Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 September 2022

It is the suddenness of it all - death...

Four weeks ago, we attended the memorial service of one elder in the family who passed on. Sitting in church, reminded me of how much I enjoy the sacred quietness that is so characteristic of traditionally designed churches, cathedrals, and synagogues. And then – if the latter is host to a traditional pipe organ – I love it even more.

A couple of rows in front of me, a late thirty-ish / early forty-year-old male was scrolling his social media pages on his mobile. Truly disrespectful, I thought…

In fact, it also reminded me of what I dislike about these spaces - people and their general disrespect – the whispering before, after, and during the service. Really… get with the programme!

Although it is natural to pass on, the suddenness of some of these occurrences is truly traumatic. The processes involved in acquiring all the required documentation, postmortems and so forth, can be extremely traumatic, especially when the people involved in these processes absolutely disregard even the simplest of dignity and courtesy towards the deceased and the family.

But then – I took many detailed pictures at post mortems during my time with SAPS. Postmortems are not for the faint of heart. A body - on that stainless steel table, represents – for most officials present – and brace yourself for what I am about to say – nothing more than muscle and bone - a piece of meat. Your fame, money and whatever status you claimed during your life, means zero, niks….

I must haste to say that I have attended a couple of postmortems where the body was treated with utmost respect and care by the pathologist. This is not the norm though.

I have always maintained that, if there is one thing that will blow your ego cover to infinite scraps and humble you for the rest of your life, it is attending a postmortem.

Be that as it may – these experiences refocus one’s priorities and spotlight those things in your life that present and require authentic value and care. Family is one.

Life is a handful for most at this time – the government is a mess and we as citizens need to take hands -ground ourselves within the traditional value of good humanitarian principles which – just by the way – has zero/zilch to do with the colour of your skin or the balance in your bank account. It is about caring for others as you would care for yourself. Just remember – self care – not selfishness - is a priority if you want to care for others.

To not care for and about yourself is selfish and brutal because it will bite you in the long run.

What are your thoughts about this?

 

Monday, 12 February 2018

The right answer ... is it out there?





Many answers – yes.

Stupid question – no, there is no such thing as a stupid question.

Questions may be confrontational, thought-provoking, shocking, eye-opening, boring, irrelevant at a particular time and point, but never stupid. 

The person posing the question was serious and adamant about the value of the question.
Simple questions can be as serious as serious questions can be simple.

When one analyses the question’s various latent elements, it actually raises more questions e.g.
Do you believe in God – yes, no, maybe
Do you believe in a god – yes, no, maybe
Is this God/god the same one the Bible talks about?
Do you believe in God but not in religion?
Can the one be without the other?
What does the Bible say about the dead / souls / reincarnation
What does religion say about the dead / the Bible / souls / reincarnation
What does the world say about the aforementioned?
Religion claims the Bible as its foundation but with so many different religions/believe systems/interpretations – how does one determine the truth? 
Should one not prescribe to any of the above, in whole or in part, how does one explain the wonderment of creation, nature and the synchronicity within the amazing human body to name but  a few?
If one considers all of the above, or part thereof, irrelevant – what is your relevance, purpose and significance, as human being, within this bigger picture that we call life?
I for one cannot subscribe to the thought that my beingness, presence, and contribution be considered irrelevant at all.
This sharing of possible scenario answers to a particular question may be considered irrelevant and interesting only for this moment or the sake of philosophical debate or interaction and that is it. It may, or not, have no relevance to what happens next.
It may just serve as an illustration of the complexity within the simplicity of a seemingly simple question – but then, the final choice always rest with the interpreter who also solely bears the responsibility of his/her decision. 
      
And now I have a deadline to respond to. 

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Monday, 15 August 2016

JOURNEY FROM WITHIN


JOURNEY FROM WITHIN

https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/journey-from-within/9780992493936-item.html

This is exiting news and an absolute must share.

My eBook/ePub is now available on the above link and other platforms. It is a potpourri of spiritual essays, prose and one short story - all in one. Many of the prose is accompanied by a photograph which relates, or not, to the words.

