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I believe that all humans have a soul that continues to exist forever (is eternal) but that is not to be confused with eternal life, which is a state of the soul that is near to God, meaning that they know and love God. One way to know and love God is by recognizing Jesus so that is why believing in Jesus conferred eternal life.Religions speak of the timelessness of the Divine. God is "eternal". In Christian beliefs, believers are promised "eternal life". But what does that mean? It's generally assumed to mean that as one day passes to the next in a linear progression, that this will continue infinitely into the future beyond our mortal deaths, ages and ages, forever passing behind us, and us forever into the future. I would say it's natural for us to think in terms like this, since that is the experience of our daily realities. But is this what eternal means? Forever marching forward creating a linear timeline?
I would make the case that thinking is confused when it comes the the timelessness of the Divine, that which exists without beginning or end. That timelessness exists in every moment, fully. It's difficult for our minds to think in terms like this as we are always thinking about the future or recalling the past. Yesterday is behind us. Tomorrow is ahead of us. But the overlooked reality is that we only live in the present moment, and thoughts about the past or the future, are only occurring right now, this second, and not anytime in the future or past. All there is is Now.
So what then is Eternal Life? Not something in the future, but something in the present, right now. To be fully present in the moment, not just strictly concentrating on one thing, but mindfully Aware, is to be in that "timelessness". That "Eternal Life", is Now. And when fully Aware, it is seen and experienced as fully, infinitely Present in all things. Eternal Life, is something within everything.
So, drawing from the Christian tradition in the use of that language, I would say that the deeper meaning is not that you keep going on and on forever in a immortal version of yourself, after you have died in this body. I see those as bit of a "hint" at what it is, but seen from the linear, dualist mind. Yet God is timeless, and thus, non-linear. What I hear is the deeper truth, what the metaphor of "life after death" is meant to point to. That is, that "Eternal Life", is the Divine itself. Is it the reality of God. And it is our participation within that, fully in the timeless Now. Aware and Awake.
To me this is the real underlying message of the Christian faith, using dualistic metaphors to speak to reality of the Eternal Life that is timelessly Present, through all ages, without beginning or end, ever and always Now. This is what Enlightenment is. This is what "Salvation" is a metaphor for. "Except you be born again, you cannot see the kingdom of God". You Wake up, and see. You experience Reality fully in the present.
I've just been processing my thoughts lately, which have undergone some radical transformation since my early days introduced to Christian thought through a very narrow, literal, fundamentalist perspective. I just felt inspired at the moment to share a thought I just had, reflecting the evolution of my views from those early days. Thoughts and feedback are encouraged.
In Christian beliefs, believers are promised "eternal life". But what does that mean?
I would make the case that thinking is confused when it comes the the timelessness of the Divine, that which exists without beginning or end. That timelessness exists in every moment, fully. It's difficult for our minds to think in terms like this as we are always thinking about the future or recalling the past. Yesterday is behind us. Tomorrow is ahead of us. But the overlooked reality is that we only live in the present moment, and thoughts about the past or the future, are only occurring right now, this second, and not anytime in the future or past. All there is is Now.
I don't believe that Christians were ever promised "eternal" life.
If we take Romans 6:23 e.g.....
The Greek word is "aiōnios" which is translated in the NASB as...
"For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord."
But "aiōnios" means....
So technically, it should not be translated as "eternal" because all life has a beginning.
- without beginning and end, that which always has been and always will be
- without beginning
- without end, never to cease, everlasting."
It should be more correctly rendered as "everlasting life"..."life without end".
In the literal meaning of the word, only one personage can be "eternal" and that is God himself.
