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08-16-2007, 04:39 AM
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#61 (permalink)
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Flour Power
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 2,341
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Thomas,
Thanks for the great post which I'm still pondering.
I'm having trouble conceptualizing physical human existence without the ability to discriminate between good and evil. Without the ability to utilize what you referred to as "self knowledge:, ie. "discrimination, distinction, separation, individuation..." how could we even function in the physical? Perhaps we could be like angels or something, living in the quantum flow, but it's hard to conceptualize a physical existence without the accompanying "illusion" of individuation.
Chris
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08-16-2007, 04:49 AM
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#62 (permalink)
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Episcopalian
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Wild, Wild West
Posts: 3,552
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
Further, since we're all (theoretically) flawed by virtue of being human, I was thinking that one would have to adopt a permanent mindset of repentance in order to live in submission to God's will.
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I think I understand what you are saying, but it seems to me that if one was in a constant state of repentence, it would be like a life of groveling and fear, or anxiety. I don't think that's what the Christian life is about. Repentence is 'getting real' about what stands between us and God, which to me means in practical terms what stands between us and loving each other.
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08-16-2007, 04:50 AM
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#63 (permalink)
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Episcopalian
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Wild, Wild West
Posts: 3,552
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
Thomas,
Thanks for the great post which I'm still pondering.
I'm having trouble conceptualizing physical human existence without the ability to discriminate between good and evil. Without the ability to utilize what you referred to as "self knowledge:, ie. "discrimination, distinction, separation, individuation..." how could we even function in the physical? Perhaps we could be like angels or something, living in the quantum flow, but it's hard to conceptualize a physical existence without the accompanying "illusion" of individuation.
Chris
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Exactly. You can't conceptualize it...the act of thinking at all requires discrimination, dualism.
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08-16-2007, 05:17 AM
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#64 (permalink)
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Flour Power
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 2,341
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by lunamoth
I think I understand what you are saying, but it seems to me that if one was in a constant state of repentence, it would be like a life of groveling and fear, or anxiety. I don't think that's what the Christian life is about. Repentence is 'getting real' about what stands between us and God, which to me means in practical terms what stands between us and loving each other.
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I guess I'm differentiating between remorse and repentance. I'm thinking that while remorse may be the catalyst to repentance, repentance is the active turning away from that which brings remorse. I'm kind of thinking of what Paul said about dying to self daily so that Christ lives within. I don't think he meant that he does it, like, once a day- perhaps in the morning when he takes his vitamins. And obviously he doesn't think that once is enough since he says "daily." Maybe it goes along with praying "without ceasing." Being always actively engaged in repentance and prayer.
Just my musings.
Chris
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08-16-2007, 05:31 AM
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#65 (permalink)
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Episcopalian
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Wild, Wild West
Posts: 3,552
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
I guess I'm differentiating between remorse and repentance. I'm thinking that while remorse may be the catalyst to repentance, repentance is the active turning away from that which brings remorse. I'm kind of thinking of what Paul said about dying to self daily so that Christ lives within. I don't think he meant that he does it, like, once a day- perhaps in the morning when he takes his vitamins. And obviously he doesn't think that once is enough since he says "daily." Maybe it goes along with praying "without ceasing." Being always actively engaged in repentance and prayer.
Just my musings.
Chris
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I agree with that...and pray without ceasing. It's about living a life in a deliberate manner too, and one that always points to God. It is our actions which make our faith alive, and which bring about the reconciliation of the world. I think that's what' you meant about the KOG and the golden rule. If by repentence you mean transformation I agree completely. My prayers go with my life, repentence, thanksgiving, intercession, and praise.
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08-16-2007, 05:48 AM
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#66 (permalink)
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Flour Power
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 2,341
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Yes, the Kingdom. I'm fascinated by that concept.
Chris
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08-16-2007, 06:22 AM
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#67 (permalink)
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Episcopalian
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Wild, Wild West
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
Yes, the Kingdom. I'm fascinated by that concept.
Chris
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The Kingdom of God is one of my favorites. I think I started a thread a long time ago...not sure that it went anywhere.
