dave_a_mbs
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I'm going to take a third posture in this discussion - Given my outlook, rather predictably I wonder whether we are dealing with only one level of reality here, but are mistaking it for two or more, which means that we might be asking the wrong questions.
If we view reality as innately dualistic, where God is the Infinite Stranger, then the various appearances of God will be at best confusing. If we assume that spirits are of the same dualistic sort, infinitely removed, or largely so, then we still are going to be hard put to understand who or what is manifesting to us because we and they are of different sorts. In that case, the arguments can rage on forever, but without resolution. Further, given no common organizational principle, all their manifestations will be more or less chaotic - unordered in our eyes, regardless of their ultimate (inaccessible) origin.
If we view reality as monistic, starting with God at one end, as Caryn emphasizes, and continuing into the material world at the other end where we live, we are dealing with degrees of manifestation of the Single Nature which pervades all of us. (I personally like this idea best.) Then any reference to any of the sages, prophets, avatars etc, is somewhere along a continuum between totaly God and totally human. Let's call it a "God-vector."
Some of the various avatars and such, Siddhartha and Mohammed are good example, have totally denied divinity, yet they have manifested it by their lives and lessage. Others, Nisargadatta Maharaj and Jesus are good examples, have accepted and acknowledged their divinity. Derpending on who you speak with, Buddhists might have thoughts of Siddhartha as a divine being or as a common person. So, by espousing monism, we have a long range of both perceived and actual Godliness as a primary parameter, with offshoots of personal expression of this Godliness according to the individuals in specific (I'm reminded of Teilard de Chardin's "tree", where the root is God and the fresh leafy shoots are you and me, more or less.)
If proceed along the "God-vector" from everyday human diferences, we eventually see these differences vanish as everything turns into a singler God-locus, which is the point of origin of the "God-vector".
Personally, I feel that as we approach the God end of the line, we encounter more beings of the sort that are identifiable with Jesus. This does not necessarily mean that they are specifically the same previously-human-but-now-absorbed-into-God Jesus. However, at the God end of the vector we do find the Christ into which we presuamably are asorbed.
A sidebar here - By Christ is meant one of the three aspects of God. There is the substantive and obdurately enduring aspect which we call "God the Father" because it is the essential nature from which all arises. There is the logical ature that ties together and makes rational and true the and in that sense, is the Mediator, which we usually call the "Holy Spirit". The third aspect of God is the projection of "beingness" into the mundane world which we call the "Christ". This role is adopted by avatars such as Jesus and by yogis, sinats, prophets etc who follow the same route of "carrying their cross" by progressively abandoning the perks and pleasures of being human, and in their place accept a "here and now" definition at the pleasure of the whatever God tosses at them.
In this sense, everyone who manifests the Christ is a "Son of God". I think it was St Paul who put it when he met with some apostles,"I know ye all, all Sons of God."
Now we get into the question of whether all Sons of God are Jesus, at least in the figurative sense of being the personal name given to a state of oneness with God, hence equally well known as one with the Christ. Or is Jesus the "one and only", to which no others are alike, in which case the Jesus to which we refer has retained human attributes by which he stands out and is identifiable, To me, the discriminable and unique personification called Jesus must then mean Jesus-the-man, as opposed to the projected Christt, or Jesus-as-God.
I happen to be a Radical Monist, I suggest that all the saints and avatars of all religions of all planets and galaxies are identical to the Son of God, and that Jesus is one of that group. Thus, despite birth, creed, nation or whatever, all resolves into the same undifferentiated state at the God end of the vector, and into individual actors like us at the other end. (And, because I'm Very Radical, I suggest that the only difference between you and me and God is a matter ofawareness and acceptance. As a simple supporting argument, what else could we say about an avatar saving the arachnoid populace of Star Beta-4 of the M47 galaxy? From that, the rest follows.)
This argues with Matthew's idea that Moses was not a "Son of God", because it places him along the God-vector at the God end, or very close to it. As Bishop Berkeley argued, there has to be contact for there to be intereaction. I also place Mohammed there (despite the evident misunderstanding that led to mullah's ruling by Sharia and Hadith instead of rational monotheism). And, I place everyone else who has a divine revelation at the same general end of the God-vector.
Given all this preliminary BS, I suggest that what we are involved in, as we try to make sense of the various apparitions, is both a degree of Oneness plus a degree of Humanness, extreme states of the God-vector. The result would seem to be a combination of these qualities assembled in the manner best suited to the individual having the experience, which means that (1) we are going to have to know a lot more about their personal psychology to understand precisely who and what each has encountered. After removal of the specific individuals that were claimed, we are left with a common experience that appears to be transcendental, to bring access to higher spiritual values, and to lead to good results for the vast majority. (2) The names given to the various apparitions are very likely those that seem tobest fit the circumstances for the individual. I suggest that these arise from inability to express the experiences in a better manner. At the same time, the degree to which the experiences seem to bring the person closer to God will probably be reflected in the "Godliness" of the apparition, and in turn, will be a reflection of their proper spiritual maturity.
Aside from these rather general concepts, we may be discussing something mor like what color clothing was the avater wearing at the time of manifestation, and whether this has a bearing on the weather in the spirit world.
You guys bth have keen minds - this is fun! PUL d
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