[FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have YOU killed..?)

2009-04-17 Thread shempmcgurk
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Kirk"  wrote:
>
> The point of dying for ones sins is that one need do no more sacrifices.




The process of sacrificing seems to me to be the process of transcending.  When 
you transcend into pure consciousness, you have sacrificed the whole world and 
your attachment to it to get there.




> 
> - Original Message - 
> From: "yateendrajee" 
> To: 
> Sent: Monday, April 13, 2009 9:24 AM
> Subject: [FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: 
> Have YOU killed..?)
> 
> 
> > The question of whether Jesus "died for our sins" may not be as trivial as 
> > it looks on the surface.
> >
> > It is a well-accepted doctrine in the East that a spiritual master often 
> > works out the karma of members of his circle by processing it through 
> > his/her own body. This can result in diseases and, in some cases, death 
> > for the master.
> >
> > Also, many in the East regard Jesus as the "avatar," an incarnation of 
> > Vishnu, the universal sustainer (Rama and Krishna were also avatars of 
> > Vishnu). If Jesus was a "universal master" (a spiritual figure who claimed 
> > all humanity as his students, many of them unconscious of the fact), there 
> > is a logical basis for considering his sacrifice as having been on our 
> > behalf. One could also consider Jesus' sacrifice as a kind of "clearing 
> > the atmosphere" of that time, smoothing the path for future generations 
> > (Isaiah 40:4 uses a similar metaphor when prophesying the coming of the 
> > Messiah).
> >
> > On the foregoing basis, I'd answer Maharishi's question: "He both lived 
> > *and* died for me."
> >
> > [I will freely admit that most practicing Christians have a limited 
> > understanding of the meaning of Jesus' sacrifice, and many other 
> > limitations in their beliefs, e.g., exclusivism ("Jesus is the only way"), 
> > etc.]
> >
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Robert"  wrote:
> >>
> >> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "shempmcgurk"  wrote:
> >> >
> >> > Once when a born again Christian (who also happened to be a TM teacher) 
> >> > told Maharishi that Christ died for his sins, Maharishi replied: "Did 
> >> > he die for you or did he live for you?"
> >> > (snip)
> >> Great observation, simple and true...
> >> The whole 'Died for YOu'...is so absurd.
> > ...
> >> Crazy Religion!
> >> R.G.
> >
> >
> >
> > 
> >
> > To subscribe, send a message to:
> > fairfieldlife-subscr...@yahoogroups.com
> >
> > Or go to:
> > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/
> > and click 'Join This Group!'Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
>




[FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have YOU killed..?)

2009-04-17 Thread shempmcgurk
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "yateendrajee"  wrote:


[snip]

> 
> When I consider Jesus' sacrifice,

[snip]


I prefer the Isaac/Abraham sacrifice.

No one actually got killed in that one.



[FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have YOU killed..?)

2009-04-17 Thread shempmcgurk
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "authfriend"  wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "shempmcgurk"  wrote:
> 
> > I call this whole idea of Jesus "dying for my sins"
> > as the "Free Lunch" approach to karma.  That somehow
> > I am forgiven my sins by an act performed by Jesus
> > some 2,000 years before I was born.
> > 
> > What happened to taking responsibility for my OWN 
> > actions?  As ye sow so shall ye reap? Yes, certainly,
> > I can eventually obtain self-realization and the
> > cycle of karma will still occur to my body and life
> > as I silently witness it.  But I can't help thinking
> > of someone like Mark David Chapman, the murderer of
> > John Lennon who has, of course, "found" Jesus oh-so-
> > conveniently while in prison.  He snuffed out the
> > life of a 40-year-old creative man with two sons yet
> > now everything is a-okay on the karma front because
> > he's accepted Jesus Christ as his personal savior.
> 
> But he's still in jail, right?
> 
> What do you think *should* happen to him beyond
> temporal punishment?


I'm for capital punishment, so I would have liked to see him executed.


> 
> If you don't believe he's really been "saved," is
> your objection to his having accepted Jesus as his
> savior that he gets to *think* he's been saved,
> whereas he should be wallowing in guilt, or live
> the rest of his life in terror that he's going to
> hell?


