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| #Post#: 2866-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Why 'Oneoff' for a name? | |
| By: Oneoff Date: August 13, 2015, 4:39 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Whilst I am unable to comfortably empathise with a single | |
| religion/church/denomination, and cannot accept the | |
| fundamentalist extreme belief that the bible is the �complete | |
| and final, verbally inerrant Word of God�, I nevertheless | |
| instinctively believe in God who is the originator of all that | |
| �now is�, has �gone before�, and �is to come�. | |
| If, aside from the above description, I have to be further | |
| �pigeon holed� then Deism is perhaps closest to my current | |
| inclination (but I emphasise �current inclination�, since even | |
| my tendency towards Deism is not held with dogmatic certainty). | |
| Unless and until I find someone of similar inclination I guess | |
| that �Oneoff� is a username that �fits the bill�. | |
| However that is not to say that there cannot be other �Oneoffs� | |
| who habor inclinations that differ from mine. | |
| I just hope that an inclination such as mine can be regarded as | |
| being as equally acceptable as that of any other member of this | |
| forum. | |
| #Post#: 2875-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why 'Oneoff' for a name? | |
| By: Kerry Date: August 14, 2015, 6:47 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Do you really believe truth is a personal variable? To a | |
| certain extent, I do. I think that's why there are so many | |
| religions and denominations. People are busy creating God in | |
| their own image. | |
| Are they right? Well, we don't see God showing up and telling | |
| them they're wrong. It seems then that God, if He exists, does | |
| not impose Himself or knowledge about Himself on people. God | |
| must allow us to believe almost anything we want. | |
| Does that mean God doesn't care or is hiding? Or is it a game | |
| where we imagine something about God and it seems true to us? | |
| Is what we believe about God and see "out there" only a | |
| reflection as in a mirror of what we want to be "out there"? | |
| Is that the way it must be? Is God a reflection of our minds -- | |
| or could we be reflections of His? | |
| One thing I do believe is true: Almost any idea you can propose | |
| about God is untrue in one way or another. These ideas are like | |
| dirt on a mirror -- with our minds being the mirrors. We | |
| cannot reflect reality right if we have dark spots on the | |
| mirrors of our minds. It is more important to erase ideas we | |
| have about God than to acquire more. | |
| Sherlock Holmes said, "Once you eliminate the impossible, | |
| whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth." | |
| This is also the scientific method of testing an idea to see if | |
| you can prove it's wrong. You can't really prove many things | |
| using science as "true," but you can often prove some things are | |
| not true. | |
| But again, is truth a personal variable? I think so. I think | |
| when Jesus said, "I am truth," he meant he was being true to his | |
| own nature. Most of us lie to ourselves. Lying to others is | |
| bad enough; but the person who lies to himself may be a goner. | |
| If there is a God, obviously He likes diversity since each | |
| person is unique. How then can we believe all these different | |
| people are made in the image and likeness of God? | |
| Personally, I believe each person is meant to be a unique | |
| expression of the God-Nature. The infinity of God includes all | |
| that is -- and all that could be too for all I know -- I suspect | |
| that the whole universe is but a tiny fraction of the mysterious | |
| infinity of what we call God. Only a tiny fraction is | |
| manifested -- but that's just a guess. | |
| #Post#: 2877-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why 'Oneoff' for a name? | |
| By: Oneoff Date: August 14, 2015, 11:32 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Kerry, | |
| For me, the complete �personal text� would be �as a generality | |
| �truth� is more likely to be personally relevant rather than | |
| universally absolute�, but the software only permits 50 | |
| characters so I had to scale it down. | |
| Terry (CC) will not agree and I understand his PoV. | |
| However the phrase developed within me at a time when my forum | |
| struggles were mainly with Evangelical Protestants who, whilst | |
| holding different versions of �truth� that they each claimed | |
| were sufficiently �absolute� to justify the setting up of | |
| denominations based upon them, still claimed that there could | |
| only be one �truth�, and that it had to be �universally | |
| absolute�. | |
| The outworking of that claim was, in itself, so blatantly | |
| self-contradictory that my consequential personal text has | |
| �stuck� ever since. | |
| #Post#: 2878-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why 'Oneoff' for a name? | |
| By: Kerry Date: August 14, 2015, 1:36 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Would it surprise you that David said how God seems to us | |
| depends on us? | |
| Psalm 18:26 With the pure thou wilt shew thyself pure; and with | |
| the froward thou wilt shew thyself froward. | |
| I thought once about trying to study the psychology behind the | |
| various beliefs of different denominations. What is it about | |
| people inwardly that wants to say they have the truth and it's | |
| got to be absolute? Such a study would be general only since | |
| so many people adopt the ideas taught to them almost without | |
| question -- I think a study of this kind might be able to tell | |
| us more about the people who originated the ideas. | |
| For example, take the Calvinists who believe in the "total | |
| depravity" of man. Who could come up with such an idea? I | |
| think someone who took a look at his inner self and saw such | |
| blackness, he concluded he was totally depraved. Furthermore, | |
| I'd say he did not repent when he saw his many sins. If he had | |
