Berserk
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Hi,
Every now and then, I still "lurk" on this site. At present, I don't want to intrude myself into the theological debates simmering on this site, suffice to say that I think I can disprove almost everything that critics of the Bible have recently said. If you want me to elaborate this claim, communicate with me via a "private message." Many posters from here now communicate with me via E-mail and I'm grateful to the site for many new friends. But I want to keep my promise to assume a low profile until summer and to plunge into these debates now would force me to develop long threads. But I thought you'd be interested in three points about this particular post:
(1) The Bible does not explicitly address the question of other life in our universe, though the Hebrew term "elohim" often means not "God" or "angels", but "heavenly beings," the identity of which is a mystery.
(2) Belief in extraterrestrial life is not unprecedented in early Christianity. For example, Origen, an early church father, (late 2nd-early 3rd century) taught that the universe teems with other worlds populated by intelligent life that requires bodies appropriate to that world. Contrary to the New Age consensus that Origen taught earthly reincarnation, he often ridicules that idea. But Origen does teach that in the afterlife many will incarnate in new bodies in these other worlds.
(3) Then there is Jesus' teaching in NDEs as opposed to the Bible. For example, consider what "Jesus and the angels" tell Howard Storm during his NDE about God's nature and extraterrestrial life. Jesus dominates the conversation, but the proximity of angels sometimes makes it unclear to Storm whether it is Jesus or one of His angels that is communicating telepathically with him. As an academic specialist in life of Jesus research, I am certain this really is Jesus and not some archetype or masquerading helper, despite His controversial claims that are sure to alienate some fundamentalists. Here is a sample quote:
"The angels refer to God in many ways, but the term most often used is The One. God is the One because God is the source of everything. There is NO THING other than God. Everything came from God and everything returns to God.
They explained to me in a way I could understand that God is like an artist who creates for the sheer pleasure of creating. One of our attributes that is in the image and likeness of God is our desire to create. We are creative not only as artists, musicians, writers, and performers, but as parents, workers, healers, lovers, and learners.
God creates universes which in turn become procreative. There are countless intelligent beings in the universe we inhabit and infinitely more in universes that occupy othe dimensions.
The Creation is entirely in the NOW to God. God's consciousness is the entire creation. Everything that was, and everything that will be, is this moment to God (pages 68-69)."
One pet peeve of mine is that New Agers commonly conceive of God as "All That Is" and act as if this conception is novel or anti-Scriptural. In fact, it is quite consistent with biblical teaching, just more inane and simple-minded because it is less nuanced. For example, it overlooks the distinction between ways God is transcendent and ways God is immanent in creation.
I want to recommend two books that many of my new friends from this site hav already read or will be reading and disussing with me. In my view, both books are the best of their kind ever written. Not surprisingly, the first is Howard Storm's "My Descent into Death."
His NDE in Paris is as dramatic as any ever recorded. But what makes his book so riveting is the role of angels (discarnate helpers?) in saving him from certain death and guiding his spiritual path. Storm was a militant atheist at the time of his NDE, but is now a United Church of Christ pastor in Cincinnati. What makes it especially important for me are all the subtle nuances of Jesus' postmortem teaching to Howard, nuances often not widely recognized. In fact, Storm's Jesus has changed my mind on a few theological issues. IMHO, the second book is also the best book of its kind ever written: David Fontana, "Is There an Afterife: A Comprehensive View of the Evidence." If you read Fontana, you will know what you're missing from standard discussions on this site. When I return to the site this summer, I will be discussing many of the issues raised by him. To give you an idea, here are his chapter titles:
1. Survival of Death: Questions and Beliefs 2. Evidence from Modern Parapsychology 3. Evidence from Apparitions 4. Hauntings 5. Mediumship: History and Background 6. Mental Mediumship 7. Three Outstanding Mental Mediums 8. Drop-in Communicators 9. Proxy Cases 10. Are Statements by Mediums Too General and Too Trivial? (a discussion of Schwartz & others) 11. Physical Mediumship: Independent Voice Phenomena 12. Physical Mediumship: Materializations and Other Phenomena 13. Physical Mediumship: More Recent Examples and the Question of Fraud 14. Instrumental Transcommunication (If you're interested in that communication device Bruce was trying to make, you'll love this chapter.) 15. Near-Death Experiences 16. Out-of-Body Experiences 17. Reincarnation 18. The Nature of an Afterlife
OK, back off my soapbox and back into obscurity until summer.
Don
P.S. And no, Marilyn, I don't know JD, but I do admire his courage and grace under fire.
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