Since it is only God who is timeless (eternal), logically then, all life on earth is not timeless because it has a beginning. Only human life was originally meant to be "everlasting"...i.e. God put into place the means for human life to be without end. The "tree of life" in the garden of Eden was the means, but access to that tree was conditional.....humans could only live forever if they were obedient to God's command. There was only one, and it wasn't even a difficult command.....but the humans did not obey God and lost access to the only means to keep them alive perpetually. (Genesis 3:22-24)
Death now came in the same way to humans as it did to animals. Solomon lamented this fact. (Ecclesiastes 3:19-20)
So, yes, since no one is promised tomorrow, all we have is right now. We can learn from the past and look forward to (or even dread) things that may happen in the future......but we all have an expectation to go on living....the main reason for that is I believe, that we have no 'program' for this life to end. Death was not meant to happen, because life was supposed to be "everlasting" from day one.
The only way for death to be overcome now, according to scripture, is for God to eventually restore life, (John 5:28-29) and for humans to regain access to the trees of life. (Revelation 22:1-2) God created the earth for us and us for the earth....it was never his intention to take us anywhere else. We were placed on this earth with God's attributes so that we could represent him here as caretakers of his precious creation.
That is how I understand the Bible's scenario in Genesis.
What about these verses?I don't believe that Christians were ever promised "eternal" life.
But that Life, that is considered "eternal Life", has no beginning. It originates in God. 2 Cor 4:18 "While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal." If God gives the gift of himself, that is the eternal life of God given to the human. God's Spirit, in other words. It is speaking about God's being in our lives. Which being, is without beginning or end, or timeless, or eternal. It never changes, and is Life itself.I don't believe that Christians were ever promised "eternal" life.
If we take Romans 6:23 e.g.....
The Greek word is "aiōnios" which is translated in the NASB as...
"For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord."
But "aiōnios" means....
So technically, it should not be translated as "eternal" because all life has a beginning.
- without beginning and end, that which always has been and always will be
- without beginning
- without end, never to cease, everlasting."
It should be more correctly rendered as "everlasting life"..."life without end".
In the literal meaning of the word, only one personage can be "eternal" and that is God himself.
It may help you to refer to life on earth, as life-forms. Or forms that Life takes. Lifeforms, have beginnings. Life itself, is eternally from God, and is God's being itself. Spirit. That which animates all forms of life.Since it is only God who is timeless (eternal), logically then, all life on earth is not timeless because it has a beginning.
Of course I do not read the Genesis creation myth literally. These portraits are not meant to be understood scientifically, but allegorically. That is a mistake of the modern mind, trying to make ancient stories, inform us about a correct scientific understanding.Only human life was originally meant to be "everlasting"...i.e. God put into place the means for human life to be without end. The "tree of life" in the garden of Eden was the means, but access to that tree was conditional.....humans could only live forever if they were obedient to God's command. There was only one, and it wasn't even a difficult command.....but the humans did not obey God and lost access to the only means to keep them alive perpetually. (Genesis 3:22-24)
Solomon does not refer to humans previously not dying like animals. He just laments that despite all our glories, we return to the dust just like all other lifeforms. It's not a statement of comparison of what we "used to be like" to what we are now. We've always died, but yet why should that be so, is the lamment.Death now came in the same way to humans as it did to animals. Solomon lamented this fact. (Ecclesiastes 3:19-20)
But death to the forms that Life takes, has always occurred. It's how the system of life on earth sustains and supports itself. It is always reborn as another lifeform, from the beginning of life taking form on earth. That fits the actual evidence that we have.So, yes, since no one is promised tomorrow, all we have is right now. We can learn from the past and look forward to (or even dread) things that may happen in the future......but we all have an expectation to go on living....the main reason for that is I believe, that we have no 'program' for this life to end. Death was not meant to happen, because life was supposed to be "everlasting" from day one.
All of this is a metaphor. Having eternal life, simply means you are Awake to God's timeless Presence. It doesn't mean this guy I am right now, will always continue without physical death. It does mean however that spiritually, I am alive in God. The body is just a housing for that Life. Where we as an individual see it or not, changes how that Life is lived in the body; either in Light, or in darkness of the mind.The only way for death to be overcome now, according to scripture, is for God to eventually restore life, (John 5:28-29) and for humans to regain access to the trees of life. (Revelation 22:1-2) God created the earth for us and us for the earth....it was never his intention to take us anywhere else. We were placed on this earth with God's attributes so that we could represent him here as caretakers of his precious creation.
energy cannot be destroyedReligions speak of the timelessness of the Divine. God is "eternal".
