dave_a_mbs
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central california
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Hi Rondele- If we start back at the very beginning, just a moment prio to the Big Bang, or whatever you want to call it, there wasn't anything at all except the motivating power of God. In fact, the nature of God was essentially in and of that motivating power, hence the term "Father", as the seed and source.
One moment later and we have the explosion of everything that exists filing the cosmos. It still has the same nature, the projection of the initial Godhead, but not it is beginning to spread out in different patterns. This is where individual patterns start to occur in the interactions of one part with some other part. Yet the sum of the parts remains the same, still just a manifestation of the One God.
Moving ahead a few billion years, here we are. We still are made of the same stuff, the same one empowerment by God. But we all seem to be quite different. Some of us do things that seem terrible to others. That's not because there is a script that tells us to be terrible, but rather that those parts happen to be caught up in relationships that make it seem as if those are proper things to do - a matter of confusion, delusion and iognorance. Like the days when we were children, that it seemed OK to sneak a cookie out of the cookie jar. To us it was innocent. In the same way, to the "evil doers", their actions seem ultimately innocent and appropriate - otherwise they'd alter what they do to some other way to get a payoff.
Finally, if we look a few billion years ahead, we can see all this stuff coming back together again - and it again sums to nothing but the motivating power of God. All the rest, the personalities, the interactions, the errors and discoveries, turn out to be ways in which that power manifested itself. Fortunately, since everything is "made of God-stuff", there is no permanent damage, as God is infinitely capable of self-restoration.
My point is that in the short run, all of these things look really important because we can only see the immediate circumstances. However, in the long run we can see that this is simply God's way of being God and, while doing so, it's God's way of discovering the more preferable, as well as the less preferable, ways of doing things. And the common thread linking the experiences seems to be that a soul is born without any guidelines, and must learn by growing, from total selfishness to total altruism and unity with God.
Jesus didn't seem terribly worried about such things. When people mentioned misdeeds done to children, he responded, "Such things must happen. But woe to those who do them."
dave
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