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JussiUt 06-03-2007 09:19 AM

The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religion
 
I'm very interested in hearing how this connection is born. If you experience a spiritual experience/mystical experience or whatever you want to call it how do you draw the link between that feeling and one particular religion? How do you know that that experience was exactly the product of Allah or a product of God?

I know the most logical explonation here is that you "choose" the religion which is around you. If you live in a Christian country or in a Christian community or you have Christian parents you are most certainly going to believe that the experience was related to that particular religion. That's logical. What I'm interested in is that how do believers explain to themselves that their religion is the correct one and the others are nonsense?

I know that at least PairTheBoard has played with the idea that all religions are attempts to understand God and that all religions are "related to" the same God and that people just interpret things differently. I would think this would be the most logical and rational position for a believer. If however you truly believe that your religion and its dogmas are absolutely true how do you explain it to yourself logically?

I guess the simplest question would be "what makes Christianity special"? How do you "know" that your spiritual experience indicates that there is a Christian God and not Brahma?

The Christians who believe Christianity is correct is naturally the group who can answer this the best but others are welcomed to chime in.

I just think it's fascinating that people truly say they "know" that Christianity is right and other religions are wrong. What do they think about the origins of the other religions? Are they just illogical and stupid or what is their justification for this belief?

AWoodside 06-03-2007 11:21 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
Meh, I think it's psychological conditioning, plain and simple. Either they've been indoctrinated to some particular faith from the time they were born, or they switch gears mentally at some point in life due to a traumatizing experience. This statement is mostly from personal experience, but I've never met a mid-life convert that just started believing for no reason. Every single one (and I've met a fair amount) convert after some traumatizing or emotionally scaring event and they turn to whatever faith is most convenient at the time and then get hooked because of the psychological comfort it provides.

My first instinct was to write that these people are simply intellectually bankrupt, irrational, and lack any semblance of personal courage, but after a few minutes of thought I don't think that's fair. I was raised Catholic and indoctrinated pretty heavily when I was young so I know first hand how effective the mental conditioning churches excel at can be. It took me a long time to remove the last vestiges of said conditioning, so I sympathize with those currently suffering from it.

I agree that in some respects the question you ask is "fascinating" but I have a feeling the answer, if we can ever satisfactorily arrive at it, will be less earth-shattering than you might hope. When I was a Christian and I knew deep down in my heart that Christianity was correct it was nothing more than the result of highly effective psychological conditioning performed on an impressionable young child. Church and Sunday school every week, prayers before bed, prayers before sleep, discussion of faith in the classroom (catholic school), threat of eternal torture for not believing, etc. etc. During this time I even had what I thought were spiritual experiences, where I heard God talking to me, but I was an imaginative kid and my experiences with God, looking back, were not qualitatively different than any of the experiences I had with any of my other imaginary friends.

goodgrief 06-03-2007 12:24 PM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
Christianity is not special. The answer to your question is that your vision aka mystical experience tells you what it's about. It is not just a warm fuzzy feeling. It is a complete experience that seems as real or more real than any other experience. As a child, I had a classical "enlightenment" experience down to the flash of light that broke open my skull. In that experience, I was "informed" that adults were just pretending to believe in God, just as they did with Santa Claus, because it was a game we have to play in our society to be accepted and not be accused of being a communist. I was informed that all intelligent people knew the secret, that God did not exist, but that we simply don't talk about such matters if we know what is good for us. How was my vision any different from the vision desccribed by Paul on the road to Damascus? (Flashing lights, voice, important message from our sponsors, etc.) It was exactly the same, it just carried a different message. People's susceptibility to such visions seems to be linked to activity in their temporal lobes. I was experiencing some very severe headaches of unknown origin over a period of a couple of years at that time. It is annoying that subjectivity reality can sometimes feel so much more "real" than objective reality, but no use letting it go to your head and kidding yourself that it has anything to do with some guy who may or may not have lived thousands of years earlier. The guy who gets the message from Jesus may be more socially acceptable than the guy who gets the message from Allah that "white people are the devil" or the guy who gets the message that he has been contacted by the Space Brothers for genetic testing, but his message isn't any more real and shouldn't be taken any more seriously. We have an agreement in our society to tiptoe around and pretend that Christianity is somehow special and entitled to special respect because we are, as a society, cowards afraid to point out that nonsense is nonsense. It isn't anything deeper than that. If you ever had a vision, you would quickly realize that they all seem real.

