Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

God Without Religion by Sankara Saranam

The sense of self, or identity, can expand to include all of humanity, regardless of nationality, beliefs, ethnicity, race, gender, or lifestyle...God Without Religion guides readers to expand their sense of self until it encompasses every living being, eradicating all preconditions for conflict and war.

... More often, religion distances worshipers from their inherent spirituality by directing their attention to outer rituals that reinforce dogmatic belief systems. In either instance religion stifles questioning, which is why antagonism between mystics and orthodoxy--such as Jesus and Jewish leaders, Buddha and the Brahmin, and the Sufis and Islam--permeates the history of religion. Instead of facilitating a dialogue with God, religious leaders interpret God for their followers, which has the effect of narrowing the sense of self so much that it is perceived as separate from the infinite self of God. If we were to focus awareness inwardly, very deeply, we would no longer need an interpreter because we would have a direct knowledge to the universal self peering through the eyes of all.

....God Without Religion offers a way for individuals to discover and define God on their own rather than accepting the interpretation of a particular religious doctrine. Instead of providing answers about God as organized religions do, the book encourages readers to explore their ideas of God by asking a series of questions that ultimately expand their sense of identity. I call this "worshiping by wondering." Wonder is the gateway to spiritual knowledge. The more questions we ask about the nature of God, the more profound the answers will be, leading to deeper questions which broaden our perceptions and expand our sense of self. Constantly challenging our conclusions and refining our knowledge of God promotes the deep spiritual growth needed to transcend the violence so prevalent in the world today.


....The idea of an infinite God shared by all people emerges from an unexpected form of devotion: worshiping by wondering. Instead of restating old beliefs, we begin asking new questions: What is God? What is the connection between God and self? What happens to my definition of God as my sense of self expands? Every answer is then challenged, transporting us as freethinkers beyond the boundaries of organized religion and into true spirituality, which is permeated throughout with a personal, all-loving image of God used to focus the heart and mind.


God Without Relgion by Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Longest lie ever told

Rev. Dr. T J Joshua wrote in his Manorama column Innathe Chinthavishayam that three words are the most powerful to bring change in the world: I am wrong. If it is true in relation to individuals, it must be true to communities, nations and civilizations. Recently it was reported after a study of 20000 people that most racists are religiously conservative people. Those who consider themselves spiritual are often most selfish. Cultures and civilzations are really built on terror and brutality, injustice and exploitation. Will we able to say that our cherished institutions, religions, traditions are wrong. Then only these words prove to be powerful and our world takes the path of truthfulness. An impossible possibility. Nietzche said, truth is the longest lie we ever told. We need to say we are wrong, our spirituality, institutions, culture and whatever we have built up on what Jesus told, hypocrisy. Dr. K. M Roy has written in Mangalam an apt essay on the nature of Spirituality of Kerala religious leaders. Thanks to the Malankara Orthodox church website which highlighted both articles Sphere: Related Content