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I guess I am spiritually lost... I am a Vaishnava in philosophy and preferred practice, but the Abrahamic religions have rubbed off of me for the longest time and I have the hardest time letting go of them:
Judaism - Karaism, Chasidism
Christianity - Unitarianism, Latter Day Saints movement
Islam - Qur'an Alone, Sufism
Baha'i Faith
I can not let them go, because I actually believe in every one of them and their Scriptures as revealed by the One True God, whether it be Yehovah, Jehovah, Allah, Abha, or Vishnu.
I'm lost, LOL. Either I am guaranteed Paradise, or guaranteed Hell!
I guess I am spiritually lost... I am a Vaishnava in philosophy and preferred practice, but the Abrahamic religions have rubbed off of me for the longest time and I have the hardest time letting go of them:
Judaism - Karaism, Chasidism
Christianity - Unitarianism, Latter Day Saints movement
Islam - Qur'an Alone, Sufism
Baha'i Faith
I can not let them go, because I actually believe in every one of them and their Scriptures as revealed by the One True God, whether it be Yehovah, Jehovah, Allah, Abha, or Vishnu.
I'm lost, LOL. Either I am guaranteed Paradise, or guaranteed Hell!
you are not guaranteed any of them. It is upto God to judge. Don't judge yourself on behalf of him. Because you don't know all of his thoughts which are different than our thoughts. And you don't know his ways, which are different than our ways.
Krishna says in the Gita that everything beautiful, magnificent and splendid in this world is a mere fragment of His power.
God bless!
It can be said that I am an Islamic Jain. I accept one God and that Akbar is his prophet, and believe in multiple non-eternal heavens and hells, and one eternal heaven for those who devote themselves and earn it. I perform the five daly salah prayers turned towards to tomb of Akbar and in ethics I follow the five Jain layman vows.
Yes, Emperor Akbar, the founder of the Din-i Ilahi, I have opened a topic about it on this same sub-forum.
In the Dabistan, a book from 1655 which enumerates and describes all religions known to the author, when talking about the Din-i Ilahi it says: "In the month Rajab of the year of the Hijra 987 [1579 CE], the Emperor Akbar was ordered by Heaven to fix the sentence: There is but one God, and Akbar is his Khalifah to be used" meaning- as the shahada. By the way, being that Muhammed started preaching 13 years before he done his Hirja, this was exactly 1000 years after the start of Islam, to simbolically signify it's end.
Thank you. I was unaware of this tradition in Islam, which I assume is what this religion is, is that correct...?
I don't think that would be right, SageTree.
The wiki article say: From the discussions he led at the Ibādat Khāna, Akbar concluded that no single religion could claim the monopoly of truth. This inspired him to create the Dīn-i Ilāhī in 1582. Various pious Muslims, among them the Qadi of Bengal and the seminal Sufi personality Shaykh Ahmad Sirhindi, responded by declaring this to be blasphemy to Islam.
Din-e Ilahi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Seems like it's a religion of its own, albeit an extremely small one.
It can be considered a religion onto itself, or a syncretic religion mixing Islam and Jainism, I think both are valid opinions, and I would certainly rather classify Din-i Ilahi in the category of deistic traditions then among denominations of Islam, even though I do perform five salah prayers every day.
And yes, it is basically a non existant religion concerning practitioners, I personally don't know any practitioners in person, I have only found a few by internet. Similar is the case with e.g. Pythagoreanism, which is one of most theologically and ethically exalted religions, and yet it has no followers, afaik.
Regarding your signature.I syncretize autotheism and pantheism, but I don't think either of them is a religion.
It's like those 'personal relationship' Evangelicals using Jesus as an imaginary friend. You could do it with God or Superman, all you have to do is think, "What would Superman think of what I am doing?" The fear engendered is a moral one which is based on principled archetypes, not necessarily "run from a giant tiger" fear that assumes a physically real entity which has power against you.How can you fear someone you don't believe in?
I am strongly influenced by the traditionalist Catholicism I was raised under, especially the Chaldean church I joined in my late teens. Since I have broken with them I have freely incorporated elements of philosophy such as Hegelianism and less systematic but probably more meaningful ideas I found in Nietzsche and his famous translator Walter Kaufmann. An encounter during my college days with the works of Max Stirner and Dora Marsden finally caused me to become an antinomian and something of an Epicurean in my outlook on norms.
The works of Rudolf Bultmann also influenced me, with their quasi-Jungian treatment of religious texts and experience, which I realised could be extended almost arbitrarily to work with everything from comic books to the Quran.
I absolutely adore the Assyrian Church of the East and the Yazidi, and have picked up scripture from the Tohedo Orthodox Church focusing on Enoch.
My sources are heavily Christian, obviously, but my interpretation and use is decidedly not 'Orthodox'.
I know DavidtheGreek didn't ask me, but I want to answer:
It's like those 'personal relationship' Evangelicals using Jesus as an imaginary friend. You could do it with God or Superman, all you have to do is think, "What would Superman think of what I am doing?" The fear engendered is a moral one which is based on principled archetypes, not necessarily "run from a giant tiger" fear that assumes a physically real entity which has power against you.
For the record I believe in God, I just don't think he matters. Omnipotent, omniscient entities don't do anything. I'd like to put Preacher comics into the canon.
This question brought to my mind a metaphoric image of a mad scientist building his grand experiment with all his various and eclectic apparatus carefully arranged in his lab. Alchemy? Is that what syncretism is?Would it be easier to list the ones you don't?
How do you combine them all together? And which ones do you mainly use? Like, your top three or four.