Bigdaddydvo 06-03-2007 01:25 PM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religion
 
I'll do my best to answer from personal experience. Spiritual experiences are significantly different than other human emotions. To narrow it down a bit, I'll contrast spiritual joy with happiness derived from earthly events/accomplishments. I have a whole host of terrific "worldly" events to draw from for this example (meeting my wife, kids being born, running the Boston Marathon, my West Point graduation day, winning big poker tournaments, even seeing U2 in concert, etc) All those things felt awesome, were exciting, and are among my most treasured memories. Yet they all lacked something present in my most joyful spiritual experiences.

I'll use a recent example. When I was deployed the last time, there was a significant shortage of Catholic priests in the AO. Thus I was unable to attend Mass for a long period time. During that stretch, I developed an intense spirtual hunger, especially for reception of the Holy Eucharist. Later through some good fortune, I was able to attend Mass for the first time in the deployment. From the moment the priest began Mass "In the Name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit" to Communion and the closing prayer, I felt a spiritual high that rivaled many in my life. Spiritual joy is the purest form of happiness there is. As you feel God's love radiate in your soul, you feel no desire to be anywhere else. No happiness derived from any drug, earthly relationship, or accomplishment could ever mirror it. The happiness I felt was not self induced from years of "conditioning" as some suggest but an absolutely real experience. As I've said, in my life I've had some absolutely kick ass non-spiritual experiences, yet none can compare with those of the spiritual realm.

If you're curious, I recommend reading the biographies and writings of several well known Catholic mystics of the last century and the recounting of their spiritual experiences. Among them are St. Faustina and St. Padre Pio.

bunny 06-03-2007 08:20 PM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religion
 
I think there is no rational way to determine the correct religion, although there are rational grounds for excluding some (those which make claims contradicting known facts).

Personally, I think subjective experience is good grounds for thinking there is something there, but claiming you know much more about it (other than it induces a subjective feeling) is not justified. I never struggled with this as a believer. I considered myself a christian who was probably following the wrong religion.

godBoy 06-03-2007 08:51 PM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
I'm very interested in hearing how this connection is born. If you experience a spiritual experience/mystical experience or whatever you want to call it how do you draw the link between that feeling and one particular religion? How do you know that that experience was exactly the product of Allah or a product of God?

[/ QUOTE ]
The bible gives very descriptive characteristics of God, and tells the stories of many people who throughout history have connected with him.
The Christian finds himself noticing the uncanny resemblance between the God described in the bible and the God that they know personally.
But then there's lots of things, often I will(even this morning) wake up with a Book and a Chapter in my mind, I can't explain how 'perfect' these scriptures always are.
Another reason I strongly believe that Christianity is correct is that other Christians are always able to see something in me when somethings not right, they 'know' things about me that no-one could possibly 'know' for sure.
The God of amazing coincidences..
I suppose my belief is the lump sum of all of these amazing coincidences.
[ QUOTE ]
I know the most logical explonation here is that you "choose" the religion which is around you. If you live in a Christian country or in a Christian community or you have Christian parents you are most certainly going to believe that the experience was related to that particular religion. That's logical. What I'm interested in is that how do believers explain to themselves that their religion is the correct one and the others are nonsense?

[/ QUOTE ]
The fact that people are exposed to that which their parents enable them to be exposed to is no argument at all that Christianity is not correct.
[ QUOTE ]
I know that at least PairTheBoard has played with the idea that all religions are attempts to understand God and that all religions are "related to" the same God and that people just interpret things differently. I would think this would be the most logical and rational position for a believer. If however you truly believe that your religion and its dogmas are absolutely true how do you explain it to yourself logically?

[/ QUOTE ]
This just isn't right, it's no where close to logical or reasonable that mutually exclusive beliefs can co-exist.
This type of belief is just intellectual dishonesty and a perversion of the truth (if such a thing exists). The thing that separates religions is it's theology, it's defining 'facts' about the nature of God that it claims. ptb shouldn't try to make Christianity something it is not, it's nothing more than muddying the waters and perverting the truth.

[ QUOTE ]
I guess the simplest question would be "what makes Christianity special"? How do you "know" that your spiritual experience indicates that there is a Christian God and not Brahma?

The Christians who believe Christianity is correct is naturally the group who can answer this the best but others are welcomed to chime in.