Its true that "life" originates with God...but what is this "life" that he gifts to his creatures? Does he give it at conception or with our first breath? Even science has difficulty defining "life"...after all, plants are living things too. What kind of life do plants have?But that Life, that is considered "eternal Life", has no beginning. It originates in God.
If God gives the gift of himself, that is the eternal life of God given to the human. God's Spirit, in other words. It is speaking about God's being in our lives. Which being, is without beginning or end, or timeless, or eternal. It never changes, and is Life itself.
It may help you to refer to life on earth, as life-forms. Or forms that Life takes. Lifeforms, have beginnings. Life itself, is eternally from God, and is God's being itself. Spirit. That which animates all forms of life.
Of course I do not read the Genesis creation myth literally. These portraits are not meant to be understood scientifically, but allegorically. That is a mistake of the modern mind, trying to make ancient stories, inform us about a correct scientific understanding.
Solomon does not refer to humans previously not dying like animals. He just laments that despite all our glories, we return to the dust just like all other lifeforms. It's not a statement of comparison of what we "used to be like" to what we are now. We've always died, but yet why should that be so, is the lamment.
I would also note, that in that same chapter he also says in verse 11, "He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end." Notice how that "eternal life" is in here too? It is saying exactly what I am, that "eternity in the human heart", that cannot be fathomed, because it is the nature of God, and who can fathom that? You see?
But death to the forms that Life takes, has always occurred.
It's how the system of life on earth sustains and supports itself. It is always reborn as another lifeform, from the beginning of life taking form on earth. That fits the actual evidence that we have.
How we speak of ourselves and our origins poetically, has great value.
But that value does not mean we have to take the symbols as literally, factually true, when clearly there is nothing "on the ground" that would transform our creative stories, as literal facts. To deny facts in favor of our stories, denies of the value of both. I find holding each ways of understanding of complimentary value, rather than a competition of truth.
All of this is a metaphor.
Having eternal life, simply means you are Awake to God's timeless Presence. It doesn't mean this guy I am right now, will always continue without physical death. It does mean however that spiritually, I am alive in God. The body is just a housing for that Life. Where we as an individual see it or not, changes how that Life is lived in the body; either in Light, or in darkness of the mind.
Everything has that same Life. Every cell. Every molecule. Everything that vibrates with Life. The forms those take, collecting together as a human, or as a blade of grass, is the same Life.Its true that "life" originates with God...but what is this "life" that he gifts to his creatures? Does he give it at conception or with our first breath? Even science has difficulty defining "life"...after all, plants are living things too. What kind of life do plants have?
Is the animal's experience of this Life that God gives, anywhere near the human's experience? That's really an impossible question to answer without being able experience what it is to be a bird, and what is also like to be human to compare. I would say this, I believe every lifeform has the capacity to experience God, in the fullness of what that lifeform is capable of experiencing. God to a bird, and God to a human, is still God.Is the life that animals experience anywhere near what God gave to us? We alone are made in his image...but why? What is our purpose here?
I'm confused in your thinking. The programming we receive by nature, is for our survival. I'm not sure why that programming means that Life is not in each individual organism. Doesn't scripture say God knows each sparrow that falls?God gave life to all living things, but its not something he puts into every lifeform individually.
Reproduction is a process that is programmed into all those lifeforms....its in their DNA to survive and reproduce their "kind".....and requires nothing from God to perpetuate that life. It's all automatic....pre-programmed.
I can't agree with this. Each individual is known of God, and God's breath is in each.Even human life is not the product of God giving breath to individuals......its a process that he put in place from the beginning.
