They solve nothing...
They are worth nothing....
Please don't thank me........................
Thank you for your kind words.
To a poet, they mean everything. They are jewels harvested from the union of ones subconscious and the Pattern. Born of the labour of imagination, precious children indeed. Loved beyond measure. Imho.Please don't thank me...
Words mean nothing...
They solve nothing...
They are worth nothing....
Please don't thank me........................
Well, sirAll my life I've always wished that I could live the lifestyle where this was all a major part of my life.
To a poet, they mean everything. They are jewels harvested from the union of ones subconscious and the Pattern. Born of the labour of imagination, precious children indeed. Loved beyond measure. Imho.![]()
Thank you again, I am ok, I have walked the high wire without a net all my life, fall often, always get up. I am no longer powerless, and no one can ever take away my dignity again. I offer up my brokenness as a candle in the dark, to those of my beloved clients in the pit, others in agony, and to anyone open to being educated about the resilience ofThen let me speak those words that will take as much of the pain, as much of the anguish, as much of the demons of the past away. Let my words turn the past into a movie you once watched and cried over but not experienced yourself. My empathy is screaming "Do something! Take her pain away"... Yet I can only sit here, typing nonsense to a person who's suffered so much.
Powerlessness... Pain... Unbearable pain... Emotion matched with emotion. Tear with tear. Fear with fear.
I didn't know.
I didn't know.
I'm so... so sorry.....
Thank you again, I am ok, I have walked the high wire without a net all my life, fall often, always get up. I am no longer powerless, and no one can ever take away my dignity again. I offer up my brokenness as a candle in the dark, to those of my beloved clients in the pit, others in agony, and to anyone open to being educated about the resilience of
the human spirit. I often say to my clients, “if you cannot hold your hope right now, I will hold it for you.” We cry a lot in my office, also. Sometimes I hold their tears until we can grieve together. Healthy stuff, for them and for me. This is
the transformation which makes sense of being waterboarded at nine years old. Most days, it is worth it. An open heart can do many things. If I can survive, and flourish, perhaps so can they.
I think you are right about these issues being economic, or maybe pollical, however as I understand how the Mormon church works God is in regular communication with their head, the President and Prophet. So it seems their God had some role in making these decisions...But these were, I believe, financial decisions. Especially the decision to allow blacks to join and hold the priesthood, just saying. But the LDS priesthood is not comparable to the priesthood of the Catholic Church.
The fundamental LDS folks still believe in polygamy and still practice it within the state of Utah. Most would be shocked to learn how much it is still here. It’s not just a tv show
Been a long time since I heard those names, but remember them well from my youth, Garner Ted in particular. Used to occasionally listen to their radio show "The World Tomorrow". Not surprised they weren't interested in your challenge, I think their interest was mostly in fund raising and making money, they didn't see talking to you as a way to help that.I especially made it a point to challenge the cultists Herbert W and Garner T Armstrong of the infamous World Wide Church of God. Two biggest phonies I ever encountered in my life. I dared both of them to have a public debate with me on the subject of their cult's teaching and both of them ran away from me faster than Dracula running away from the Holy Cross.
All religions, all churches are financial institutions and the LDS church is especially financial and aggressive about it. When we first moved here, over forty years ago, the LDS church members came to your house EVERY WEEK, and demanded their piece your pie. Donation envelopes in their hands.I think you are right about these issues being economic, or maybe pollical, however as I understand how the Mormon church works God is in regular communication with their head, the President and Prophet. So it seems their God had some role in making these decisions...
You are right polygamy is still practiced in Utah, by a lot of different groups. However it is not sanctioned by the modern LDS Church and practicing it will get you excommunicated.
For those less familiar with the LDS or Mormon Church many use those terms interchangeably. As I understand it they now officially prefer to be called LDS or Later Day Saints, but I don't think Mormon is derogatory. Their gospel is still the Book of Mormon. And their Priesthood includes all adult male members in good standing, very different from the Catholics.
Been a long time since I heard those names, but remember them well from my youth, Garner Ted in particular. Used to occasionally listen to their radio show "The World Tomorrow". Not surprised they weren't interested in your challenge, I think their interest was mostly in fund raising and making money, they didn't see talking to you as a way to help that.
If you believe that all things come from God, then that would include science. The Bible, as noted, was not written by God and is not a reliable source of informationMedical science surpasses biblical miracles? Well, am not sure about that especially when you consider how St Peter used his shadow to raise thousands of people from death beds and how the dead were brought back to life by Jesus and his apostles.