I just think it's fascinating that people truly say they "know" that Christianity is right and other religions are wrong. What do they think about the origins of the other religions? Are they just illogical and stupid or what is their justification for this belief?

[/ QUOTE ]
I don't claim to 'know' all that much, just logically concluded beliefs from my experiences.

Firstly, There is too much in the atheistic world view that doesn't fit my experience.
Secondly, there is sufficient evidence(personally) to suggest that Jesus is in fact who he claimed to be.

Phil153 06-04-2007 12:13 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
godBoy,

I'd like you to think carefully about this...

If you were born in Iran to Muslim parents, and had a Muslim education, do you think you would be a Christian? Or a follower of Muhammed?

How about if you were born in Tibet? Christian or Tibetan Buddhist?

The rest of your post is interesting, and I'm merely curious about where you'd stand on this. Not trying to make a point or have a debate.

luckyme 06-04-2007 12:43 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
The Christian finds himself noticing the uncanny resemblance between the God described in the bible and the God that they know personally.

[/ QUOTE ]

It's the 'canny' part that is the expected ho-hum. It'll become uncanny when christian experience is with a Sikh god , and a hindu experience is with a christian god, and a ...

luckyme

godBoy 06-04-2007 01:57 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
If you were born in Iran to Muslim parents, and had a Muslim education, do you think you would be a Christian? Or a follower of Muhammed?

[/ QUOTE ]
I wouldn't be myself then now would I. I could say that I would most probably be a Muslim, yes.

[ QUOTE ]
How about if you were born in Tibet? Christian or Tibetan Buddhist?

[/ QUOTE ]
Same question, same answer.

godBoy 06-04-2007 01:59 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
The Christian finds himself noticing the uncanny resemblance between the God described in the bible and the God that they know personally.

[/ QUOTE ]

It's the 'canny' part that is the expected ho-hum. It'll become uncanny when christian experience is with a Sikh god , and a hindu experience is with a christian god, and a ...

luckyme

[/ QUOTE ]
This happens all the time. I know many believers who have a history with different religions.

chezlaw 06-04-2007 02:01 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religion
 
[ QUOTE ]
I'll use a recent example. When I was deployed the last time, there was a significant shortage of Catholic priests in the AO. Thus I was unable to attend Mass for a long period time. During that stretch, I developed an intense spirtual hunger, especially for reception of the Holy Eucharist. Later through some good fortune, I was able to attend Mass for the first time in the deployment. From the moment the priest began Mass "In the Name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit" to Communion and the closing prayer, I felt a spiritual high that rivaled many in my life. Spiritual joy is the purest form of happiness there is. As you feel God's love radiate in your soul, you feel no desire to be anywhere else. No happiness derived from any drug, earthly relationship, or accomplishment could ever mirror it. The happiness I felt was not self induced from years of "conditioning" as some suggest but an absolutely real experience. As I've said, in my life I've had some absolutely kick ass non-spiritual experiences, yet none can compare with those of the spiritual realm.


[/ QUOTE ]
I've had this as well, its amazing. The suns shining, the anticipation, that jingle, Richie Benaud's dulcet tones welcoming us to the first morning of the first test of the summer. God is in his heaven.

chez

godBoy 06-04-2007 02:05 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
Use multiple paragraphs please,

[ QUOTE ]
We have an agreement in our society to tiptoe around and pretend that Christianity is somehow special and entitled to special respect because we are, as a society, cowards afraid to point out that nonsense is nonsense. It isn't anything deeper than that.

[/ QUOTE ]
Is that a fact or an opinion?

Taraz 06-04-2007 03:03 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
I was asking this very question in a thread a week ago. I never really got an answer that I found satisfactory.

PairTheBoard claimed at the time that it all just gets wrapped up in the reality of the spiritual experience. You hear these things going into the experience so they become incorporated in it.

I think that something similar is probably going on. You hear all these things about God. You have a religious experience. You start believing all these things about God because he "spoke" to you and you have no reason to doubt the claims.

Maybe later you learn that something you heard about God doesn't jive with what you see in the world. Then you go down one of two paths. You either convince yourself that you were told something about God that is incorrect, or you convince yourself that what you see/hear in the world is incorrect. Depending on how hardcore you are in your faith, you could be in a spot where you think that what you heard about God can't be incorrect because he "spoke" to you and he wouldn't have if you were mistaken about who he really was. So then this subjective reality becomes more real than the objective reality because obviously objective reality was "wrong".

godBoy 06-04-2007 03:15 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
I considered myself a christian who was probably following the wrong religion.

