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The Ultimate Negative Reality (Read 5594 times)
pratekya
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The Ultimate Negative Reality
Oct 24th, 2007 at 10:57pm
 
I wanted to repost my response to the original post, as the o.p. was an interesting one.  Anyone care to respond to this rather than the fight that hijacked the original thread?

Quote:
Quote from the_seeker on Sep 29th, 2007, 12:45am:
i used to think the ultimate negative possibility out of this thing called "life" is that it ceases upon breath. i have since been trumped. the ultimate negative possibility is actually that God not only exists, but is an evil taskmasker denying his creations free will and happiness on their own terms.


You do have the option of free will on your own terms.  Its just that there are repercussions for actions.  Why shouldn't a RAPIST have consequences for his actions in the afterlife?  What it seems like you are asking for, is to be the God of your own experience, which in a sense is allowed but is not fun.  Free will on one's own terms is ultimately a hellish experience, where you are surrounded by like minded spirits who want to exercise their free will on you in selfish ways as well.  The heavenly option requires we do the will of God, which involves loving other people and ourselves.  Yes that involves a choice where your freedom to say, rape others, has been limited.

Quote:
i was reading about the consequences of suicide on various sites like http://www.near-death.com/suicide.html and over and over i read "suicide solves nothing - the soul must reincarnate and deal with the same problems." if so, that's really messed up. why would God create souls/humans only to make them suffer if they don't want to suffer anymore? these accounts explain that when a person commits suicide, it creates negative karma by making their family suffer and feel guilty. umm..... but God doesn't have to suffer or feel guilty for all the terrible circumstances humans endure??? it seems God doesn't have to live by his own law!



God does suffer with victims, and people who feel suicidal because of circumstances or genetics.  In effect, God did become one of us to suffer some of the worst evil that humanity would throw at him at that time (crucifixion and death through torture, rejection, etc.).  Reincarnation in these cases would be another chance to live through difficult problems.  God doesn't expect the same from everyone - 'to those who have been given more, more will be expected - those who have been given less, less will be expected.  By the way, God doesn't expect people to be happy necessarily, and God's ultimate purpose isn't our temporary pleasure or pain (although he is concerned with this, its just virtue/character issues are more important).

Secondly there are passages in the bible that have to do with the afterlife as a type of rest for people who have worked hard on themselves to deal with issues of life.  People who have committed suicide or tempted to would need a much more peaceful sort of heavenly experience then others.  Jesus went on to promise that he was preparing a place just for us individually - meaning we will have a tailor made existence.  Someone who is troubled by depression and needs more peace will have it.

Quote:
on that site, Angie Fenmore's in particular is a very very Christian-oriented NDE. at the end, God even shows her that the time of the Second Coming of Jesus is near!!!! i refuse to believe that. she describes God's voice "encompassed such ferocious anger that with one word it could destroy the universe." umm, why would God be mad at the very thing he created? it makes me wonder how much of the NDE experience is kind of "made up" to fit the beliefs of the experiencer. i would think it was all created in the brain if i didn't know better from people's experiences with ghosts (spirits).



God cares passionately about people, and loves them very much.  Its because of this love that he can be so angry at destructive and hurtful decisions that people make.  We do few actions  (or say few words) that are isolated and independent  - pretty much everything we do or say affects others for good or for bad.  This has ripple effects on others as well. 

Quote:
i thought God was supposed to give us free will, yet one person who committed suicide was told "you have to either live out the rest of your life or reincarnate and go through the same problems." that's free will???????? doesn't sound like free will to me. free will would be the soul being allowed to stay in heaven with everyone else if they wanted to. some suicide NDEr's have even experienced "hell" - demons in the hospital room. i'm starting to wonder if God is actually evil and we are just stuck in his sick twisted game. it kind of makes sense in a way - i mean if God was pure goodness, why would he even allow evil/terrible things to exist in the first place? in fact, why bother with humans in the first place, because they're so incredibly imperfect and have a great capacity for evil? i'm so confused.



Again, you have free will - in fact you can be terribly evil in your interactions or terribly loving.  It doesn't mean there aren't consequences, however.  One cannot be a rapist and be "allowed to stay in heaven with everyone else if they wanted to" without going through a whole lot of repentance / experiencing of what the victim went through.

