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God is already with us. Or we are already with God. whichever. Yes, I think that more than one religion "leads to God" because, as I said, God is already with us. We just need to discover/remember that.Who here beleives that all religions lead to God, or that more than one religion leads to God, explain why and how you beleive this(this question is for those who actually beleive God exists).
I believe all Gods exist.
It doesn't get much more illogical than this.
It doesn't get more off topic than this.
I have no problem with it.I just can't grasp how you can think all Gods exist.
What if there are certain "locations" where the breeze comes and goes more often than in others?The experience of God is like a breeze that comes and goes. How can a religion be a path to a breeze?
What if there are certain "locations" where the breeze comes and goes more often than in others?
If your beliefs aren't on topic you should not have mentioned them.
I just can't grasp how you can think all Gods exist. Two monotheistic Gods can't exist at the same time by their very nature. Do you think Allah and Yahweh both exist? Do you think Poseidon exists? Surely you have misspoken.
I just can't grasp how you can think all Gods exist.
What if there are certain "locations" where the breeze comes and goes more often than in others?
If I was to define God I would say Yahweh. However since many do not see Yahweh as God, or the Only God. Let's now understand "God" to be any higher being or beings, or any supernatural being considered a god, or any state of existsance considered to be "God."
If it's that broad then the answer to your original question would be a definitive yes. If it's Yahweh then the answer is no. The Bible is clear on that much.
Yes, I remember.I'm borrowing a metaphor invented by Jiddu Krishnamurti. He likened the human condition to sitting inside the room of a house, waiting for a breeze (God) to come through the windows. In that situation, there is nothing one can do to make the breeze any more likely. The only reasonable course of action is to open the windows so that when the breeze comes, it can come in.
I don't really see how that is functionally different from what I suggested.If we extend that metaphor a bit to tie it into the OP, Lilithu, then the question becomes which religions, if any, either help to open the windows or help to keep the windows open. For no religion can actually guarantee that it will produce a breeze.