[/ QUOTE ]
Sorry, Did I read this correctly?

How can possibly follow something you 'probably' believe to be wrong?

Taraz 06-04-2007 03:19 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]

[ QUOTE ]
I know that at least PairTheBoard has played with the idea that all religions are attempts to understand God and that all religions are "related to" the same God and that people just interpret things differently. I would think this would be the most logical and rational position for a believer. If however you truly believe that your religion and its dogmas are absolutely true how do you explain it to yourself logically?

[/ QUOTE ]
This just isn't right, it's no where close to logical or reasonable that mutually exclusive beliefs can co-exist.
This type of belief is just intellectual dishonesty and a perversion of the truth (if such a thing exists). The thing that separates religions is it's theology, it's defining 'facts' about the nature of God that it claims. ptb shouldn't try to make Christianity something it is not, it's nothing more than muddying the waters and perverting the truth.


[/ QUOTE ]

I'm not saying that you have to believe it, but I don't really think it's all that illogical. If you believe in God, why would it be illogical to think that all human attempts to reach him have ended up misinterpreting his message in some way? I don't think PTB ever claimed that all religious theologies are compatible, just that they were all trying to get to God in some way.

I mean, Muslims believe that Jesus was from God. Christians believe Moses was from God. But Muslim Theology doesn't jive with Christian Theology which doesn't jive with Jewish Theology.

godBoy 06-04-2007 03:35 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
It's not right to give equal credibility to all religions.

The very point that mutually exclusive theologies exist amongst religions means you have a choice to make.
I've said myself that i'm sure that there is truth in religions other than Christianity, but to be a 'Christian' is to agree on the points where it differs from others.

Taraz 06-04-2007 03:43 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
It's not right to give equal credibility to all religions.

The very point that mutually exclusive theologies exist amongst religions means you have a choice to make.
I've said myself that i'm sure that there is truth in religions other than Christianity, but to be a 'Christian' is to agree on the points where it differs from others.

[/ QUOTE ]

Oh, I wasn't arguing at all that PTB's view is a "Christian" view. I just don't think it's a logically inconsistent view.

What do you mean that it's not right to give all religions equal credibility? In this post you seem to be agreeing with my overall point, so I'm not sure what you mean. Obviously some religions are going to seem "more right" to each individual.

And I don't think you necessarily have to make a choice. You can pick and choose like all of us do anyway [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img].

godBoy 06-04-2007 03:53 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
Oh, I wasn't arguing at all that PTB's view is a "Christian" view. I just don't think it's a logically inconsistent view.

[/ QUOTE ]
What is logically inconsistent is that you believe that all religions are pointing to the same thing - when the individual religions are clearly pointing in very different directions.

[ QUOTE ]
What do you mean that it's not right to give all religions equal credibility? In this post you seem to be agreeing with my overall point, so I'm not sure what you mean. Obviously some religions are going to seem "more right" to each individual.

[/ QUOTE ]
I do agree with your main point.
Some religions are just perversions of other religions and they should be seen as such.

[ QUOTE ]
And I don't think you necessarily have to make a choice. You can pick and choose like all of us do anyway.

[/ QUOTE ]
I'm not one for making up my own religion, that's intellectual dishonesty and wishful thinking.

bunny 06-04-2007 03:55 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
I considered myself a christian who was probably following the wrong religion.

[/ QUOTE ]
Sorry, Did I read this correctly?

How can possibly follow something you 'probably' believe to be wrong?

[/ QUOTE ]
Most people do it all the time. I have a bunch of beliefs regarding science for example, but given the nature of scientific theories I am pretty confident that they are not true representations of the world. I dont see this as a problem, do you?

With regard to christianity, of course, what I mean is that I assume that my interpretation of the bible is incorrect (after all, how could I possibly expect to get it exactly right?). That doesnt change the fact that it "seems right" to me.

Taraz 06-04-2007 04:04 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Oh, I wasn't arguing at all that PTB's view is a "Christian" view. I just don't think it's a logically inconsistent view.

[/ QUOTE ]
What is logically inconsistent is that you believe that all religions are pointing to the same thing - when the individual religions are clearly pointing in very different directions.