Quote:
also, what about all the MILLIONS UPON MILLIONS of people who commit "slow suicide" by drinking, not exercising or eating junk food? why the hell do they not get treated like s*it upon death? hell, it seems to me they're saying suiciders get treated worse than RAPISTS AND MURDERERS.



It is possible that God will call people into account for being destructive to their own bodies over a long period of time.

People who commit suicide are throwing away an outrageous opportunity to do good and evil in this life, even if they don't realize it at the time.  Once that is thrown away, they have lost some of that freedom through choices they have made.  No doubt each experience of suicide is treated differently, and its my personal belief that some people who commit suicide end up in heaven.

Quote:
oh yeah, and at the same time these experiences say "suicide solves nothing" etc. they say "suicides are not judged by God - they judge themselves." huh????? why would a soul make themselves suffer more, when they just proved they can't/don't want to handle suffering??? makes no sense.



Again, people have free will, but not freedom from consequences of their actions.

Would the world be better if rapists and torturers were simply dead when they died and didn't know what harm they had done to their victims and the domino effect the evil had on other people?  Do we want to live in a universe where Hitler can live life fully and happily until his physical death and have no repercussions for the millions of his victims?  Thats absurd in the existentialist sense of things, and makes a mockery of the suffering of people.  God actually places a huge value on the suffering of people, and takes it far more seriously than your worldview does.

Quote:
ALSO i thought God was supposed to not generate fear, and supposedly fear is the most dangerous thing on earth and all bad blah blah blah, yet what does these experiences teach in spades? fear fear fear fear fear.



Think of a child who gets caught eating cookies.   You are thinking of God in the sense of a mother who whacks the kid's hand afterwards.  God is really more like a mother who warns the kid they will spoil their appetite for dinner, which is what happens to the kid.  These are natural consequences of evil actions with the free will that God has given us.  Would God be loving if he didn't warn us of terrible experiences that are possible in the afterlife?

Quote:
ALSO what about all those souls they talk about that never even come to Earth in the first place??? obviously THEY don't have to reincarnate and grow past what drove them to suicide because they never had to deal with anything negative in the first place, but us eternally darned humans do?? are we condemned or something? i thought a person could choose not to reincarnate, but that's not what these people heard in their NDE's.



I have no idea what happens to souls that don't incarnate on Earth.  However, along with free will comes good and evil.  We can be forgiven of our evil, but we need to be loving and forgiving towards the evil that others do toward us (assuming they ask for forgiveness), and we need to ask for forgiveness for ourselves.  So there is a mechanism to deal with the evil that we create during our lifetimes.  What you don't get, is life on your own terms.  Thank God for that - the people you have hurt in your lifetime would be living in a unjust paradigm where you would be able to exalt in pleasure at their pain.  There is justice in the universe; justice, and love.
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recoverer
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #1 - Oct 25th, 2007 at 12:20pm
 
Pratekya:

I had some very good heart felt reasons for writing what I wrote. If you considered what I was trying to share you might see that it wasn't simply a hijacked fight.

[quote author=pratekya link=1193281053/0#0 date=1193281052]I wanted to repost my response to the original post, as the o.p. was an interesting one.  Anyone care to respond to this rather than the fight that hijacked the original thread?


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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #2 - Oct 25th, 2007 at 12:40pm
 
Recoverer -
I read what you wrote and actually appreciated what you wrote - I wasn't referring to your writing when I said that.  People should be warned about unscrupulous characters - that in of itself is a helpful service.
  But I'd rather not talk about what's on the other thread and talk about what's on this thread - any thoughts anyone?
Pratekya
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #3 - Oct 25th, 2007 at 1:32pm
 
Pratekya, you said:
"By the way, God doesn't expect people to be happy necessarily, and God's ultimate purpose isn't our temporary pleasure or pain (although he is concerned with this, its just virtue/character issues are more important). "

I think this statement, in an odd way, actually repeats the dilemma Seeker originally lamented about, which is fear of the unknowns in the afterlife.

According to some, it is possible that this fear will color whatever experience of "God" that he might have in the afterlife.