~ science is an accepted method of obtaining miracles ~
Some would argue that Moses's parting of the water with a staff was scientific {believe it or not, I actually heard that argument one time}.
~ neither God nor Jesus defined how the miracles were to come about ~
One of Christianity's major failings is that it teaches almost exclusively by commandment rather than by example. But when you read Jesus's teachings, he continually says "imitate me"*. Thus he, more often than not, was teaching by example. In fact, I have seen Christian references to him as the Great Exemplar. On that basis, the Bible does illustrate how miracles are to take place.
* 10 Bible verses about Imitating Jesus (knowing-jesus.com)
The Bible, as noted, was not written by God and is not a reliable source of information
Well, I am not worried, I will not be judged by “every Christian church”-anyone in every Christian church judging me or what I wrote as blasphemous had better read their Bible more carefully. “Judge not, less you be judged.” Judgment is left to GOD-something the Bible is extremely clear on.The Bible speaks of itself as "plenary inspiration". Every Christian church I know of teaches that. Thus, what you have written there would be considered blasphemous by many of them (not to me, of course).
Medical science surpasses biblical miracles? Well, am not sure about that especially when you consider how St Peter used his shadow to raise thousands of people from death beds and how the dead were brought back to life by Jesus and his apostles.
~ science is an accepted method of obtaining miracles ~
Some would argue that Moses's parting of the water with a staff was scientific {believe it or not, I actually heard that argument one time}.
~ neither God nor Jesus defined how the miracles were to come about ~
One of Christianity's major failings is that it teaches almost exclusively by commandment rather than by example. But when you read Jesus's teachings, he continually says "imitate me"*. Thus he, more often than not, was teaching by example. In fact, I have seen Christian references to him as the Great Exemplar. On that basis, the Bible does illustrate how miracles are to take place.
* 10 Bible verses about Imitating Jesus (knowing-jesus.com)
I guessed!One mind-boggling theory is that the entire universe originated from the explosion of a tiny "dot" (with no dimensions?) over millions of years into the enormous entity filled with trillions of stars that we have now.
But eventually, it will reverse. Gravity will cause the whole enormity to fall back on itself and once again become a singularity. And that one may once again explode, producing a new universe.
And so on. Maybe it goes on and on, without end. Maybe we are the millionth version of human beings, either in one of those past universes or even (likely) in the present one. It's like a giant bubble that originates as a tiny dot, then shrinks back into a dot again, then explodes again, and so on.
If I've given anyone a headache, I apologize. The idea came from Stephen Hawking.
Well, I am not worried, I will not be judged by “every Christian church”-anyone in every Christian church judging me or what I wrote as blasphemous had better read their Bible more carefully. “Judge not, less you be judged.” Judgment is left to GOD-something the Bible is extremely clear on.
I will be judged by God. All the rest is simply dirt blowing in the wind-blah,blah, blah. Or did you miss that part in reading your “plenary inspiration” of the Bible?. @oldiebutgoody
Well, let me put it this way, Oldie. If you were on the brink of death from a medical condition, but surgery had a good chance of saving you, which would you turn to, the surgeon, or praying to St. Peter to do a miracle with his shadow? For anyone living in this day and age, in his right mind, the surgeon would definitely "surpass" St. Peter. Nothing wrong with praying to St. Peter, or Jesus, or whoever, but the surgeon comes first.
Anything quoted from the Bible, and taken as absolute truth, cannot be trusted.
I wish I could remember the name of the book
I think that is probably coming, but slowly. They did not accept black people as full equals until 1978, pretty slow on the civil rights thing too. I see some progress being made, one can only hope.For me the change i want to see is LDS accepting LGBTQ people. i have never understood how a faith that claims to value family so highly can rationalize ripping families apart by villainizing people for things that are not a matter of choice.
i know and have in fact said that myself to people for whom that was the main issue. Look at how long the Catholic church has been around and they still haven't. Episcopalians, at least their clergy i've known, on the other hand tend to adjust to the times a bit more quickly.I think that is probably coming, but slowly. They did not accept black people as full equals until 1978, pretty slow on the civil rights thing too. I see some progress being made, one can only hope.
I'm glad you can see the logic of my conclusion. Re hugeness of conspiracy: Many small ones (especially for reasons of profit making) added together make a huge conspiracy. For example: There are rumors that cure for cancer has been found but it's not made public for profit purposes..@CAKCy said:
"...If new ideas/paradigms are left in the drawer for any reason (publicity, greed, ego etc.) doesn't that make science untrustworthy or a huge conspiracy? The same applies when studies are conducted aiming at reaching a pre-determined conclusion."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
i can see how you reached that conclusion, however, i don't think there's a 'huge' conspiracy, tho perhaps some small ones in some fields involving some researchers. i suspect most of the decisions to squash research and evidence supporting new ideas is done for reasons of protecting the squasher's own status, job, etc.