[/ QUOTE ]

I disagree. One could easily claim that the reason they are pointing in different directions is because humans have misinterpreted things. Is there anything you have in mind when you say they clearly point in different directions? I'm not arguing that this viewpoint is correct or somehow better, just that it isn't illogical necessarily.

[ QUOTE ]

[ QUOTE ]
What do you mean that it's not right to give all religions equal credibility? In this post you seem to be agreeing with my overall point, so I'm not sure what you mean. Obviously some religions are going to seem "more right" to each individual.

[/ QUOTE ]
I do agree with your main point.
Some religions are just perversions of other religions and they should be seen as such.

[/ QUOTE ]

Or you could say that all religions are just perversions of the same religion/God. That seems to be an equally consistent position.
[ QUOTE ]

[ QUOTE ]
And I don't think you necessarily have to make a choice. You can pick and choose like all of us do anyway.

[/ QUOTE ]
I'm not one for making up my own religion, that's intellectual dishonesty and wishful thinking.

[/ QUOTE ]

I don't see why you keep saying it's intellectually dishonest. Would you mind expanding on that? To me it's seems the most intellectually honest. If none of the religions make sense to you as a whole, why is it wrong to choose to follow the tenets that you agree with? You wouldn't be able to claim that you follow a particular religion, but I don't see how it's dishonest.

I'm 100% fine with you disagreeing with this position, but I think it's a little strange to call it more illogical than any one of the given religions.

bunny 06-04-2007 04:09 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
In case it's not clear what I meant, I am referring to beliefs like:
It's impossible to travel faster than the speed of light, there are a bunch of fundamental particles which combine in various ways to make "bigger" sub-atomic particles, natural selection accounts for the variety of species in some nebulous, half-understood way, the universe expanded from an infinitely dense point, a variety of half-remembered things from astronomy and astrophysics regarding the formation of stars, planets and black holes, etc etc

While I believe each of these things, I am very confident that we dont have them all right. I cant say which ones of course, yet I am left believing in a bunch of statements but confident that they aren't all true. It sounds peculiar, but I dont think it is an uncommon position if you think about it. My religion is the same.

godBoy 06-04-2007 04:09 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
Most people do it all the time. I have a bunch of beliefs regarding science for example, but given the nature of scientific theories I am pretty confident that they are not true representations of the world. I dont see this as a problem, do you?


[/ QUOTE ]
Yes, I do. Given the nature of scientific theories I am pretty confident that they are good representations of the world.

[ QUOTE ]
With regard to christianity, of course, what I mean is that I assume that my interpretation of the bible is incorrect (after all, how could I possibly expect to get it exactly right?). That doesnt change the fact that it "seems right" to me.

[/ QUOTE ]
There's a difference between being 'right' and 100% correct.

bunny 06-04-2007 04:14 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Most people do it all the time. I have a bunch of beliefs regarding science for example, but given the nature of scientific theories I am pretty confident that they are not true representations of the world. I dont see this as a problem, do you?


[/ QUOTE ]
Yes, I do. Given the nature of scientific theories I am pretty confident that they are good representations of the world.

[/ QUOTE ]
So why do they keep being discarded and replaced with new ones?

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
With regard to christianity, of course, what I mean is that I assume that my interpretation of the bible is incorrect (after all, how could I possibly expect to get it exactly right?). That doesnt change the fact that it "seems right" to me.

[/ QUOTE ]
There's a difference between being 'right' and 100% correct.

[/ QUOTE ]
Well, perhaps you would say it differently. What I mean is that I think the bible is inspired by god and says the following things about him: blah blah blah. However, there are millions of competing religions (many of them christian) which disagree with me. I doubt very much that I've got it spot on. In other words, I believe in a religion which I expect to be wrong. This seems obviously right to me - but perhaps it is just a semantic distinction we are tripping over. I certainly disnt mean to say that I have some single statement which I "believe" while being confident it is false.

godBoy 06-04-2007 04:16 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
I don't see why you keep saying it's intellectually dishonest. Would you mind expanding on that? To me it's seems the most intellectually honest. If none of the religions make sense to you as a whole, why is it wrong to choose to follow the tenets that you agree with? You wouldn't be able to claim that you follow a particular religion, but I don't see how it's dishonest.

[/ QUOTE ]
I think it's dishonest to construct a religion that has any truth value by taking the parts from different religions that you would like to be true. All you would be making is a likeable religion and not an honest one.