My objection is that there is a wide-spread interpretation to Christianity out 
there that is made available to people such as this so that they can latch on 
to it and, yes, as you say, think they are saved. And also that we have to hear 
about it...AND he gets to perpetuate it by talking about it.

This free-lunch approach I believe puts the idea of non-responsibility out 
there and can result in crimes because people think that they can subsequently 
get saved and wash the bad karma away.




> 
> These aren't rhetorical questions; I'm just trying
> to nail down exactly where you think the problem
> lies.
> 
> Me, I don't believe in the whole substitutionary
> atonement thing. I do think *belief* in it may
> have a certain psychological utility.
> 
> A minister of my acquaintance used to say, "If God
> forgives you, who the heck are you not to forgive
> yourself?"




Well, actually, I like that.  That's a pretty life-affirming statement.





> 
> One element of having all your past sins forgiven is
> that you're supposed to do your best not to commit
> any new ones. Seems to me it's easier to make that
> kind of effort if you're not weighed down by a huge
> burden of guilt and convinced that you're
> irredeemable, that God couldn't possibly love and
> forgive you.
> 
> No idea whether or how that might apply in Chapman's
> case, though. If you're genuinely psychotic, that
> must change the equation.
>




[FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have YOU killed..?)

2009-04-13 Thread yateendrajee
I have absolutely no argument with your reservations.

I realized after sending that I'd neglected an important qualification to my 
understanding of how masters process the karmic impressions of those near them. 
It is not a wholesale processing. Only impressions which would defeat the 
disciple's role in the master's mission would be processed.

I think the second way I imagined the meaning of Jesus "dying for our sins" is 
the most helpful. His sacrifice served to clear obstacles on many planes of 
existence which has sped up evolution for humanity and other life forms on this 
planet. We are all beneficiaries of that.

When I consider Jesus' sacrifice, I don't imagine that it excuses me from 
having to own up to actions borne of wrong understanding. I consider the laws 
of karma to be something like the prescription of a cosmic "doctor," such that 
the experience which comes my way is specifically designed to trigger insight 
into how I "screwed up" in the past, and I can amend my ways.

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "shempmcgurk"  wrote:

> I call this whole idea of Jesus "dying for my sins" as the "Free Lunch" 
> approach to karma.
...
> What happened to taking responsibility for my OWN actions?



Re: [FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have YOU killed..?)

2009-04-13 Thread Mike Dixon
Isn't one of the keys to TM "letting go" , taking it as it comes? Another way 
of  "forgiving". TM , an excellent practice in learning how to "forgive us our 
sins as we forgive others". Not holding on to the past or being anxious about 
the future.

--- On Mon, 4/13/09, authfriend  wrote:

From: authfriend 
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have 
YOU killed..?)
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
Date: Monday, April 13, 2009, 3:07 PM








--- In FairfieldLife@ yahoogroups. com, "shempmcgurk"  wrote:

> I call this whole idea of Jesus "dying for my sins"
> as the "Free Lunch" approach to karma. That somehow
> I am forgiven my sins by an act performed by Jesus
> some 2,000 years before I was born.
> 
> What happened to taking responsibility for my OWN 
> actions? As ye sow so shall ye reap? Yes, certainly,
> I can eventually obtain self-realization and the
> cycle of karma will still occur to my body and life
> as I silently witness it. But I can't help thinking
> of someone like Mark David Chapman, the murderer of
> John Lennon who has, of course, "found" Jesus oh-so-
> conveniently while in prison. He snuffed out the
> life of a 40-year-old creative man with two sons yet
> now everything is a-okay on the karma front because
> he's accepted Jesus Christ as his personal savior.

But he's still in jail, right?

What do you think *should* happen to him beyond
temporal punishment?

If you don't believe he's really been "saved," is
your objection to his having accepted Jesus as his
savior that he gets to *think* he's been saved,
whereas he should be wallowing in guilt, or live
the rest of his life in terror that he's going to
hell?

These aren't rhetorical questions; I'm just trying
to nail down exactly where you think the problem
lies.

Me, I don't believe in the whole substitutionary
atonement thing. I do think *belief* in it may
have a certain psychological utility.

A minister of my acquaintance used to say, "If God
forgives you, who the heck are you not to forgive
yourself?"

