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Hammer of Los wrote:...
Everything has a shadow side.
...
In this chapter, the idea is given that all limitation
and evil is an exceedingly rare accident; there can be
no night in the whole of the Solar System, except in rare
spots, where the shadow of a planet is cast by itself.
It is a serious misfortune that we happen to live in a
tiny corner of the system, where the darkness reaches such
a high figure as 50 per cent.
The same is true of moral and spiritual conditions.
In this chapter, the idea is given that all limitation
and evil is an exceedingly rare accident; there can be
no night in the whole of the Solar System, except in rare
spots, where the shadow of a planet is cast by itself.
It is a serious misfortune that we happen to live in a
tiny corner of the system, where the darkness reaches such
a high figure as 50 per cent.
The same is true of moral and spiritual conditions.
Via: Book of Lies, commentary Lambda-Zeta
Hammer of Los wrote:...
I have a lesson for the brainpanhandler;
Gestalt theory and practice are the same as the Pure Mind, Pure Land doctrine of the ultimate boddhisatvas.
I certainly observe gestalt theory.
It ain't no theory to me.
The death of the old man that is risen again in Christ is metaphorical.
Perhaps not surprisingly, insofar as I am a follower of Christianity, which I'm not, it is of the mystical persuasion.
To the trained eye universal truths are revealed.
...
Jeff wrote:I think any belief system powerful enough to command obedience must have a shadow side, but a system with a staying power of millennia can't be only shadow.
Virginia man kills family and himself over fear Obama would be re-elected
By Arturo Garcia | Friday, September 28, 2012 17:10 EDT
A Virginia man allegedly killed himself and his family earlier this week in part because he was upset by the thought of President Barack Obama being re-elected.
“He felt that our God-given rights were being taken away,” a family friend identified as “Maggie L.” told The Daily Mail. “He didn’t like where the country was going.”
The friend said Albert Peterson, a defense contractor, had a history of paranoia and was also affected by a favorite uncle’s recent suicide. On Wednesday, The Washington Post reported that Peterson, his wife Kathleen and their two sons, Matthew and Christopher, were found dead in their home.
According to The Mail, authorities believe Peterson shot his wife and the children before turning the gun on himself. Maggie told the newspaper that his family had a history of mental illness; his father killed himself when Peterson was young, and the death of his mother five years ago, she said, nearly drove him to suicide before Kathleen saved him.
But more recently, Maggie said, Peterson was behaving erratically, sending paranoid political emails daily to family and friends.
“They were very well off people and they saved a lot of money,” she said about the Petersons. “He couldn’t understand how the government could be so irresponsible and he thought it would be on the backs of his boys.”
WJLA-TV reported on Wednesday that friends of the family and classmates of Matthew and Christopher held a vigil to support each other.
“It doesn’t really hit you until you get to school to know that you’re never going to see them at school anymore, or anytime,” said a family friend, Jazmine Mitchell.
WJLA’s report from the vigil for the Peterson family, aired Wednesday night, can be seen below.
Raw Story (http://s.tt/1oEms)
compared2what? wrote:Hammer of Los wrote:...
I have a lesson for the brainpanhandler;
Gestalt theory and practice are the same as the Pure Mind, Pure Land doctrine of the ultimate boddhisatvas.
I certainly observe gestalt theory.
It ain't no theory to me.
The death of the old man that is risen again in Christ is metaphorical.
Perhaps not surprisingly, insofar as I am a follower of Christianity, which I'm not, it is of the mystical persuasion.
To the trained eye universal truths are revealed.
...
I'd kind of like to see that rephrased lovingly some day. It would be very well suited to that kind of approach. And I mean that in a truly (unshadow-y) Christian spirit. Because, for one thing, I have no idea what the quarrel is here. Although that is just one thing. There are others.
compared2what? wrote:Jeff wrote:I think any belief system powerful enough to command obedience must have a shadow side, but a system with a staying power of millennia can't be only shadow.
I disagree. I don't actually think Christianity is such a system. But I do think a system with equivalent staying power can be only shadow.
Theory.
brainpanhandler wrote:compared2what? wrote:Jeff wrote:I think any belief system powerful enough to command obedience must have a shadow side, but a system with a staying power of millennia can't be only shadow.
I disagree. I don't actually think Christianity is such a system. But I do think a system with equivalent staying power can be only shadow.
Theory.
You don't think christianity is a system powerful enough to command obedience and therefore possessed of a shadow side but despite it's staying power not exclusively so?
JackRiddler wrote:brainpanhandler wrote:compared2what? wrote:Jeff wrote:I think any belief system powerful enough to command obedience must have a shadow side, but a system with a staying power of millennia can't be only shadow.
I disagree. I don't actually think Christianity is such a system. But I do think a system with equivalent staying power can be only shadow.
Theory.
You don't think christianity is a system powerful enough to command obedience and therefore possessed of a shadow side but despite it's staying power not exclusively so?
This one confused me too. I think c2w? mangled the syntax a little since it was response. I want to get my bet in on what she meant:
1) A system can be only shadow and stick around for millennia. (This is the part she disagrees with you on.)
2) That doesn't mean Christianity is only shadow, but has both light and shadow, as you would also agree.
3) And of course Christianity is a really powerful system to stick around so long, one way or another.
.
brainpanhandler wrote:compared2what? wrote:Jeff wrote:I think any belief system powerful enough to command obedience must have a shadow side, but a system with a staying power of millennia can't be only shadow.
I disagree. I don't actually think Christianity is such a system. But I do think a system with equivalent staying power can be only shadow.
Theory.
You don't think christianity is a system powerful enough to command obedience and therefore possessed of a shadow side but despite it's staying power not exclusively so?
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