My journey is ongoing and relates to exploring the many consciousness levels of the mind and the soul with the intention to reach constant mindfulness within every moment.

Some of the writing may be abstract and challenging but I believe that the reader will find the essence.

I hope and believe that every reader will find value - if not immediately - then in due time.

Be good.

Wednesday, 3 August 2016

READING FOR THE SOUL


Here are just a couple of short impressions on books which I have read over the last two months.


The Essential Gnostic Gospels inclusive of the Gospel of Thomas and the Gospel of Mary – Alan Jacobs

For early Christianity salvation was gained through self-knowledge but the Orthodox Church has labelled this as heresy. Alan has brought forward again some of the most important renditions with simplicity. Gnosticism was about experiencing God directly within oneself. The Nag Hammadi papyrus rolls were discovered in 1945 and this brought much of the early knowledge and original interpretations back – the latter often quite different from that presented by the New Testament.
Wisdom is gained by studying more than just one interpretation of a particular subject matter and in terms of the Bible is wise to refer back to the above, the Nag Hammadi, the Dead Sea scroll and original Hebrew texts. It is often quite enlightening to experience first-hand how the today’s text has been altered from the original. No wonder then that we have this plethora of different religious interpretations which, in my opinion, does nothing more than to illustrate a perfect example of the “divide and conquer” principal.
This is truly inspiring read.



The Path by Maharaj Singh

The author is an enlightened master which presents the reader with a glimpse of the transcendental realms within oneself. Each of us has to follow our own path – part of this, is not to follow the herd – part of this is that not a single one of us can in fact advise someone else as to what is truly their purpose etc etc. All paths are correct. This is absolutely not something what the world out there will agree with, but so be it. All our efforts must be directed towards subjugating the mind and withdrawing to the Source (God). He writes about fear and control of the mind which really, in more sense than one is uncontrollable. The more one wants to control it, the more uncontrollable it becomes. The mind and the soul is two different things and has become subservient to the mind which is caught up between the ego and the illusion of this world.
I think this saying by Swami Ji says it all: “By thy self, realise the Self – be not led away by what others may say”



The Path of the Masters – Julian Johnson – M.A., B.D., M.D.

This book is about the Audible Life Stream. It offers a fascinating journey into the philosophy and practical benefits of being taught and guided by a living master. Living Master is an interesting suggesting and I found synergy with this in that some year ago I was reading – and with great intention and attention, the writings of the Essenes. In their Gospel of Peace, it is suggested that “the written word is dead” and that we should take our lesson from nature because she is alive.
Julian, a medical doctor, pastor, scientist and much more made a serious study of the many different paths, religions and writings by many, now deceased masters. He discusses the good in a whole host of popular religions – he refers to many ancient writings and philosophical schools of thought – he advise as to how to recognise a genuine master – the difficulty in finding one and their function.
He discusses God and the grand hierarchy of the Universe – the various perversions of the mind – reincarnation, Karma, the existence of higher worlds (something which is denied by most religions simply because they follow a deceased master), the principals of man being a microcosm of the macrocosm, a Christ attitude and the dreaded results of us humans not being able to kill “the desire” for things.
He refers to the many rituals (almost all completely useless) within religion and other schools of thought – most of them operating without a living master and following only the umpteenth interpretation of other interpretations of the various scared writings – the implicit and fanatical following of deceased masters and the chaos this is causing in the world. He refers to meditation, even that practised by a number of prominent Christians of ancient times and even today.
He refers to the partial good in all of these – negated of course by the fact that there is no living master in all of these practices. Thus preventing the student to connect with and access all knowledge and the real truth about the truth – and, so much more capacity to live life to the fullest and true to your purpose.
Our infinite capacity – something which I have always innately believed in, read about, investigated, explored through various meditation and breathing techniques – is infinite but we have lost our ability to access this worlds of wonder and wisdom.
I will continue to investigate and explore because I agree that there is still much that we know nothing about and as a result we cannot conclude and accept that which we are being spoon fed by media, government, religion. I will decide for myself. The answers are inside. The external will and do provide us with leads and stimulation, but if we don't go inside - we go without the truth. Call me whatever you want – believe in whatever and whoever you want – that is perfect – I respect that.
One other element of this book which I found fascinating is that although the author refers to many ancient masters – the Veda’s – Indian philosophies and more – he substantiate and quote verses from the Bible – he refers to the disciples and their incomplete training.
You might say - well, this is just another interpretation of interpretations supported by much and true practical experiences. The long and the short is this though – if you are an avid reader or student of this subject matter and these philosophies and, you have some practical experience – at some point you gain the ability to separate yourself from the deception that is so rife in this world with its divide and conquer religions, policies and governments.
Mental and academic superiority, refined tastes in ethics and aesthetics does not produce civilisation and civil behaviour – LOVE and love alone makes civilisation because it is the essence of pure spirit.
This is not an easy read, in fact none of these books are – but it certainly is inspiring and most enlightening.                    




