Gnostic Bishop
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2014
- Messages
- 2,769
I try to peer into a deeper meaning behind what was said. I admit I do not know the Bible very well, and don't consider myself a Christian by the standards of others. My religion is also Islam, but not Mohammedan, in that I accept some things as true... Perhaps even the totality, but imperfect. Its hard to explain. I think its all "in Gods image"... Things must eat. How moral is it that I eat this chicken? How 'moral' is it that the human race exists in the first place?
I don't think we can put 'God' on human standards, and it doesn't mean that we need to necessarily follow what earlier people interpreted as God. Or even what another now does. I've seen God, seemingly, make some crazy jokes. I've traveled down the rabbit hole, or into the illusion (?) so far that it seems to break down, and all I'm left with is choice. Choice to love, or give up- find myself in nothing. But my words are so imperfect... "Nothing" leads me to love, sometimes. (Also, it becomes a joke... Seemingly, at times)
While there is a lot of other data, and instructions- God tested Abraham in asking him to kill Isaac... They say, but this was a test (or Abraham was just sort of what some may pass as 'crazy' now and his rational mind won in this case). I don't think things are so clear cut and dry, as we seem to interpret them as. I want to see the reasons things are wanted or instructed in these books, and I often do, no matter how harsh... But... I don't agree, and will defy this God, for a different God. That higher 'moral' God, most of the time.
I think it is impossible that we are not "in the image of" the one true God. But the Old Testament and whatnot are just some words of some people... Not to write it off, but we all have our own choices- our own words, and minds to make them, as dangerous as that may be...
Jews have always strove both for and against God.
Do you think the testing of Abraham might have bee a Jewish test of their God?
Did Abraham not say that God would supply a sacrifice and did God not pass the test by doing so and proving his worthiness?
Regards
DL