What trumps fear every time? Love. It is always the answer. What we see is our OWN reflection, every time, wherever we are, whatever we do, whatever life we live, whatever death we choose.

love, blink Smiley
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #4 - Oct 25th, 2007 at 2:07pm
 
Blink -
  There is good food for thought in what you have written.
  As for the first point, yes people are afraid of the afterlife and the unknowns involved.  And the teachings of Jesus aren't that comforting at times.  I think some moderate concern/fear about how one's own actions will be evaluated in the afterlife is a generally good thing.  However if this is taken to an extreme it can be very bad.  Someone living in constant fear & guilt is not healthy, and neither is someone who gives no thought to how they treat others / the afterlife at all.  I said that God values character more than temporary suffering or pleasure because of the problem of evil.  Many philosophy students will question how a God of this universe could be all powerful, all loving, and allow so much suffering to happen in the earth.  First of all the question assumes that God's goals are simply maximizing pleasure.  I don't believe that that's true.  God seems to value virtue and the freedom of will to develop virtue or vice more than temporary pleasure or pain.  Given this free will on earth, there comes a time when there needs to be a judgement, or life review or something similar so that people will have to give an account for evil actions and finally realize (possibly for the first time) what they have done to others.  Justice demands this.  In fact the suffering of the world demands this.  If there is no judgement, no justice in the afterlife, then the suffering of millions if not billions is worse than a sick joke, worse than absurdity.  It would be better if life never happened if that were the case.
  As for your second point - I do believe that its true that the only thing we are in control of is our actions & reactions to others, and we can learn to react in loving ways even in the face of evil actions towards ourselves.  However I still think that there really are other people out there besides ourselves and their actions are significant.  In other words, I would disagree that all there is is our reflection, "What we see is our OWN reflection, every time, wherever we are, whatever we do, whatever life we live, whatever death we choose."   But I think I agree with the spirit of what you are writing (if I understand it correctly), that the most important thing, and the thing we are ultimately responsible for, is how we treat others and hopefully show love, and that will most likely get reflected back to us eventually.
Pratekya
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #5 - Oct 25th, 2007 at 4:16pm
 
I know another who feels exactly the same way you do, one for whom I feel a great love, and so I deeply respect your point of view here. Without justice, somehow, some way, this world can seem pointless and unbearably cruel. The idea of a merciful God is difficult to hold in mind when seeing atrocities committed, knowingly and unknowingly, human to human, and in the myriad of other ways that disrespect can be shown toward other living creatures.

But, remember, we have a reptilian brain stem. We are not made to be perfect, clean, quiet, orderly creatures, at least not yet. And we might find such a life unpleasant and boring. Many people do not feel alive unless they have freedoms that other people find far too stimulating.

But, back to justice.

I respect your point of view, and there is little I can add to it. Except that what we consider justice won't be what we find out There. In the afterlife, I mean. The love there is so much greater than what we typically experience, not because we cannot, but because we are not typically taught how to feel it fully.

And I think that is our greatest challenge, here on the earth.

love, blink Smiley


pratekya wrote on Oct 25th, 2007 at 2:07pm:
Blink -
 There is good food for thought in what you have written.
 As for the first point, yes people are afraid of the afterlife and the unknowns involved.  And the teachings of Jesus aren't that comforting at times.  I think some moderate concern/fear about how one's own actions will be evaluated in the afterlife is a generally good thing.  However if this is taken to an extreme it can be very bad.  Someone living in constant fear & guilt is not healthy, and neither is someone who gives no thought to how they treat others / the afterlife at all.  I said that God values character more than temporary suffering or pleasure because of the problem of evil.  Many philosophy students will question how a God of this universe could be all powerful, all loving, and allow so much suffering to happen in the earth.  First of all the question assumes that God's goals are simply maximizing pleasure.  I don't believe that that's true.  God seems to value virtue and the freedom of will to develop virtue or vice more than temporary pleasure or pain.  Given this free will on earth, there comes a time when there needs to be a judgement, or life review or something similar so that people will have to give an account for evil actions and finally realize (possibly for the first time) what they have done to others.  Justice demands this.  In fact the suffering of the world demands this.  If there is no judgement, no justice in the afterlife, then the suffering of millions if not billions is worse than a sick joke, worse than absurdity.  It would be better if life never happened if that were the case.
 As for your second point - I do believe that its true that the only thing we are in control of is our actions & reactions to others, and we can learn to react in loving ways even in the face of evil actions towards ourselves.  However I still think that there really are other people out there besides ourselves and their actions are significant.  In other words, I would disagree that all there is is our reflection, "What we see is our OWN reflection, every time, wherever we are, whatever we do, whatever life we live, whatever death we choose."   But I think I agree with the spirit of what you are writing (if I understand it correctly), that the most important thing, and the thing we are ultimately responsible for, is how we treat others and hopefully show love, and that will most likely get reflected back to us eventually.
Pratekya