The KOG. It's not what you expect. 
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08-16-2007, 07:01 AM
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#68 (permalink)
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Flour Power
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 2,341
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
You might like this Laurie. It's an online English translation of Leo Tolstoy's classic of Christian anarchism The Kingdom of God is Within You- Christianity Not As A Mystic Religion But As A New Theory of Life , published in 1894. Leo Tolstoy - The Kingdom of God is Within You
Chris
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08-16-2007, 07:29 AM
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#69 (permalink)
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Episcopalian
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Wild, Wild West
Posts: 3,552
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
You might like this Laurie. It's an online English translation of Leo Tolstoy's classic of Christian anarchism The Kingdom of God is Within You- Christianity Not As A Mystic Religion But As A New Theory of Life , published in 1894. Leo Tolstoy - The Kingdom of God is Within You
Chris
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Thank you Chris.
I read this by Tolstoy and greatly enjoyed it. I don't agree with throwing out the Mystery, but I am in many ways a Tolstoy Christian.
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08-16-2007, 03:56 PM
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#70 (permalink)
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From across the Tiber
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 2,765
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Hi Chris —
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
I'm having trouble conceptualizing physical human existence without the ability to discriminate between good and evil.
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I don't think we weren't supposed to have that capacity ... the fact that God warned the Primordial Couple is evidence that they did ... He just meant, "Know the difference, but don't go there... " ... so what do we do ...
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
Without the ability to utilize what you referred to as "self knowledge:, ie. "discrimination, distinction, separation, individuation..." how could we even function in the physical?
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A trick one ... but I look at the Passion in another, very different Garden (Gethsemane) ... "thy will, not my will, be done."
... maybe, tragically, Adam and Eve just dropped their guard for a moment? Origen believed that souls just became satiated with the Divine Plenitude ... like snowblindness ... but, I wonder, what is it in man that has Charlie Chaplin standing next to Arnie Schwartzewhatsis and Arne says "Don't touch that," and you just know what CC's gonna do...?
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
Perhaps we could be like angels or something, living in the quantum flow,
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That's it! Living in the flow of Love (or ist that luuu-rr-ve? I hope not!) ... but yes ... just go with it ...
... I've done a little bit of sailing, so this balmy evening, on a 30 foot Broads gaff-rigged yacht, the sun was setting, the wind dropped, the sail was hanging with just a whisper of a breeze, I was the last one on the water, all the yachts were moored up along a staithe (a cutting, like a canal), not a ripple on the lake, and us just moseying along. I turned into the staithe, and could see a space at the very top, passed all the other boats ... I gave my partner the helm (not a sailor) and said 'just hold it there til I say, then pull it towards you' and walked up to the bow, no rush, no panic, all the time in the world, took the line, slid passed all the other (panic-looking) yachts, slowing all the time, reached the head of the staithe moving at what seemed like inches per minute ... stepped ashore and took a turn round the bollard, said 'now' with a nod, and walked back (enough headway still to answer to the helm, which began to tuck the stern in to the bank), took the stern line off the rail where I'd hung it, and a turn round a stern bollard brought us to a stop ...
... closest thing to heaven on earth, ever ... never thought about any of it ... just did it ... it came naturally ... I was in synch with it all ... not my will, just working with the wind and water, the evening and the land ... the will of nature ... she called the shots ... I mean, I could have turned on the motor ... but I trusted in no surprises, and just knew what to do ... living in the Divine Quantum would be just like that, I reckon ...
(The next day I lost my hat overboard, and try as I might, never managed to fetch up near enough to get it back. Doh! Another shattered dream!)
Truly, the trick of living in the moment, is knowing that we are actually part of the moment, not something outside, trying to get in ... and just settling to that and not expecting the moment to be something like a Hollywood musical.
Life is a mystical experience ... the trouble is we spend half our lives waiting for an angel to turn up and say 'Ooh look, he's having a mystical experience," and the other half asleep to what's happening ...
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
but it's hard to conceptualize a physical existence without the accompanying "illusion" of individuation.