Taraz 06-04-2007 04:26 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
I don't see why you keep saying it's intellectually dishonest. Would you mind expanding on that? To me it's seems the most intellectually honest. If none of the religions make sense to you as a whole, why is it wrong to choose to follow the tenets that you agree with? You wouldn't be able to claim that you follow a particular religion, but I don't see how it's dishonest.

[/ QUOTE ]
I think it's dishonest to construct a religion that has any truth value by taking the parts from different religions that you would like to be true. All you would be making is a likeable religion and not an honest one.

[/ QUOTE ]

Dishonest to who? If you don't believe any of the religions to be the absolute truth, then why does it matter whether you learn something from some of them and choose to apply what you've learned to your life? If you think all religions are "wrong" to some extent, then where does the dishonesty lie? However, I understand your wishful thinking claim.

In a related but separate point, I think people do this with religion anyway. If you aren't born into your religion, you likely shopped around and chose the one which jives best with whatever you already believe.

godBoy 06-04-2007 04:33 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
Dishonest to who? If you don't believe any of the religions to be the absolute truth, then why does it matter whether you learn something from some of them and choose to apply what you've learned to your life? If you think all religions are "wrong" to some extent, then where does the dishonesty lie?

[/ QUOTE ]
Your being dishonest to yourself if you actually believe the religion that you have willingly crafted yourself.
But, it is dishonest just the same if you 'follow' something that you just can't 'believe' in.

[ QUOTE ]
In a related but separate point, I think people do this with religion anyway. If you aren't born into your religion, you likely shopped around and chose the one which jives best with whatever you already believe.

[/ QUOTE ]
Not all do this. In fact many people wrestle with the Christian God, he's not.. politically correct on a few matters.

Where some may simply throw out these things - That is the point where they are being dishonest.

godBoy 06-04-2007 04:39 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
So why do they keep being discarded and replaced with new ones?

[/ QUOTE ]
Come on bunny.. mostly scientific findings are very consistent throughout time(and it's getting better as time goes on), some are re-shaped, and very few are completely discarded.

[ QUOTE ]
I believe in a religion which I expect to be wrong

[/ QUOTE ]
This isn't justs semantic differences - this sentence means something distinctive, that you are a confused person [img]/images/graemlins/wink.gif[/img]

When in fact you mean to say that you believe in a religion, but you don't expect it to be 100% right.
99.999% correct is hardly 'wrong'

Taraz 06-04-2007 04:47 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Dishonest to who? If you don't believe any of the religions to be the absolute truth, then why does it matter whether you learn something from some of them and choose to apply what you've learned to your life? If you think all religions are "wrong" to some extent, then where does the dishonesty lie?

[/ QUOTE ]
Your being dishonest to yourself if you actually believe the religion that you have willingly crafted yourself.
But, it is dishonest just the same if you 'follow' something that you just can't 'believe' in.


[/ QUOTE ]

I agree with your second sentence, and that's why I don't understand where the dishonesty comes in. If you believe that you've somehow "got it right", I guess that would be dishonest because you're admitting you don't know by picking and choosing in the first place. But if you're just searching like everyone else, that seems pretty honest to me. I mean, aren't you supposed to be looking for what makes sense and resonates with you personally? Again who are you dishonest to? You're obviously not lying to yourself if you plead ignorance, right?

[ QUOTE ]

[ QUOTE ]
In a related but separate point, I think people do this with religion anyway. If you aren't born into your religion, you likely shopped around and chose the one which jives best with whatever you already believe.

[/ QUOTE ]
Not all do this. In fact many people wrestle with the Christian God, he's not.. politically correct on a few matters.

Where some may simply throw out these things - That is the point where they are being dishonest.

[/ QUOTE ]

I never claimed all did this, just that many do.

I'm still missing the dishonest. You've never disagreed with authority? Are you "dishonest" if you do? Disobedient maybe, but not dishonest. I just don't understand your use of that word.

godBoy 06-04-2007 04:54 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
Your being dishonest to yourself if you actually believe the religion that you have willingly crafted yourself, because in 'crafting it' you know that it's made up.

[ QUOTE ]
You're obviously not lying to yourself if you plead ignorance, right?

[/ QUOTE ]
Right.

Taraz 06-04-2007 04:57 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
Your being dishonest to yourself if you actually believe the religion that you have willingly crafted yourself, because in 'crafting it' you know that it's made up.

[ QUOTE ]
You're obviously not lying to yourself if you plead ignorance, right?

[/ QUOTE ]
Right.

