18. What is Death?
And now we come to the great question, a question on a subject so thoroughly contemplated and pondered throughout the ages in all cultures and within all walks of life – the subject of death. What is death? So many of us …
And now we come to the great question, a question on a subject so thoroughly contemplated and pondered throughout the ages in all cultures and within all walks of life – the subject of death. What is death? So many of us …
One of the things I find quite disturbing and arrogant about theologians, apologists, pastors, and many so-called “spiritual” and “religious” people, is their belief humanity is somehow, some way, something “special.” That is not to say we as individuals are not …
As stated in a previous chapter in this book, “Contradictions and Double-Standards,” I heard a pastor once try to tell a clever story about a man who challenged God on who could make a better man. When the man reached …
The question of free will has been present in my mind for quite some time now, and while I have touched on this concept briefly in the past, only now have I felt compelled to actually investigate this question with any real …
IV. Theological Problems of Christianity We have discovered it time and again throughout this book – the fact that the ego, the self-concept, is an illusion, rendering all belief structures which assume the ultimate reality of the self to be fiction. …
While all words are ultimately inadequate to express what God truly is, perhaps the best way to describe God is the Oneness of All. God is the One, the Uncreated All. God is that which is never born and never …
The name “Jesus Christ” is an expression of the experience of a dual nature, both human and “divine.” To be clear, when I speak of “spirit” or of the “divine,” I am speaking metaphorically, and am not referring to the concept of “substance …
The common view of salvation within traditional Christianity is to view the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ as the purchase of the souls of those who believe Jesus is the Son of God who offered himself as a necessary …
In a previous chapter entitled “The Principles of Oneness” in this book, we learned there are two fundamental principles of oneness – stasis and change. We also learned the principle of change is what is responsible for “creating” energy, or the “stuff” we …
When I look back on the trajectory of my life, I can see how the creation of this book was in many ways inevitable. My desire to understand all of the things which were drilled into my head in CCD …