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That's because it is real. The 'illusion' is in the notion that we are outside of it.
Thomas
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08-16-2007, 04:10 PM
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#71 (permalink)
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From across the Tiber
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 2,765
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
The word 'repent' is a translation of the Greek verb metanoeō which means 'change of heart' — we've discussed metanoia before, I think ... it's quite a concept in Christian theology.
But to go on repenting, once you've had a change of heart, is a bit like living in the past, and is often unhealthy, producing an obsequious Uriah Heap-like character "Your very 'umble servant, Mr Pip!" all wringing hands and bowing and scraping ... piety, when false, is a form of self-abuse, which is both satisfying, and dissatisfying, at the same time ...
That's not to mean we dismiss the past ... but the wide-eyed born-again "I used to be a sinner, but now I'm saved" is a bit OTT - let's face it, I used to wet my nappies, but then I grew up, it's not something I make a big deal of telling everyone ("Hey, I've still got some, d'ya wanna see?") but nor do I pretend I came into the world walking, talking and toilet trained.
Addicts who've dried out rarely go round telling everyone they used to be an addict, unless they;re craving attention ...
So I was a cradle Catholic. Then I wandered off. Then I found my way home. Now I try and get on with it, and think, like my mate who was knocked off his motorbike last week, 'there, but for the grace of God... '
(he's recovering, by the way, having smashed kneecap, hands... )
So repentance, and remorse, ongoing, has its place ... and I suggest its place is quietly, privately, and in prayer, balanced with a touch of 'thank God I found you/you found me'.
As far as the world goes, just get on with it.
Thomas
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08-17-2007, 01:38 PM
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#72 (permalink)
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,636
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by China Cat Sunflower
I'm thinking in a whole bunch of different directions and having trouble focusing my thoughts.
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Hi Chris
Always a good thing to mentally explore. If I may I would like to make a couple of personal observations, having been on both sides of the fence (although neither side may agree with me, they are just my personal ramblings).
Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomas
I don't think we weren't supposed to have that capacity ... the fact that God warned the Primordial Couple is evidence that they did ... He just meant, "Know the difference, but don't go there... " ... so what do we do ...
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For me, Thomas explains the difference between repentance and submission very well here (you must make a brilliant dinner guest Thomas, if you are ever in egypt and like spicey food  ). As a Muslim I have submitted to G-d. That is that I try every day to live my life according to the teachings of Allah. However, there are times I slip from that path (vanity, greed, hatred, etc gets the better of me) and for that I must repent. I do not feel the need to be in a permanent state of repentance but I do feel the need to be in a permanent state of submission.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomas
But to go on repenting, once you've had a change of heart, is a bit like living in the past, and is often unhealthy,
Addicts who've dried out rarely go round telling everyone they used to be an addict, unless they;re craving attention ...
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Again Thomas makes a point I can pick up on. When I became a Muslim my prior sins were forgiven and from that moment I began my submission to G-d. Now the human mind doesn't let go so easily, so my prayers, for the longest time, were all about my sins prior to my conversion. I cannot describe the fear and shame in my heart and mind for the things I had done prior to submitting to G-d. I had to learn to let go of the past. I had to repent for those days and move on, live today and improve on the person I am. My conversion was my repentance of those days, so I had to let go and live in the moment.
It took me a long time to realise that G-d is All Merciful and He knows that I was lost during those years. It was not until I was able to see this and let go of the past that I became able to truly submit to G-d. Alhamdolillah I have now let go and can wake every day and say today I submit to G-d. I see my submission as accepting that I do not control my life, G-d does but that I can affect my life by my choices. If I choose today to 'ignore' my submission because I want to follow my desires (eat that bacon sandwich or fail to say hello when someone says hello to me, whatever), then I will have to answer for that sin. This is where repentance comes in, when I do sin I must repent, not just say oops sorry and do it again tomorrow but truly feel ashamed of my behaviour and try harder next time to resist temptation.