Each lifeform has its specialty that gives in an advantage in this world. If you were to rank the lifeforms which are best adapted to life on this planet, it would probably be something on the order of the dragonfly, not humans.We are not the highest lifeforms in existence, but we are the highest on this planet. We are not accident of evolution but created to reflect God's qualities because he placed us here as caretakers. We were to have "in subjection"...all other forms of life, to care for and to make sure that their habitats stayed pristine so that their lives could be a joy as well as a responsibility to us.
Yet, 99.98% of all humans are run in that self-perpetuating programming, just like the rest of nature. Very, very few are awake to that. So we can claim to have free will, but unless someone shows otherwise, they barely can escape the programming enough to show otherwise.Yes, God's spirit animates all life......but we are the only lifeform offered everlasting life. For the rest of creation, life was to be a self-perpetuating cycle.....governed largely by instinct....not needing anything but a watchful eye......but not so, humans. We alone have free will.
It's hard for a lot of people to understand what metaphors really are. They speak truth beyond facts. They speak to the human imagination. But I honestly don't know what you mean by the greatest scientist in existence? You mean God? That's like saying God is the greatest taxi cab driver in existence. Why would God be a scientist? Because we see religion in competition with science?I do not doubt that the Genesis account is literal.....just because of its brevity and lack of scientific explanation, doesn't mean that the greatest scientist in existence speaks merely in metaphors.
Genesis has nothing to do with modern science. You waste your energies distracted by such efforts to make it that.The people to whom he gave the Genesis account were not scientifically minded, so going into detail would have been a waste of space in his instruction manual. Science had thousands of years to catch up.
We actually don't know if other animals don't have the fear of death like we do. We assume they don't. Yet, each animal fights to stay alive. The anxieties we have, may be higher than other animals because of the size of our brains. But that seems both a curse and a blessing. A blessing, because we get to choose to face the idea of death before actual death, and that can lead to a more enlightened life, for those very, very few who choose to face that existential dilemma.Solomon's lament seems to be focused on why humans have a finite existence when God's word says that they are superior to all other lifeforms. What was the point of death if we are made in God's image? God doesn't die, so why should we? Why give us a fear of death when no other creature has it?
So far as you know. I personally doubt we are alone in this. I more than imagine other species being so taxed in their own ways.Animals have no concept of death....they live "now" and when death comes they have no preparation for it, but nor do they spend time worrying about it, like we do.
Elephants are known to grieve and mourn their dead just as us. Other species as well, I'm sure. To me, this creates a larger narrative than just the human dilemma.We are the only creatures who can contemplate our own death.....that seems cruel if death was meant to be part of the scheme of things....? Why is there grief and mourning?
Oh hardly. It makes the Presence of God, immediate. To be experienced here and now, not in some imaged tomorrow, or in remembering the past. It's no longer a story we believe in, but the very air we breathe.Putting 'eternity into the hearts' of mankind just reinforces the idea that we cannot accommodate the thought of not being here.
Of course we are designed for eternal life. It comes from God. We already have it. What we do with that, if we drink of it, if we see it, if we live that, is entirely up to where we choose to look. Genesis is a mythology, not that it is a lie or something false. Not whatsoever. But mythology is a story about something that transcends our common words. We use pictures and imagery to tell truths. That is what mythology actually is. It is Truth, in story form. Not dull science.We alone are designed for unending life......it is something we lost right at the beginning, so to dismiss Genesis as myth, loses all the reasons for why Jesus came, what his death meant, why there was a need for a Kingdom, and why we find death so repugnant.
So what then is Eternal Life? Not something in the future, but something in the present, right now. To be fully present in the moment, not just strictly concentrating on one thing, but mindfully Aware, is to be in that "timelessness". That "Eternal Life", is Now. And when fully Aware, it is seen and experienced as fully, infinitely Present in all things. Eternal Life, is something within everything.
Everything has that same Life. Every cell. Every molecule. Everything that vibrates with Life. The forms those take, collecting together as a human, or as a blade of grass, is the same Life.
