Albert,
I am touched at your personal encounters with Jesus and heaven, and I respect that. You have taken up the mantle of Don's views after his display of anti-PUL yesterday caused yet another in a series of self-imposed banishments from this forum.
I would as you the same question you pose to others, but in the converse. You ask:
" What are you going to do if you get to the glory of heaven one day and find that Christ is a key part of it? Are you going to say: "No, thanks, not for me,"
I would ask you, if you find that on crossing over that the principle of God and Heaven is PUL, and that the personal identification of Jesus is but one way to God, but not the only way, what will you say?
I am going to start another NDE thread as soon as I have time to set the record straight about the effect of culture and expectation on those encountered in NDEs. I have alluded to this before. Howard Storm, and George Ritchie published moving, eloquent NDEs in the Western world of their encounters with Jesus and heaven. Due to the dissemination of information in the modern world, and on this board, one gets the impression that the vast majority of NDEs encounter JC, or at least a disproportionate number of people do. However, after analyzing the data over many months, I have found the number of cases to be well proportioned to the culture, religious exposure and expectation of the experiencers.
Storm and Ritchie's cases were but two; the Bardo Thodol is an ancient text of the afterlife experience affirmed by the experiences of countless buddhists through meditation and their own NDEs, which were not documented, but acknowledged in their verbal tradition. If one looks at the millions who have practised buddhism and had NDEs and confirmed experiences in the Bardo Thodol (Tibetan Book of the Dead), the numbers are staggering, and would dwarf any Western accounts of NDEs. There are beings of light (thought to be Buddhas) to be found, and many descriptions that sound exactly like Western NDEs, eventhough this text is many centuries old. Notably, JC is absent in the meetings for these people (though we can not say if another light being is being named for the same experience of PUL).
I have said before on this site that given the stated number of Muslims (2 billion) who acknowledge the teachings of Christ in the Koran, and a similar number of Christians (estimated at 2.1 billion in 2001) out of perhaps 6 billion people on the planet, one could reasonably expect the being of light and love universally felt in many NDEs to be associated with JC in at least 4.1 out of 6 billion people from religious teachings and exposure alone. Given the prevalence, it would not at all be surprising to find an example of a Jew or a Muslim who had an unexpected encounter with JC.
What one can not say, in NDEs is that a large number of Asian people or people in other cultures (my Thai examples on the other thread) do not experience Christ because they have either never heard of him or have closed their hearts. This is patently unfair, and not supported by the NDE evidence.
I bring up all of this to add perspective to selective text citing on this forum. Without looking into the Bardo Thodol, its origins, its affirmations, and the frequency in which NDEs correspond to it in Asian and Tibetan culture, one is apt to make incorrect assumptions based on a handful of descriptive and well published texts of NDEs in the West.
My point is not to decide the issue of Christ's divinity, but to weigh the evidence from the world over, and acknowledge NDEs both beautiful and terrifying in large numbers in other cultures that do not involve Jesus but do gel with the collective experience of the geographical culture.
Deep inside me, I have come to believe in the love of Heaven. I am still striving for it, and I believe Swedenberg's dictum of trying to live life showing a love of God and a love of one's fellow man is a great roadmap for us all.
I would urge all on this board to keep an open mind about the beliefs of others, and not be upset if certain posts may or may not acknowledge what one believes to be true. True realization of the love of Heaven does not require my making my fellow human being on this forum acknowledge my experiences or my beliefs over their own.
Matthew