[/ QUOTE ]

Well you can believe it and not be sure it's correct. I think that's what bunny was getting at.

I don't think anyone believes that their cherry-picked version of religion is the absolute truth though.

Taraz 06-04-2007 05:02 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
godBoy, I have another question for you that's more relevant to the OP.

Are there things that you believe in terms of your religion that you haven't seen good "evidence" for? I know that you see the words of the Bible confirmed in your every day life, but at some point you're doing an induction right? Everything you've seen seems to be true, so you take the parts you haven't personally witnessed as truth?

If you agree that you do this, whose authority do you trust in interpreting the Bible passages you haven't seen confirmed in your life?

JussiUt 06-04-2007 05:26 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
The fact that people are exposed to that which their parents enable them to be exposed to is no argument at all that Christianity is not correct.

[/ QUOTE ]

No it's not but the point I was trying to make was that it's natural to select the religion which is around you. You choose Christianity because it is the most familiar to you. I don't know about your religious background but I doubt you searched most of the holy books and most of the religions before becoming a Christian. It came naturally to you that the Bible is the Book for you because it was such an influence in your surroundings.

You answered to the hypothesis that if you were born in Pakistan you probably would be a muslim positively. Doesn't that indicate that we really do not have much to say what religion we choose especially if we are taught one religion as a child? Doesn't that make sense that the same way you feel the Bible is an awesome book with great advice and great accuracy a muslim born in Pakistan feels about the Qur'an? Aren't all spiritual experiences subjective and the surroundings influence heavily on how we interpret our experiences?

[ QUOTE ]
This just isn't right, it's no where close to logical or reasonable that mutually exclusive beliefs can co-exist.
This type of belief is just intellectual dishonesty and a perversion of the truth (if such a thing exists). The thing that separates religions is it's theology, it's defining 'facts' about the nature of God that it claims. ptb shouldn't try to make Christianity something it is not, it's nothing more than muddying the waters and perverting the truth.

[/ QUOTE ]

Taraz is already discussing with you about this so I just make a quick point. IF you agree that spiritual experiences are subjective isn't it expected that different dogmas are born? This is related to the point of my original post - you feel the Bible is correct and that Christianity is what moves you. Isn't it possible that it's your subjective experience and that muslims in other countries have exactly the same feelings? How do you explain this? If you believe the dogmas of Christianity are correct how do you explain the "wrong" dogmas of Islam? Or Hinduism? How is it that the religion you most likely were "born into" is the correct one and the others are nonsense? (Ok, this wasn't such a quick point after all)

[ QUOTE ]
I don't claim to 'know' all that much, just logically concluded beliefs from my experiences.

Firstly, There is too much in the atheistic world view that doesn't fit my experience.
Secondly, there is sufficient evidence(personally) to suggest that Jesus is in fact who he claimed to be.

[/ QUOTE ]

I'm fine with all this. That's a legitimate view of yours. Just remember that there are people who would say "there is sufficient evidence (personally) to suggest that Brahma is in fact who he claimed to be." Why do you believe they have a bigger chance of being wrong than you do or do you believe so?

And sincere thanks to the first posters in this thread. Those were great responses.

godBoy 06-04-2007 05:37 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
Are there things that you believe in terms of your religion that you haven't seen good "evidence" for?

[/ QUOTE ]
Sure, a number of things, heaven, hell etc..

[ QUOTE ]
I know that you see the words of the Bible confirmed in your every day life, but at some point you're doing an induction right? Everything you've seen seems to be true, so you take the parts you haven't personally witnessed as truth?

[/ QUOTE ]
This is what Faith is all about for me, I act 'as if I believed' the bible were absolutely true, but I don't have reason to 'believe' with 100% assurance that it is all 100% correct.
[ QUOTE ]
..whose authority do you trust in interpreting the Bible passages you haven't seen confirmed in your life?

[/ QUOTE ]
I get God's help when interpreting scripture, I also talk it through with those who have been around for longer than me.

Duke 06-04-2007 05:47 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
I get God's help when interpreting scripture, I also talk it through with those who have been around for longer than me.

[/ QUOTE ]

I'd like to put you on the payroll as a $250 an hour bible consultant. Your direct line to God will be easier to sell than your other collaborative contacts, though.

godBoy 06-04-2007 05:48 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
Aren't all spiritual experiences subjective and the surroundings influence heavily on how we interpret our experiences?