Is the animal's experience of this Life that God gives, anywhere near the human's experience? That's really an impossible question to answer without being able experience what it is to be a bird, and what is also like to be human to compare. I would say this, I believe every lifeform has the capacity to experience God, in the fullness of what that lifeform is capable of experiencing. God to a bird, and God to a human, is still God.
I'm confused in your thinking. The programming we receive by nature, is for our survival. I'm not sure why that programming means that Life is not in each individual organism. Doesn't scripture say God knows each sparrow that falls?
I can't agree with this. Each individual is known of God, and God's breath is in each.
Each lifeform has its specialty that gives in an advantage in this world. If you were to rank the lifeforms which are best adapted to life on this planet, it would probably be something on the order of the dragonfly, not humans.
As far as us being stewards... that would be nice. Unfortunately our appetites for money, lead us elsewhere.
Yet, 99.98% of all humans are run in that self-perpetuating programming, just like the rest of nature. Very, very few are awake to that. So we can claim to have free will, but unless someone shows otherwise, they barely can escape the programming enough to show otherwise.
I honestly don't know what you mean by the greatest scientist in existence? You mean God? That's like saying God is the greatest taxi cab driver in existence. Why would God be a scientist? Because we see religion in competition with science?
Genesis has nothing to do with modern science. You waste your energies distracted by such efforts to make it that.
We actually don't know if other animals don't have the fear of death like we do. We assume they don't. Yet, each animal fights to stay alive.
The anxieties we have, may be higher than other animals because of the size of our brains. But that seems both a curse and a blessing. A blessing, because we get to choose to face the idea of death before actual death, and that can lead to a more enlightened life, for those very, very few who choose to face that existential dilemma.
Elephants are known to grieve and mourn their dead just as us. Other species as well, I'm sure. To me, this creates a larger narrative than just the human dilemma.
Of course we are designed for eternal life. It comes from God. We already have it. What we do with that, if we drink of it, if we see it, if we live that, is entirely up to where we choose to look.
Genesis is a mythology, not that it is a lie or something false. Not whatsoever. But mythology is a story about something that transcends our common words. We use pictures and imagery to tell truths. That is what mythology actually is. It is Truth, in story form. Not dull science.
Time is spiral - linear (progressing) and cyclical (repetitive/periodical). Everlasting life is not timeless - it's still passing through time. Eternity is different. I think of it as no past and no present - just now. Nothing slips away and nothing is anticipated. All is present simultaneously.Religions speak of the timelessness of the Divine. God is "eternal". In Christian beliefs, believers are promised "eternal life". But what does that mean? It's generally assumed to mean that as one day passes to the next in a linear progression, that this will continue infinitely into the future beyond our mortal deaths, ages and ages, forever passing behind us, and us forever into the future. I would say it's natural for us to think in terms like this, since that is the experience of our daily realities. But is this what eternal means? Forever marching forward creating a linear timeline?
Timelessness in time? As we are aware of a moment it's already gone in the past.That timelessness exists in every moment, fully
For us only here and now is directly experienced as real (present) but our mind usually wanders to memories and plans. Mindfulness is ability to stay and observe at this window/door where moments are coming and passing. To be fully (not just physically) present in present. You stand in a river but your view is firmly where you stand.So what then is Eternal Life? Not something in the future, but something in the present, right now. To be fully present in the moment, not just strictly concentrating on one thing, but mindfully Aware, is to be in that "timelessness".
Life, is vital existence. There is only one Life, which animates all lifeforms as different expressions of that one same Life, which comes from God.Again....define "life". There is a vast difference between life experienced as a human, and life as a blade of grass.....only here to provide fodder for other creatures.
I would say unconsciously. What we call "conscious" generally means we are actively thinking about it as an object of thought. What I believe is all life is "aware" of God, on whatever level that awareness occurs, as just "sense", without active thought, or mental objects. Let me put it a simple way. Are fish aware of the water that they swim in? No. Not consciously, as "this is water we are in". It just is reality to them, without conscious thought. Yet they are certainly aware of it, even if it is completely invisible to their minds, such as those might be.You honestly believe that other creatures consciously acknowledge God?
