oldbadger
Skanky Old Mongrel!
Indeed.Winston Churchill, the saviour of civilisation as we know it. Thats creative.
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Indeed.Winston Churchill, the saviour of civilisation as we know it. Thats creative.
................................Sometimes a patient who is a Christian fundamentalist may ask me what faith I am..............
I don't consider being one restaurant as a definition of unity and being the source of it.
One restaurant is just the place we are eating nothing more.
I was at a Korean luncheon yesterday, at sat alone because I knew no Korean and was around people three times my age so I couldn't relate. Same place. Still isolated.
What we have in common is our intent and interest to try each other's food and be content and respectful to each other's meal and it's differing origin.
What is different and highly valuable to most countries is that the food they share is their food. They don't mind sharing if the people they share with understand that the ingredients and instruction of dish is theirs.
If I compared it to language, if I made up a sign in sign language to reflect my own interest because I can speak some sign too, that's disrespectful. Yes, we are signing around the same table and enjoying our conversation. The deeper issue is disrespecting the culture and nature to which American Sign Language comes from and who can make up signs and who cannot.
So the unity is not in our differing history; origins. We have various sources coming together talking in one conversation. It's the interest in talking in that one conversation and not mistaking a Deaf person's hospitality as a means he is accepting you in his culture and language.
Unity in results not by source.
An "agnostic Christian" is a person who has received Christian baptism and is a believer in Jesus Christ and his teachings, but also believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God or of anything beyond material phenomena. Basically, the belief is there with the understanding that it is based on faith not knowledge. This doesn't apply to me anymore though.
ag·nos·tic
aɡˈnästik/
noun
Chris·tian
- a person who believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God or of anything beyond material phenomena
ˈkrisCHən/
noun
- a person who has received Christian baptism or is a believer in Jesus Christ and his teachings.
Well, I expect that it could help Bahai if Bahai couples would meet and marry, wouldn't it?
It doesn't have to be smutty, but a 'meet a Bahai' section in Bahai.org might not be such a bad idea?
J.W. was a Bahai who ran a 'pension' type plan in the late 70's. He used to hold firesides which I took my wife to. He didn't just offer his services to Bahais as far as I know. He was convicted and sent to prison because his plan was something like what they (in the US) call a ponsi-scheme. Lots of elderly folks lost their savings.
I'm not allowed to look for sex even if I wanted to. Mrs Badger would bash me.
The avatar concept is different than the manifestation concept, although I may be wrong, since neither apply to me personally. My understanding is that an avatar is a person and simultaneously God.
A manifestation of God, OTOH, isn't God. If it was, then you would call Baha'u'llah God, or Muhammad God. The two words, Baha'u'llah, and God would be synonymous, and hence interchangeable. I could be wrong, but I don' think that's how Baha'i' view it.
n Hinduism, any version (name) of the supreme God, whether it be Krishna, Siva, Shakti, etc. is interchangeable with the term God. So to me, saying 'Sive permeates the universe, is identical to 'God permeates the universe'.
Perhaps the distinction is subtle, but its still there.
If someone is consistently unable to follow the rules of the forum, they get banned. A couple of warnings won't do that. Clearly the definition of proselytizing varies.
Yes Hindus will have differing views. Good to hear from a Vaishnavite, but I\m curious if he could compare 'manifestation' with avatar'. Maybe he does see Baha'u'llah and Christ as avatars.
And perhaps indeed they are truly incredibly different.
Haha. That made my head turn crooked. I wonder if I asked @adrian009 the same thing would there be a deeper insight on it.
Thanks. My point was that a religion that adopts bits and pieces of other traditions might be better regarded (i.e. more widely/acceptably interpreted) as a "fusion" or a "hybrid" religion rather than an authentic revelation from God. The problem facing Baha'is in this discussion hinges around the perfectly understandable difficulty non-Baha'is have in accepting the Baha'i claim of authenticity when they can see that it clearly borrows from (and frankly, bastardizes) the traditions of other faiths.
On the other hand - it is simply following in the tried and trusted Abrahamic tradition which entire edifice is founded on the notion of prophetic succession - the gradual or successive (depending on whether you are a Jew, a Christian, a Muslim, a Baha'i or whatever) apocalypsis of God's plan for humankind. You can't be a Christian and not believe that Christ has the last word, or a Muslim and imagine that the Prophet's message can legitimately be revised. Likewise for Baha'i's (I think) - it would be impossible for a Baha'i to admit that Baha'u'llah's writings might be a less authentic interpretation of the teachings of Buddha or Krishna than those of a modern Buddhist or Hindu. It sounds arrogant on the face of it - but how else is a believing Baha'i to rationalize their faith?
It is - I guess - a paradoxical feature of religion that as the religious needs of humans change, the faces of their religions change with them and yet the same faces keep turning up as "religion" tries its best to live up to its name by re-connecting (Latin: re [again] ligare [to bind or connect]) us to the past but never quite succeeds in stuffing the new package into the old carton without breaking something.
So my question now is - since we can't stuff the new (religious ideas) into the old carton, is there something we could take out to make a better fit? Personally, I'd start with divine revelation and prophetic succession. I reckon there's still plenty of flavors that we could use to spice it up a bit without those.
Fair enough....
Our Doctor is a Sikh and so such situations might be more easy for both himself and his wife who is also a doctor at the practice..
As a full elder of the Studd Hill Full Moon Frolickers I refuse to let you save my life if you belong to any of those 'goody goody' religions.......I have this born again Christian patient who persisted and I have just refused to answer beyond a few evasive biblical quotes. Eventually he asked me if I was a Muslim. When I told him I wasn't he was happy and hasn't asked me about my religion again since and we get on fine.
1) Baha'u'llah translated means 'Glory of God.'
2) I agree, but there is overlap too. The words physical verses spiritual incarnation come to mind. in part the reality of the Manifestation for Baha'is is an incomprehensible reality beyond the understanding of men.
3) interestingly, the way Viashnavites view Krishna may be closer to the way Christians view Jesus, than the way Baha'is view Baha'u'llah.
We're all emanated from God, so in that sense we all are.The manifestation of God, is both man and God.
Now you are a Buddhist maybe he has given you a koan for your education and edification!
Kōan - Wikipedia
We're all emanated from God, so in that sense we all are.
1) Krishna translated would mean 'God' I think.
2) Hindus believe it's totally understandable, but men have to go beyond the intellect. We are all potentially realised sages. In fact it's our spiritual destiny. The only difference is we don't know it, and first have to go through the karmas and learning necessarily to get there. The belief in reincarnation is an absolute prerequisite.
3) In all 3 situations, I've observed variance, and it's all outside my understanding and interest, so who knows?
I never used Zoans. I never practiced Soto Zen before so I wouldn't know how to properly use or reflect on them. It reminds me of does a tree make a sound when no one is in the forest. My brain doesn't learn from things like that. It does make a sound. We just like things to revolve around us for it to exist as if the laws of nature cannot run without us.
Nor do I. The restaurant is the social space we share whether the earth, a country, a city, a workplace, a home or even cyberspace on RF.
In my town most of the Japanese restaurants are owned and run by Koreans. Do you think they need permission in some way from Japanese people to run a Japanese restaurant?
I haven't had too much to do with the deaf community but understand from my limited experience they have developed their own culture within a culture. They have done what they needed to do to make the best of life with a disability.