[/ QUOTE ]
yes.

[ QUOTE ]
Isn't it possible that it's your subjective experience and that muslims in other countries have exactly the same feelings? How do you explain this? If you believe the dogmas of Christianity are correct how do you explain the "wrong" dogmas of Islam? Or Hinduism? How is it that the religion you most likely were "born into" is the correct one and the others are nonsense? (Ok, this wasn't such a quick point after all)

[/ QUOTE ]
Firstly, being a Christian does not require you to believe that all other religions have no truth in them, and are nonsense. If there are Muslims experiencing God in the same way as I then it would be because we are experiencing a shared truth.
As in the truth of connecting with a personal creator God, it's this earnest seeking of God that will always produce results. If a child calls out to his Father - his Father will answer, even if he doesn't know the right name to call him by.

[ QUOTE ]
Why do you believe they have a bigger chance of being wrong than you do or do you believe so?

[/ QUOTE ]As i've said, my beliefs do not require me to believe these things. All I can speak of is what I have experienced, period.

godBoy 06-04-2007 05:50 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
While it may sound ridiculous to you, it is plain and simple Christian theology.
It's not really all that bold a statement to say that I communicate with God, all believers.. well the majority of believers feel the same way.

Duke 06-04-2007 05:55 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
While it may sound ridiculous to you, it is plain and simple Christian theology.
It's not really all that bold a statement to say that I communicate with God, all believers.. well the majority of believers feel the same way.

[/ QUOTE ]

Who am I to argue with it? I'm just thinking that others might be less confident in their ability to talk to their gods, and figure there might be some money to be made.

Even to someone like me (to whom this is obviously absurd), the concept of a bible consultant under this pretext is less of a scam than a lot of "legit" consulting engagements anyhow.

JussiUt 06-04-2007 06:28 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
Firstly, being a Christian does not require you to believe that all other religions have no truth in them, and are nonsense. If there are Muslims experiencing God in the same way as I then it would be because we are experiencing a shared truth.
As in the truth of connecting with a personal creator God, it's this earnest seeking of God that will always produce results. If a child calls out to his Father - his Father will answer, even if he doesn't know the right name to call him by.

[/ QUOTE ]

So why did you say PTB's idea that all religions are trying to reach the same God is false? You said that "if a child calls out to his Father - his Father will answer even if he doesn't know the right name to call him by". That's basically the same thing.

godBoy 06-04-2007 06:57 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
My example was saying that various people are trying to reach the same God.

But, there are Religions that aren't pointing to this God.

bunny 06-04-2007 06:58 AM

Re: The connection between a spiritual experience and a certain religi
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
So why do they keep being discarded and replaced with new ones?

[/ QUOTE ]
Come on bunny.. mostly scientific findings are very consistent throughout time(and it's getting better as time goes on), some are re-shaped, and very few are completely discarded.

[ QUOTE ]
I believe in a religion which I expect to be wrong

[/ QUOTE ]
This isn't justs semantic differences - this sentence means something distinctive, that you are a confused person [img]/images/graemlins/wink.gif[/img]

When in fact you mean to say that you believe in a religion, but you don't expect it to be 100% right.
99.999% correct is hardly 'wrong'

[/ QUOTE ]
I dont think you're right about scientific theories not being discarded - admittedly not every day, but often enough that it's likely to happen again. In the nineteenth century I would have "known" that Newton's laws governed how things moved. I would have believed that newtonian mechanics was an accurate portrayal of how the world really is. Nonetheless I would have been (along with most of the scientifically literate) wrong in that specific belief. That's all that I'm saying. We have a bunch of well justified beliefs. There is no inconsistency in saying that we are pretty sure that some of them are wrong.

Taking it back to religion (where I claim to be confident I am following the wrong religion) do you claim to be 99.999% sure you are right in your interpretation of the bible? My only point was I am 99.999% sure I am wrong on some points and I think all believers should acknowledge this without feeling it is compromising their theism - it isnt a contradictory, nor particularly unusual state of affairs.

IMO, it lends some credence to NotReady's argument that you cant rationalise your way to faith, also to Peter666 and BluffThis's arguments for the necessity of the Catholic church. (Perhaps this is part of where you are coming from. I cant remember your position on the authority of the church, but it's the only way I can see to claim certainty for your religious beliefs. "I may have misunderstood it, but my church is advocating the perfect, true religion as it is the only one guided by God.")


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