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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #6 - Oct 26th, 2007 at 8:39pm
 
Quote:
It doesn't mean there aren't consequences, however.  One cannot be a rapist and be "allowed to stay in heaven with everyone else if they wanted to" without going through a whole lot of repentance / experiencing of what the victim went through.


why not?  why should we have to suffer the repercussions of our actions?  why couldn't that rapist or murderer simply be made not to reincarnate again to hurt people again?  yet God lets that person reincarnate and keep hurting people - why doesn't God stop suffering???     perhaps our free will is not a good thing to have at all, if it only leads to trouble and suffering.  why would God create us only to suffer? 

i certainly hope reincarnation is a CHOICE and not something forced upon us, because i don't want to come back to earth again.
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #7 - Oct 27th, 2007 at 4:59am
 
the_seeker wrote on Oct 26th, 2007 at 8:39pm:
Quote:
It doesn't mean there aren't consequences, however.  One cannot be a rapist and be "allowed to stay in heaven with everyone else if they wanted to" without going through a whole lot of repentance / experiencing of what the victim went through.


why not?  why should we have to suffer the repercussions of our actions?  why couldn't that rapist or murderer simply be made not to reincarnate again to hurt people again?  yet God lets that person reincarnate and keep hurting people - why doesn't God stop suffering???     perhaps our free will is not a good thing to have at all, if it only leads to trouble and suffering.  why would God create us only to suffer? 

i certainly hope reincarnation is a CHOICE and not something forced upon us, because i don't want to come back to earth again. 



Hi Seeker, seems like I saw you raise this question elsewhere and didn't get a sufficient answer so thought I'd put my two cents in.
you asked "why couldn't the rapist or murderer be refused another lifetime so this person can't hurt others..."  actually I think this does happen exactly as you suggest in some cases..a person who refuses to change behavior can be refused the opportunity of another life station by his overseers..not necessarily the big guy god, but we all have counsel and guides here/there which participate in another life planning.
by the same token said criminal can be desiring a certain life station but not have earned it and be forced into a much lower station than they desired due to their karma, or made to stay in a BST region with the likeminded until they think things over and decide to do a little better towards their fellow man. its a process but I do believe mankind is slowly evolving towards peaceful coexistence.

I like Pratekya discourse here, can't add much either, from my own explorations I have seen justice operating out there, in that I have seen that what is given out to another does return to self, the same. and this is a type of justice to experience the hurt one has caused another human being, not always to trade places exactly, but to "feel" that same pain, and that would be like the beginning stages of acquiring a conscious. not every wayward person has a conscious. It's part of the character building that Pratekya mentions. its necessary.

its interesting what he says about pleasure and pain. I tend to agree. pleasure and pain are temporary things, these, we can call emotions, they are often mere baggage, and yet we cling on to them as if they were our very identity, our essence. They are tools, and consider there are levels of being where emotions are not utilized and still, life is thriving in it's way.
PUL, blissful states, nirvana, these are not emotions, but culminations of character building and involuntary, not an objective, delivered by what I call grace.

in the end, as a whole, we are not at a place of complete self responsibility to take, for everything that "happens" to us. when a person accepts there is order in the universe, therefore there is justice, they are taking responsibility for everything that happens to them, good, bad or indifferent, then the way begins to get smooth because this creates courage in the soul and courage is rewarded for those who will take a chance on extending PUL even if hatred is handed to them.

