Muffled
Jesus in me
Well, what do you think? Are they? I personally find Brahman much nicer, but I'll let the believers speak.
::Sits back and watches::
If Brahman is nicer then he isn't God.
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Well, what do you think? Are they? I personally find Brahman much nicer, but I'll let the believers speak.
::Sits back and watches::
Well, what do you think? Are they? I personally find Brahman much nicer, but I'll let the believers speak.
::Sits back and watches::
In the Baha'i view, yes!
ALL the major religions were founded by the One God, Who has many different names in the various religions and cultures!
Just a few of these include:
In fact, God has MANY names and titles, in the various languages and cultures, and they are all equally acceptable!
Just a few of these names are: God, Boje, Jehovah, Dieu, Wankantanka, El, Gott, Yahweh, Dios, Brahman, Elohim, Allah, Bog, Adonai, and Parvadegar.
ANY of these are just fine!
Peace,
Bruce
Undifferentiated being is worthless. You might as well worship a rock. However IMO no such being exists.
Hiya Proud 2B Gay ...yeyyyyyyyyyyyy...
Should always be proud of who and what you are ...
I personally believe Brahman and the God of Sri Abraham Ji are the same...
To me both are personal and impersonal...i mean 'God(Brahman,God of Abraham etc)' surpasses it all :S...
Am i making sense? Lol xxx
No. The God of Abraham is a personage. He has a personality, a sex, and many other qualities, emotions, preferences, &c described in the Bible/Torah.
Brahman has none of this. Brahman is more like the multiverse or an M-theory brane.
If this is true that the God of Abraham is the same as Brahman then Abrahamics certainly view Jehovah as much more personal then people tend to view Brahman.
In Vishishtadvaita, Ishvara is the Supreme Cosmic Spirit who maintains complete control over the Universe and all the sentient beings, which together also form the pan-organistic body of Ishvara. The triad of Ishvara along with the universe and the sentient beings is Brahman, which signifies the completeness of existence. Ishvara is Para Brahman endowed with innumerable auspicious qualities (Kalyana Gunas). Ishvara is perfect, omniscient, omnipresent, incorporeal, independent, creator of the world, its active ruler and also the eventual destroyer. He is causeless, eternal and unchangeable and is yet the material and the efficient cause of the world. He is both immanent (like whiteness in milk) and transcendent (like a watch-maker independent of a watch). He is the subject of worship. He is the basis of morality and giver of the fruits of one's Karma. He rules the world with His Māyā His divine power.
Isn't this creator and reciever of worship though a lower expression of Brahman like all the other devas?
ARJUNA: Among those of Thy devotees who always thus worship Thee, which take the better way, those who worship the Indivisible and Unmanifested, or those who serve Thee as Thou now art?"
KRISHNA:
"Those who worship Me with constant zeal, with the highest faith and minds placed on Me, are held in high esteem by Me. But those who, with minds equal toward everything, with senses and organs restrained, and rejoicing in the good of all creatures, meditate on the inexhaustible, immovable, highest, incorruptible, difficult to contemplate, invisible, omnipresent, unthinkable, the witness, undemonstrable, shall also come unto Me.
For those whose hearts are fixed on the unmanifested the labor is greater because the path which is not manifest is with difficulty attained by corporeal beings. But for those who worship Me, renouncing in Me all their actions, regarding Me as the supreme goal and meditating on Me alone, if their thoughts are turned to Me, O son of Pritha, I presently become the Savior from this ocean of incarnations and death.
Place, then, thy heart on Me, penetrate Me with thy understanding, and thou shalt without doubt hereafter dwell in Me.
People moreso meditate on Brahman, at least from what my past Vaishnava experiences were. Krishna in the Gita speaks of Brahman as incorporeal, impersonal, ineffable as an aspect of God, and as far as I know of, there is no Abrahamic comparison. The Jewish 'Yehovah' or the Christian 'Jehovah' would have more paralellism with Sriman Narayana or Vishnu than Brahman.
Seyorni is right. People do not and can not worship Brahman. It's God's reality as His impersonal form, such as Light or Totality. Some Hindus will meditate and see Brahman as the ultimate conception of God. Others who are dualists will see more of the personal side of God, which corresponds almost equally with Allah or Jehovah in the other religious traditions.
If this is true that the God of Abraham is the same as Brahman then Abrahamics certainly view Jehovah as much more personal then people tend to view Brahman.
Isn't this creator and reciever of worship though a lower expression of Brahman like all the other devas?
May I ask what the relation of Ayn Sof is to the sefirot?
I'd like to read through the Bible (again) but this time with Jewish commentary. Are there any Kabbalah-friendly translations that would explain a more esoteric side of the passage of the Tanakh?
Something I'd like to see as a whole would be a whole Bible--NT too, translated by Jewish rabbis with commentary. It'd be interesting to see misconceptions and misunderstandings of the Jewish faith by Christians, and what Christ, and Gehennah mean and so on, written and explained in a study Bible.
It'd be interesting to see for example, how Judaism sees Sodom and Gomorrah and the Deluge compared to a number of Christians who see it literally. Many of those Christians who don't say they see it as a myth, or fable to highlight something, but never really expand upon it. I'd love to know Jewish understandings of this. I kind of think that most Study Bibles seem to prefer more literalistic interpretations of texts, though, to quote one study Bible I said on Genesis 1, "The verse here clearly talks about actual days, and not an indefinite period of time, and it talks about it with a historical side, leading to the obvious conclusion that Genesis 1 is historical in its message, and should be treated as such" (paraphrased and probably mish-mashed a bit, but you get the idea). I'd like to see a more.. spiritually mature interpretation of the texts.
I use Chabad.org for reading the Tanakh when possible (I don't know of any other sites for online Tanakh, is this one appropriate?)
Well, what do you think? Are they? I personally find Brahman much nicer, but I'll let the believers speak.
::Sits back and watches::