G-d has given me very few instructions, of course people then heap loads more on me but my submission to G-d is about the few instructions He has given me and they are the ones I must follow. To submit to G-d I must accept those few instructions as rules carved in stone and work hard every day to obey. Of course sometimes I struggle and then I must repent but my submission is also about the good deeds. The days when I notice the green fields, the blue sky, the laughter of a child and remember to thank G-d for those things. The days I wake up and realise I am blessed with good health and say thank you. The days my hubby really gets on my nerves and I remember how blessed I am to have a hubby that loves me (okay still struggling with that one, my usual reaction is to fight with him not say thank you - oops  but am working on it). Of course then, during my prayers I feel ashamed that I was not grateful for the love of my husband and I repent for my pettiness.
It is one of the good things about praying 5 times a day, it keeps your submission in your mind and is a constant reminder of your need to submit to G-d. That is not to say I do not have choices or that I must spend my entire life praying. One example would be shopping for clothes, I do not 'shop for G-d' but am aware of my submission when choosing clothes.
Sorry if I have rambled, although you should be used to it by now.   So that is my take on the difference between repentance and submission, hope you understand what I am struggling to say.
Salaam
Sally
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08-17-2007, 07:03 PM
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#73 (permalink)
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From across the Tiber
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 2,765
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Muslimwoman
I do not feel the need to be in a permanent state of repentance but I do feel the need to be in a permanent state of submission.
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Oh well said, and right on the nail! The above and what follows is a delight, by the way ... submission does not mean sorrow ... like an athlete needs to be in a permanent state of training ... or a samurai in a permanent state of awareness ... or a Buddhist in mindfulness ... or a Christian in prayer ...
Submission ... I wonder does submission as a permanent state render the person 'a body of prayer'? Now you've said it, I know instinctively I want to explore it ... any pointers from Islam you can give me would be a gift.
If I'm ever in Egypt, I'll let you know! I'd love to be a guest at your table, but just so you know, I don't like cheese (is that rude, to say in advance?).
Thomas
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08-18-2007, 06:55 PM
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#74 (permalink)
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Coexistence insha'Allah
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Egypt
Posts: 2,636
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomas
Oh well said, and right on the nail!
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Thank you Thomas I was starting to get so worried that I clearly understand nothing of others faith so perhaps did not understand my own relationship with G-d as well. Perhaps I am doing something right then, alhamdolillah.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomas
Submission ... I wonder does submission as a permanent state render the person 'a body of prayer'? Now you've said it, I know instinctively I want to explore it ... any pointers from Islam you can give me would be a gift.
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I shall try to find a scholars answer to this but shall as usual talk off the top of my head and give you my own thoughts. It is a very interesting question but I would have to say no, purely because we are taught that the times we sin we are not Muslim and of course we all sin. Certainly I would say the idea of submission is to be 'a body of prayer' but that we all fail to really achieve that state. I have just contradicted myself - oops. So the answer must be YES, the state of submission is to be, in all deeds and thoughts, a body of prayer but we simply fail to achieve that state. Hmmm, must work on that one.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomas
If I'm ever in Egypt, I'll let you know! I'd love to be a guest at your table, but just so you know, I don't like cheese (is that rude, to say in advance?).
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Not rude at all, no cheese it is. If you ever get over I will make mashi (spiced rice stuffed in cabbage leaves, it is yummy although rather fattening), beef in spicy sauce and ..... erm can't pronounce the name but it is potatoes baked with salsa, garlic and onion. Don't worry we will supply the breath mints.
Salaam
Sally
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08-19-2007, 12:42 PM
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#75 (permalink)
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Executive Member
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 5,800
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Re: Do you reject original Sin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by lunamoth
The Kingdom of God is one of my favorites. I think I started a thread a long time ago...not sure that it went anywhere.
The KOG. It's not what you expect. 
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DANIEL 2;44 It is quite true to say that the kingdom of God is not what most people expect, in fact most are in opposition to the heavenly kingdom of God , but then there are those who are waving their symbolic palm branches to welcome the newly installed king of Gods kingdom ,Daniel 7;13-14 and they are a GREAT CROWD from all nations revelation 7;9-10 
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