thanks Pratekya, Seeker and Blink, good postings.  Smiley
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #8 - Oct 29th, 2007 at 10:36pm
 
the_seeker wrote on Oct 26th, 2007 at 8:39pm:
Quote:
It doesn't mean there aren't consequences, however.  One cannot be a rapist and be "allowed to stay in heaven with everyone else if they wanted to" without going through a whole lot of repentance / experiencing of what the victim went through.


why not?  why should we have to suffer the repercussions of our actions?  why couldn't that rapist or murderer simply be made not to reincarnate again to hurt people again?  yet God lets that person reincarnate and keep hurting people - why doesn't God stop suffering???     perhaps our free will is not a good thing to have at all, if it only leads to trouble and suffering.  why would God create us only to suffer? 

i certainly hope reincarnation is a CHOICE and not something forced upon us, because i don't want to come back to earth again. 


I'm operating under a worldview where reincarnation is somewhat rare, or at least more rare than eastern traditions would suggest.  The bible seems to suggest that it is appointed unto people to die and be judged, not necessarily die and go through it over and over again.  In addition, it seems a bit strange to me if reincarnation is common simply because we do not remember our past lives.  How are we supposed to learn a lesson if we don't remember previous actions and consequences?  I suppose one could argue that this is a lesson learned through the expression of free will, and that remembering past lives would be in a sense a limitation of that free will, and I would concede the point is made.  However Jesus never mentions reincarnation, aside from some strange things he says about John the Baptist that could be interpreted as him being a reincarnation of Elijah.

Quote:
why doesn't God stop suffering???     perhaps our free will is not a good thing to have at all, if it only leads to trouble and suffering.  why would God create us only to suffer?


Great questions.  Again I think its because there is the possibility for virtue to develop.  You can't have that opportunity without the possibility of suffering.  In other words, you can't have virtue / vice develop without free will, and if there is free will then there will be a great many people who freely choose to do evil.  God must have forseen this, if not in actuality then in probability.  So God still considers it to be worth it - the free will and choosing of developing virtue / vice that carries huge reprocussions for eternity outweighs the temporary suffering while on earth.

Lastly, God wants us to alleviate that suffering - wants people to act in loving ways that would limit suffering and so develop our own virtue as well.
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #9 - Oct 30th, 2007 at 12:57am
 
It is important to recognize that a complex moral system is already implicit in the principle that like attracts like.  This principle already excludes the possibility of a simple choice to leave a Hell with no strings attached.   The trapped spirit cannot function in a "higher" plane unless his "energetic" make-up is transformed to a degree that allows it to vibrate in harmony with the new plane through an authentic adoption of the new core values and desires shared by that planes inhabitants. 

Bliss will then be a function of how conducive a spirit plane is to the fruit of the Holy Spirit--"i. e. unconditinoal "love, joy, peace, patience, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control (Galatians 5:22-23)."  According to Paul's epistle tot he Philippians, instead of judging others, I must view them from the perspective of their potential spiritual magnficence (4:8).  I know myself better than I know the mysteries of their heart.  Therefore, I must resist the temptation to view myself as spiritually "mature (3:12);" rather, I must view myself as a perpetual work-in-progress.  And how does this balance out in terms of my chronic mood?  Paul expresses it this way: "In humiilty esteem others as better than yourselves (2:3)."  This attitudinal reselution is hardly a recipe for low self-esteem.  Rather, I am enthralled by the awesome man I might become by the grace of God through the subtle transforming work of the Holy Spirit.   It's just that my ego's craving for personal credit and applause must be consistently denied.  God must truly receive all the credit for any spiritual progress I achieve.

Consider how such a core self might function in a plane in which like attracts like.  Everyone around me would revere my potential even more than I do.  With their grace-based orientation, everyone else would deem it a privilege rather than a burdensome duty to promote my best interests and happiness.  There could not be a more intense focus on creating a heaven that works for everyone and enhances each other's bliss to the max!