As for 'debunking' research, the good news is some such researchers (who even if they don't acknowledge that was their goal, someone who knows a little about human psychology and how research is conducted can tell by how their experiments are set up what their aim was) acknowledge their experiments supported different conclusions than they were looking to find. The grand irony is that modern scanning equipment like fMRIs make some kinds of research harder because they can actually show the activity in various areas of the brain as the research into the effects of things like meditation on the brain. fMRIs were very instrumental in the new acknowledgments of neuroplasticity. because they showed that the 'brain maps' that were thought to be dedicated to just one thing can be trained to support other body parts sensory gathering, info processing.
Early on this thread in a response to someone you quoted the 'use it or lose it axiom'. There are some new ones in neurobiology: Neurons that fire together, wire together. Neurons that fire apart, wire apart. The first being my favorite, it is crucial in being adaptable, changing unwanted habits of any kind.
i've long felt prayer can be a form of meditation tho it often is not because of the mind set of the person as they say or think it. Some people repeat standard prayers of their faith by rote without actually thinking about the meaning of the words or really 'feeling' what they are saying. But when the prayers have personal meaning to the speaker, when they say it mindfully, it has a different impact on the brain. This is why both Buddhist Monks and some Catholic Nuns can enter into an 'alpha' state of mind easily--the Buddhist monks label it 'meditation' the Nuns (unless they've had the Silva Meditation training (which when i took the course was free to any clergy of any faith) will use 'prayer'--but the brainwaves of both will change to 'alpha' rhythms. Some lab (maybe several) somewhere have reams of printouts showing that people can consciously choose to change the rhythm of their brainwaves, which matters because at alpha we learn faster and better, and with minimal effort retain more of what we learn in that state. Being at alpha is a kind of self-hypnosis in which you can give yourself post hypnotic suggestions that aid in making wanted changes in your life.
There is no one cure for cancer, just as there is no one vaccine for everything. Many forms of cancer are curable, many forms are not. My son had cancer in his stomach, but it was not stomach cancer. It was testicular cancer, because he had testicular cancer. It was curable with surgery-removal of the testicular, and chemo for his stomach.I'm glad you can see the logic of my conclusion. Re hugeness of conspiracy: Many small ones (especially for reasons of profit making) added together make a huge conspiracy. For example: There are rumors that cure for cancer has been found but it's not made public for profit purposes..
All I can say is that this is an interesting (and I mean that sincerely) philosophical take on the difference in this case between "saying" and "believing." I'm doing this from memory and know I'm missing something. There's probably an easy way to find your original story, but I don't know what it is and have no idea how far back through 315 posts it is.I have tried to explain I'm still unsure, twenty years on what it really means to state something seemingly so simple, as "When we SAY there is a god, there is a god, when we SAY there is no god, there is no god", (my first thought twenty years ago was that it couldn't be right because it suggests mankind creates god, not the other way around).
However, I must have tried to discuss the sermon I'm referring to a few times since then, and realise that's an achievement in itself, by the minister, "making you think"!
Now my thinking is this, notice the word "SAY".
That's the operative word, those people gathered in church on the day listening to the minister were choosing to say there was a god, not that they thought or necessarily believed there was a god, oddly enough, and it is a group choosing to do this, not one person thinking for themselves alone, (that' you're interpretation isn't it, and where you fall down in your understanding in my view).
Now many of those people in that church had spent a lifetime trying to understand their religion, and professing a faith, and were far more knowledgeable than I, and of course the minister himself, fulfilling such a skilled role, as an instructor/teacher, leader, drawing people together, trying to encourage people to think about their lives, have belief in themselves, (and in others), and making us collectively feel better about ourselves maybe, and assisting in meditation.
That's of course without mentioning any scriptures, and I'm sure many could come up with a very long list of the skills needed to lead even a small church.
So this idea I've put forward, "saying something" is the significant bit, when it comes to a religion, far more perhaps than even what it means to say you believe in a god, or "presence", or as I clumsily put it, "something outside of yourself", (and of the nature I'm trying to describe, by definition I'd say, atheists cannot do this!).
Any further forward or more confused? I'll fully understand if you believe I'm talking complete nonsense.![]()