One element of having all your past sins forgiven is
that you're supposed to do your best not to commit
any new ones. Seems to me it's easier to make that
kind of effort if you're not weighed down by a huge
burden of guilt and convinced that you're
irredeemable, that God couldn't possibly love and
forgive you.

No idea whether or how that might apply in Chapman's
case, though. If you're genuinely psychotic, that
must change the equation.

















  

Re: [FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have YOU killed..?)

2009-04-13 Thread Kirk
The point of dying for ones sins is that one need do no more sacrifices.

- Original Message - 
From: "yateendrajee" 
To: 
Sent: Monday, April 13, 2009 9:24 AM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: 
Have YOU killed..?)


> The question of whether Jesus "died for our sins" may not be as trivial as 
> it looks on the surface.
>
> It is a well-accepted doctrine in the East that a spiritual master often 
> works out the karma of members of his circle by processing it through 
> his/her own body. This can result in diseases and, in some cases, death 
> for the master.
>
> Also, many in the East regard Jesus as the "avatar," an incarnation of 
> Vishnu, the universal sustainer (Rama and Krishna were also avatars of 
> Vishnu). If Jesus was a "universal master" (a spiritual figure who claimed 
> all humanity as his students, many of them unconscious of the fact), there 
> is a logical basis for considering his sacrifice as having been on our 
> behalf. One could also consider Jesus' sacrifice as a kind of "clearing 
> the atmosphere" of that time, smoothing the path for future generations 
> (Isaiah 40:4 uses a similar metaphor when prophesying the coming of the 
> Messiah).
>
> On the foregoing basis, I'd answer Maharishi's question: "He both lived 
> *and* died for me."
>
> [I will freely admit that most practicing Christians have a limited 
> understanding of the meaning of Jesus' sacrifice, and many other 
> limitations in their beliefs, e.g., exclusivism ("Jesus is the only way"), 
> etc.]
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Robert"  wrote:
>>
>> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "shempmcgurk"  wrote:
>> >
>> > Once when a born again Christian (who also happened to be a TM teacher) 
>> > told Maharishi that Christ died for his sins, Maharishi replied: "Did 
>> > he die for you or did he live for you?"
>> > (snip)
>> Great observation, simple and true...
>> The whole 'Died for YOu'...is so absurd.
> ...
>> Crazy Religion!
>> R.G.
>
>
>
> 
>
> To subscribe, send a message to:
> fairfieldlife-subscr...@yahoogroups.com
>
> Or go to:
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/
> and click 'Join This Group!'Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>



[FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have YOU killed..?)

2009-04-13 Thread authfriend
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "shempmcgurk"  wrote:

> I call this whole idea of Jesus "dying for my sins"
> as the "Free Lunch" approach to karma.  That somehow
> I am forgiven my sins by an act performed by Jesus
> some 2,000 years before I was born.
> 
> What happened to taking responsibility for my OWN 
> actions?  As ye sow so shall ye reap? Yes, certainly,
> I can eventually obtain self-realization and the
> cycle of karma will still occur to my body and life
> as I silently witness it.  But I can't help thinking
> of someone like Mark David Chapman, the murderer of
> John Lennon who has, of course, "found" Jesus oh-so-
> conveniently while in prison.  He snuffed out the
> life of a 40-year-old creative man with two sons yet
> now everything is a-okay on the karma front because
> he's accepted Jesus Christ as his personal savior.

But he's still in jail, right?

What do you think *should* happen to him beyond
temporal punishment?

If you don't believe he's really been "saved," is
your objection to his having accepted Jesus as his
savior that he gets to *think* he's been saved,
whereas he should be wallowing in guilt, or live
the rest of his life in terror that he's going to
hell?

These aren't rhetorical questions; I'm just trying
to nail down exactly where you think the problem
lies.

Me, I don't believe in the whole substitutionary
atonement thing. I do think *belief* in it may
have a certain psychological utility.

A minister of my acquaintance used to say, "If God
forgives you, who the heck are you not to forgive
yourself?"

One element of having all your past sins forgiven is
that you're supposed to do your best not to commit
any new ones. Seems to me it's easier to make that
kind of effort if you're not weighed down by a huge
burden of guilt and convinced that you're
irredeemable, that God couldn't possibly love and
forgive you.

No idea whether or how that might apply in Chapman's
case, though. If you're genuinely psychotic, that
must change the equation.




[FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have YOU killed..?)

2009-04-13 Thread shempmcgurk
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "yateendrajee"  wrote:
>
> The question of whether Jesus "died for our sins" may not be as trivial as it 
> looks on the surface.
> 
> It is a well-accepted doctrine in the East that a spiritual master often 
> works out the karma of members of his circle by processing it through his/her 
> own body. This can result in diseases and, in some cases, death for the 
> master.
> 
> Also, many in the East regard Jesus as the "avatar," an incarnation of 
> Vishnu, the universal sustainer (Rama and Krishna were also avatars of 
> Vishnu). If Jesus was a "universal master" (a spiritual figure who claimed 
> all humanity as his students, many of them unconscious of the fact), there is 
> a logical basis for considering his sacrifice as having been on our behalf. 
> One could also consider Jesus' sacrifice as a kind of "clearing the 
> atmosphere" of that time, smoothing the path for future generations (Isaiah 
> 40:4 uses a similar metaphor when prophesying the coming of the Messiah).
> 
> On the foregoing basis, I'd answer Maharishi's question: "He both lived *and* 
> died for me."



Well, that is, as I remember the audio tape, exactly word-for-word how the 
born-again TM teacher responded to Maharishi.

I call this whole idea of Jesus "dying for my sins" as the "Free Lunch" 
approach to karma.  That somehow I am forgiven my sins by an act performed by 
Jesus some 2,000 years before I was born.

What happened to taking responsibility for my OWN actions?  As ye sow so shall 
ye reap? Yes, certainly, I can eventually obtain self-realization and the cycle 
of karma will still occur to my body and life as I silently witness it.  But I 
can't help thinking of someone like Mark David Chapman, the murderer of John 
Lennon who has, of course, "found" Jesus oh-so-conveniently while in prison.  
He snuffed out the life of a 40-year-old creative man with two sons yet now 
everything is a-okay on the karma front because he's accepted Jesus Christ as 
his personal savior.





> 
> [I will freely admit that most practicing Christians have a limited 
> understanding of the meaning of Jesus' sacrifice, and many other limitations 
> in their beliefs, e.g., exclusivism ("Jesus is the only way"), etc.]
> 
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Robert"  wrote:
> >
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "shempmcgurk"  wrote:
> > >
> > > Once when a born again Christian (who also happened to be a TM teacher) 
> > > told Maharishi that Christ died for his sins, Maharishi replied: "Did he 
> > > die for you or did he live for you?"
> > > (snip)
> > Great observation, simple and true...
> > The whole 'Died for YOu'...is so absurd.
> ...
> > Crazy Religion!
> > R.G.
>




[FairfieldLife] Don't Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater (Re: Have YOU killed..?)

2009-04-13 Thread yateendrajee
The question of whether Jesus "died for our sins" may not be as trivial as it 
looks on the surface.

It is a well-accepted doctrine in the East that a spiritual master often works 
out the karma of members of his circle by processing it through his/her own 
body. This can result in diseases and, in some cases, death for the master.

Also, many in the East regard Jesus as the "avatar," an incarnation of Vishnu, 
the universal sustainer (Rama and Krishna were also avatars of Vishnu). If 
Jesus was a "universal master" (a spiritual figure who claimed all humanity as 
his students, many of them unconscious of the fact), there is a logical basis 
for considering his sacrifice as having been on our behalf. One could also 
consider Jesus' sacrifice as a kind of "clearing the atmosphere" of that time, 
smoothing the path for future generations (Isaiah 40:4 uses a similar metaphor 
when prophesying the coming of the Messiah).

On the foregoing basis, I'd answer Maharishi's question: "He both lived *and* 
died for me."

[I will freely admit that most practicing Christians have a limited 
understanding of the meaning of Jesus' sacrifice, and many other limitations in 
their beliefs, e.g., exclusivism ("Jesus is the only way"), etc.]

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Robert"  wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "shempmcgurk"  wrote:
> >
> > Once when a born again Christian (who also happened to be a TM teacher) 
> > told Maharishi that Christ died for his sins, Maharishi replied: "Did he 
> > die for you or did he live for you?"
> > (snip)
> Great observation, simple and true...
> The whole 'Died for YOu'...is so absurd.
...
> Crazy Religion!
> R.G.