Does God have a body?
Yes
by Narkissos 56 Replies latest jw friends
Does God have a body?
Yes
BurnTheShips
It is not a Jehovah's Witness belief merely.
This is a true statement.
The idea that we will again be joined with our bodies is a Jehovah’s Witness belief.
This is also a true statement.
Words are not an ultimate reality but symbols and as such cannot be understood in isolation.
Religion is much the same. It seeks to define ultimate reality and despite much effort fails to do so adequately. Mind you I fail to see how The Apostle's Creed supports the belief held by Jehovah’s Witnesses.
It was unkind of me to say you had a wooden sword. You had already told me on another thread that you train with train with the short sword and buckler.
See you in the arena.
Narkissos
Thank you for your comments. I would not like to cross swords with you. You would make an awesome gladiator.
Words are not an ultimate reality but symbols and as such cannot be understood in isolation.
Aye
Religion is much the same. It seeks to define ultimate reality and despite much effort fails to do so adequately.
And aye.
Mind you I fail to see how The Apostle's Creed supports the belief held by Jehovah’s Witnesses.
I never said it did.
Keep the rust off your sword.
Burn
But still no shit?
But still no shit?
LOL
Obviously, not even you believe what follows.
I'm not sure what makes that "obvious" to you...
I have become increasingly wary of all the "ought"s and "must"s and "should"s -- and, funnily enough, it started with reading Paul and Luther, long before getting into Nietzsche... there are striking similarities in the apparent "opposites".
Which doesn't mean that I consistently abstain from them (neither Paul etc. did btw). But when I do use them I know what they are worth... either mindless or performative talk (i.e., action).
Nark - what exactly do you believe - or not? Or is that too personal?
R.C., since you ask...
It may sound arrogant or miserable depending on your standpoint, but I have actually become quite close to believing nothing as far as theories or ideas, in the usual sense of those words, are concerned.
And at the same time I believe everything -- every star, cloud, tree, bug or pebble, every smile or tear, every word uttered or written... go figure.
I also sometimes think I believe nothing. Then sometimes I wonder whether or not I simply wish it were so that I believe nothing. I mean it is rather convenient (dare I even say comforting) sometimes to "believe" that I believe in nothing. Maybe the notion that I believe nothing is "nothing" but a mental trap to prevent me from seeing the something I currently believe. How can I ever know. And would it even make a difference if there were a definite answer to that question anyway?
I also am intrigued by your threads/questions of late that seem to proceed on the basis: I don't believe in Christianity any more, but let's pretend I did, what would be the best way to go about it?
I find it really hard to generate enthusiasm for these sorts of questions somehow. Isn't there a more constructive way to expend our mental efforts? Shouldn't we at least be making an attempt to look for a better foundation for ethics and for a new view of the world? Aha, perhaps I am displaying an ever-so-slightly over-optimistic streak here. Have you given up all hope, or are you multitasking behind the scenes. Please share. I rather suspect I have simply not reached your level of nothingness, so perhaps that's the problem for me. And the gap.
Nark
It sounds like a 'mystical' life, a direct experiencing of things without evaluating, or labeling, while not clinging or attaching to anything.
S