Everytime I hear a bird sing, or see a horse standing in the field feeling the wind blowing through its mane. Their very existence is worship to God.When was the last time to saw birds or horses worshiping their creator.....or admiring something that the Creator designed to delight human senses?
It's in your interpretation of Genesis, which seems to dim your view of Creation as just a bunch of stuff for us, and non inherently valuable in and of itself for its own sake, long before we came along on the seen. Even in a literal reading of Genesis as a book of science, it says after each day "It was good". That's God saying it is good. Without humans on the scene.Like a sunset or a rainbow? Or a star filled sky? Seriously, they have no comprehension. They are driven by instinct and God created some "domestic" creatures to interact with humans, and some "wild" creatures who still delight us but don't live with us. This is all in Genesis.
This is the problem you get when you read Genesis with a literal eye, and not a poetic eye. A literal eye might imagine God, as a type of person with a body of sorts, sitting on the ground and fashioning some clay into a figurine and setting it on top of a rock. He then performs some sort of supernatural magic and blows air from his mouth onto the figurine and it comes to life and starts moving around on its own.Is that what I said?
I believe that life is passed on by other life, just as it was designed to do. God does not put breath into each creature individually....not even humans. Life is the gift that we give to others. It comes from God in the way he created us, but God has little to do with each conception.
I had the unfortunate experience the other day, while sitting meditating in my garden, to witness not 8 feet direct in front of my eyes on the trunk of a tree, a male squirrel seize and violently penetrate a female squirrel, and then ran off her when finished to climb the tree. She remained there, stunned, shocked, immobile, and recovering. That looked a lot like rape to me. Squirrel rape.There is no such thing as rape in the animal kingdom....why is that?
Do we? I don't agree. Research clearly show other animals species demonstrate a sense of fairness, and they have social rules with each other about following those. I could provide links for you if you wish. Social orders exist for the benefit of the individuals in the groups, and when there are those that don't follow the rules, they are censured by the others. This happens in primate families. This happens in other species as well. That is the basis of human moral systems. We simply adopted what evolution brought the world before us, into our human social structures. Just a modification on a theme already in existence, before us.Why do only we have morals?
One is never dead to God. God however may be dead to us. God is always 'knocking at the door', but if we are deaf, we don't listen. It's not that God is hiding from us, or that we are dead to God. Consider the lament of David, "Take not your Spirit from me". He externalized, projected onto God, as if God was removing himself from David, when it was actually just David turning his eyes away from God in shame. God literally does not go anywhere. It only seems like it because of ourselves and our responses to God's Presence.God is a reader of hearts...unless you search for him, and genuinely seek to find him, you are 'dead' to him.
I think God creating creatures to be able to adapt and evolve, is a highly ingenious creative strategy, don't you? Look at how it accounts for the the existence of every lifeform on this planet? Adaptability, is designed right into it, by God."Best adapted"....seriously? God is the Creator, not the adaptor.
But these same creatures, through the magic of adaptation, are able to survive in a wide range of habitats, not just some narrow niche environment. That's a good thing, considering how our habitats change. Nature is beautiful and mysterious, far beyond what we limit it to be in our stories about it.He designed his creatures for the habitat he provided for them.
Sure. Evolution is how God creates.If for some reason these were forced from their natural habitat into a new one, with new kinds of food and changed conditions, then and only then will the adaptation develop to suit the new circumstances. That is brilliant programming. The result of clever design.
They are dysfunctions. Anything that is good, can be made bad by overuse and abuse. Why we choose the negative over the positive in our lives? That's an incredibly deep question. Because we feel alone? Because we feel unloved and want to self-destruct? This is the whole heart of the religious question. I see it all as an existential crisis. Right now, the whole world is the throes of just that, a collective, global, existential crisis. Where is joy? Why is the bunny happy, and I am not?But why? If we are created in God's image, why do we not reflect it? Where did our aberrant appetites come from? Certainly not from God.