Conversely, in "lower" ego-driven planes, there would often be a clash of conflicting self-interest as each soul becomes more obsessed with using other souls as a means to achieving their own self-centered ends.  Thus, thieves would be continually scheming to rip each other off.  True, such a competitive existence would bring its own lower-order transient pleasures.  Revenge can be temporarily sweet.  Souls would derive some satisfaction from designing a cunning plot that succeeded in acquiring the treasured possessions of other thieves.  From their perspective, these transient pleasures would seem more satisfying than more ethereal heavenly delights.  But the anger, resentment, and frustration of vicious circles of retaliation would make the dominant mood hopelessly depressing and empty. Ultimately, no high-quality joy is sustainable without unconditional love and without a sense that one has fulfilled the purpose for which one was created.  This purpose requires the goal of a sustained intimate communion with God, the source  of PUL.  In both its source and target, PUL is by definition personal.  Otherwise, we must reject the notion that PUL plays a vital role in the soul's evolution towards reunion with "the One."  "The One," you will recall, is the most common expression employed by "Jesus and the angels" for God (according to atheist Howard Storm's NDE).

Don
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #10 - Oct 30th, 2007 at 2:54am
 
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In addition, it seems a bit strange to me if reincarnation is common simply because we do not remember our past lives.  How are we supposed to learn a lesson if we don't remember previous actions and consequences?


supposedly because our SOUL remembers the past lives, and our conscious human brains are just not fully aware of what our soul knows.  they say we choose to forget, to live from a clean slate.  this certainly could make live more challenging, as for example you may not know who your true soulmate is, or who your friends or enemies are.  but of course enemies can turn into friends if you aren't aware of your bad past lives with that person.  i don't know why some people are allowed to remember past lives and others aren't, though. 
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #11 - Oct 30th, 2007 at 2:56am
 
Quote:
and this is a type of justice to experience the hurt one has caused another human being, not always to trade places exactly, but to "feel" that same pain, and that would be like the beginning stages of acquiring a conscious.


what bothers me is this seems like "eye for an eye" type of thinking.  for example, even if someone commits a murder in america, we see it as wrong to then kill that person for his murder... we see it as enough to put that person in jail and hope he develops a conscience about what he did.  it seems like a pretty good idea, as we are ALL guilty of terrible things, surely...  would God create us as imperfect beings only to punish us for our imperfections?  certainly seems unfair.
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #12 - Oct 30th, 2007 at 11:09am
 
Quote:
would God create us as imperfect beings only to punish us for our imperfections?  certainly seems unfair.


I would agree with you if there weren't a chance of becoming forgiven of these terrible things we have done in our lives.  For forgiveness to work we need to ask for forgiveness and honestly try our best to move along from these things; to try 'with all of our heart, soul, mind and strength' to move forward and to stop doing these things.
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #13 - Oct 31st, 2007 at 12:27am
 
We are created as imperfect beings because our weaknesses enhance the beauty of our spiritual progress.  Our free will derives its moral value from our powerful inclinations to choose selfishly.  The intensity of these inclinations is a function of our limited understanding and strength.  The beauty of spirituality is enhanced by the fact that many choose love and service to God, despite the fact that it is not immediately apparent what we "get out of" this decision. Our vulnerability to suffering is a vital aspect of the growth of our character.  If there was no want, there would be no generosity.  If there was no danger, there would be no courage.  If there was no unfair suffering, there would be no compassion.  The moral quality of our moral order would be far inferior if we were incapable of courage, compassion, and generosity. 

Consider this Russian parable.  A Russian king wanted to take a bride.  So he disguised himself as a peasant and wandered the countryside in search of a maiden who could awaken his love and passion.  When he found her, he tried to court her.  After being initially rebuffed, his perseverance payed off and she began to warm up to him.  Soon they fell in love and he went to her father to ask his permission to marry her.  The father refused on the grounds that this suitor was a poor peasant and could not provide the quality of lifestyle he wanted for his daughter.  The king volunteered to work for this Dad and make his farm more productive.   Finally, after much ambivalence, the Dad relented and gave his permission for the marriage. 

The king immediately disclosed his true identity and arranged for the wedding to take place in his palace.  The Dad was highly embarrassed and appalled.  "Why didn't you tell me who you were from the beginning? I would have been proud to have my daughter marry the king!"  The king replied, "I wanted you and your daughter to warm up to my character and personality and love me for what I am, not for who I am; I did not want either of you to defer to my rank an station."  So it is with God when he comes in disguise to court us to be His lovers. 

Don
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Re: The Ultimate Negative Reality
Reply #14 - Oct 31st, 2007 at 12:58pm
 
I like the parable a lot.
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