| repented, he would have felt better about things and realized he | |
| was not totally depraved. Then he invented a god who would save | |
| him anyway. He went through the Bible and seized on a passage | |
| about predestination and invented a new theological system based | |
| on that passage while merrily ignoring other passages. This | |
| was designed to provide him solace; but it didn't, not really. | |
| He knew he had invented it, so the task was to convince | |
| himself. | |
| One thing I am fairly sure of is that when people get upset when | |
| you disagree, you are making them feel threatened. Their whole | |
| world is threatening to come down around them. It may look as | |
| if they're talking trying to convince others, but they're really | |
| trying to convince themselves. This is both sad and laughable | |
| to me. Do they really think God is going to judge us based on | |
| how many ideas we got right? Never mind the guilt of past and | |
| present misdeeds -- never mind any of that -- just have the | |
| right ideas about things. To me, this is all hot air. | |
| I can sum up my attitude towards Calvinism. If it's true, if | |
| it's up to God if I'm predestined to be saved or damned, it | |
| doesn't matter what I believe, say or do. It's God decision | |
| not mine, so why should I be bothered? If my saying that means | |
| I'm predestined to be damned, it still wouldn't matter since I | |
| couldn't be saved even if I didn't say it. | |
| Calvin was not a pleasant man. I'd say he was an evil man who | |
| invented a mischievous theology that said he would be saved no | |
| matter what evil he did. It was all about "justifying" | |
| himself -- your use of the word "justify" stands out for me. | |
| The sad thing is he found followers and now we have | |
| denominations based on that. I also ask about Calvinism why | |
| God puts the elect into the world to suffer and die? Why go | |
| through all that pain and suffering if everything's been | |
| predetermined? God must enjoy watching even His elect suffer -- | |
| and clearly He enjoys seeing the non-elect suffer since this | |
| system says they will burn eternally in hellfire. Yet He | |
| created so many people predestined to be damned? What is He | |
| then, crazy? Or just enjoys watching suffering? Well, we | |
| know John Calvin approved of torture -- perhaps that's why he | |
| invented a god with a sadistic streak? | |
| The question I have in my mind about John Calvin is if he damned | |
| himself with his own beliefs. With his ideas about God, what | |
| would he think if he died and woke up in an unpleasant place? | |
| Would he conclude he hadn't been one of the people predestined | |
| to be saved? Would he curse God figuring he was damned | |
| eternally? Would hate take over completely? Would he become | |
| trapped as the result of the "truth" of his beliefs? | |
| Those are my reflections on the psychology of Calvinism. I | |
| wonder if other denominations have their own psychology too that | |
| could be analyzed? | |
| #Post#: 2880-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why 'Oneoff' for a name? | |
| By: Oneoff Date: August 14, 2015, 2:42 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Kerry link=topic=328.msg2878#msg2878 | |
| date=1439577370] | |
| Would it surprise you that David said how God seems to us | |
| depends on us? | |
| Psalm 18:26 With the pure thou wilt shew thyself pure; and with | |
| the froward thou wilt shew thyself froward. | |
| [/quote] | |
| Without ever having reflected on that verse, I have always said | |
| that a penally minded person would believe in a penal God, a | |
| loving and forgiving man would believe in a loving and forgiving | |
| God, etc. | |
| #Post#: 2913-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Why 'Oneoff' for a name? | |
| By: Kerry Date: August 17, 2015, 11:41 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Oneoff link=topic=328.msg2880#msg2880 | |
| date=1439581368] | |
| Without ever having reflected on that verse, I have always said | |
| that a penally minded person would believe in a penal God, a | |
| loving and forgiving man would believe in a loving and forgiving | |
| God, etc. | |
| [/quote]Now then, if you were God and you were loving and | |
| forgiving, what would you think of people who believed lies | |
| about you? For me, any idea which makes me love God more is | |
| likely true; and any idea which doesn't either isn't true, | |
| doesn't matter or I don't understand it. The commandment is to | |
| love God, and I believe we should not hold any ideas which make | |
| us not love Him. | |
| Remember the horrible story when the children of Israel | |
| suspected Moses had brought them out into the wilderness to die? | |
| They didn't trust Moses or God. They had completely wrong | |
| ideas, suspicious minds that created evil where no evil existed. | |
| Yet it's part of free will, isn't it? | |
| Isaiah 5:20 Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; | |
| that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put | |
| bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter! | |
| If our speculations are true here, what we believe about God may | |
| be a form of self-condemnation or self-justification. | |
| If we are penally minded ourselves, maybe God will adopt that | |
| attitude with us. Remember the story about the servant who | |
| forgiven a large debt and who then went out and collared someone | |
| who owed him a small sum? | |
| I really do believe part of salvation is wishing for the right | |
| kind of God. If we really want a God who created a world when | |
| mercy and forgiveness are possible, then we must become merciful | |
| and forgiving ourselves. If we can do that, I believe we are | |
| embracing the God-Nature in ourselves. We are becoming more | |
| like innocent children and more like the God we pant for too. | |
| The penally minded seem to have missed something. They want | |
| forgiveness for their own sins but seem to crave punishment for | |
| others. | |
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