The programming I am referring to is not biological reproduction, but programming our behaviors and thought patterns in such a way as we do not recognize that we are in fact not exercising free will at all, but are simply running the programs we were programmed with through culture and society. It's like what Socrates pointed to in saying, the unexamined life is not worth the living. 99.98% of people alive, never examine what drives and motivates them, but simply just let the programs run. They are asleep. The call of God is to Awaken.The drive to perpetuate our species is as strong as it is in any species, but we alone understand that sex drive is for reproduction. We alone are consciously aware of the consequences of sex. Animals copulate because they are programmed to reproduce. Not because they want 'children'. But there are rules about our reproduction that don't apply to any other creatures. Only we have a moral sense that should be governing our behavior.
No. Science is a human way of looking at nature, or the study of God's creation. That does not make God a human doing human science. God didn't create science. Humans created it, or used the various tools of the human mind and experimentation in order to look at God's creation. God created the world. How the world is understood, is a matter of perspective. God did not create the telescope, but humans use it to understand God's creation.No! Because science is the study of God's creation....he created what science studies. He understands science better than any human because he created the subject matter. How can you separate them?
All creation myths have an order of events that create a story of how things began. That does not make them actually scientific. It does not explain the mechanisms of anything. It's poetic, not detailed and scientific. It can't be used to explain the natural world. It has nothing to contribute to the fields of science.Genesis has everything to do with science.....it takes us from the creation of the Universe to the preparation of the planet for habitation, and gives us the order in which sentient life appeared on this carefully prepared earth. Where is the distraction or waste of energy?
These again are of course nothing more than assumptions. I think a safe assumption would be, it's possible that in some life forms which have the capacity for the level of intelligence we do, such as elephants or dolphins, it seems possible that they have existential questions as well. You don't know what it is to have the mind of an elephant, but to assume they are just dumb automatons, is safe to say an outdated, and wrong assumption, coming out of reductionistic thought."Fight or flight" is an automatic response in most creatures. Until they are chased down and captured in the jaws of a predator, they have no idea what death is. They just experience it as it happens.
We are programmed to experience emotions. And when we do they are real emotions. Same with animals experiencing emotion. We are not so distinctly different from other animals. We're just really smart monkeys with oversized brains. We were not created in the vacuum of space with not relationship with other animals, or they with us.Animals who are designed to live in family groups do appear to grieve the loss of a family member, just as mothers and others in monkey troupes appear to grieve the loss of an infant. How much of that is programming and how much is actual emotion, we don't really know, but most in the animal kingdom do not grieve the loss of a herd member. Death is taken in their stride, generally.
I want to swing back to this question, and a couple others I left unaddressed. The blessing for that, is because it allows us to question what we are programmed with as being really real. The prospect of dying puts life into perspective, which can lead to an awakening experience, where one finds Truth in the world.How is being able to contemplate your own death a blessing? And why didn't God "bless" other creatures with this knowledge?
I think you misunderstand when I use the term mythology. The Bible certainly contains mythologies. These are types of stories. According to the dictionary:I see no reason whatsoever why Genesis cannot be literal.....it just didn't take place in 7x24 hour days, is all. The story is told in simple terms, but that doesn't mean that the process was simple at all. The Bible is not mythology....it is a factual account of creation.....who said it wasn't?
Clearly all there is, is now. And we should be here now.So what then is Eternal Life? Not something in the future, but something in the present, right now. To be fully present in the moment, not just strictly concentrating on one thing, but mindfully Aware, is to be in that "timelessness". That "Eternal Life", is Now. And when fully Aware, it is seen and experienced as fully, infinitely Present in all things. Eternal Life, is something within everything.
Yeah, we are eternal, we are star material. What constitutes us is eternal (from the time the universe came into being and till it will exist).
Amen to that brother
There’s internal, external, and eternal ... is another way of looking at it.
Sorry, that is a big farce.I believe Jesus is speaking about eternal life in a physical body.
Its not. Judaism teaches a bodily resurrection in the world to come.Sorry, that is a big farce.