Thursday, 14 January 2016

Many answers



Many answers – yes.

Stupid question – no, there is no such thing as a stupid question.

Questions may be confrontational, thought-provoking, shocking, eye-opening, boring, irrelevant at a particular time and point, but never stupid.

The person posing the question was serious and adamant about the value of the question.

Simple questions can be as serious as serious questions can be simple.

When one analyses the question’s various latent elements, it actually raises more questions e.g.
Do you believe in God – yes, no, maybe
Do you believe in a god – yes, no, maybe
Is this God/god the same one the Bible talks about?
Do you believe in God but not in religion?
Can the one be without the other?
What does the Bible say about the dead / souls / reincarnation
What does religion say about the dead / the Bible / souls / reincarnation
What does the world say about the aforementioned?
Religion claims the Bible as its foundation but with so many different religions/believe systems/interpretations – how does one determine the truth?
Should one not prescribe to any of the above, in whole or in part, how does one explain the wonderment of creation, nature and the synchronicity within the amazing human body to name but  a few?
If one considers all of the above, or part thereof, irrelevant – what is your relevance, purpose and significance, as a human being, within this bigger picture that we call life?
I for one cannot subscribe to the thought that my beingness, presence, and contribution be considered irrelevant at all.
This sharing of possible scenario answers to a particular question may be considered irrelevant and interesting only for this moment or the sake of philosophical debate or interaction and that is it. It may, or not, have no relevance to what happens next.
It may just serve as an illustration of the complexity within the simplicity of a seemingly simple question – but then, the final choice always rests with the interpreter who also solely bears the responsibility of his/her decision.    
And now I have a deadline to respond to.

The concept of time.






The concept of time

The concept of time is neither here nor there. It is simply another one of many subjects which lend itself to philosophical and intellectual discussion and debate. And although the latter may
generate some wisdom and positive physical mind activity the question of whether it will, in fact, create any real life – real value changes in one’s life will obviously generate another debate.

The term “to be” does in itself not, in my mind anyway, dictate a sit-on-your-bum-and-do-nothing attitude. On the contrary, it actually instructs quite the opposite. It suggests that we apply ourselves –
investigate, question and contemplate and then determine our principals and preferences in terms of all the elements that make up life as we “understand” it. It has nothing to do with religion.

However, when one contemplates the absolute stunning uniqueness of the universe and how everything in nature synchronize, one has to accept and acknowledge that there must be an intelligence of supreme ability out there that has been instrumental in this creation which we call life.

Now once one has determined and set your preferences as a result of all the questions, debate and so forth, (this can include goals etc), you will go about doing whatever you can, in a manner that will not violate the laws of nature and God (that intelligence) to achieve these preferences.

You will not allow these preferences – especially those which prove unattainable (and there will be some) to become baggage that will drag you down. You will simply accept these, regroup, re-prioritize and proceed with faith in what you believe but cannot see in your current reality – not yet anyway! Don’t argue, quarrel, or fight!

So – is faith and religion the same thing? Yes and no! Being fanatical about your body and how it looks etc. can become a religion (something of overwhelming importance) also!

Does faith dictate that you belong to a religious group – I believe not!

© Matthys Ferreira