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Where Is God...really looking for God in all the wrong places.

#1 User is offline   jerryb

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Posted 16 June 2009 - 09:19 PM

luke 17:21 clearly states..."the kingdom of God is 'within you'. If this is true...why do we look up when we pray? Shouldn't we instead place our hand on our heart, and pray to the God who lives there/




Just wondering,

jerryb
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#2 User is offline   Jeannot

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Posted 16 June 2009 - 10:16 PM

Yes, in the heart. The last place God would be is "up there," which is really "out there"--in cold, empty space.
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#3 User is offline   minsocal

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Posted 17 June 2009 - 07:36 PM

View Postjerryb, on Jun 16 2009, 07:19 PM, said:

luke 17:21 clearly states..."the kingdom of God is 'within you'. If this is true...why do we look up when we pray? Shouldn't we instead place our hand on our heart, and pray to the God who lives there/




Just wondering,

jerryb


I think this can be taken in a litteral sense. I don't look up, I close my eyes and inward. look
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#4 User is offline   Timeflows

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Posted 18 June 2009 - 05:11 PM

I found this question quite surprising because I have never known anyone to look up in prayer.
I see it in religious images etc, but in the churches I have belonged to, everyone has always bowed their head downward when in prayer or reflection.
To be honest, I never thought of prayer residing in a specific bodily location like heart or head.
If I were to raise my head, it would be more about intensity of thought, than any sense of God being "up there."
(But then maybe this is a Christian cultural remnant that I have unconsciously adopted, like beard stroking, which is something some people also do when in thought, even without beard!)
Recently, I have been reading Barbara Brown Taylor's "An Altar in the World" and she talks of our physical bodies as being part of an ongoing prayer life. eg. prayer walking, but also hanging out laundry as being like hanging prayer flags.
It is about every aspect of our lives becoming opportunities for thankfulness.
This kind of prayer requires no set posture or practice at all.
I think being progressive, means opening prayer up to all sorts of practices and there are some exhausted and emotional times when wordy prayer is just beyond my capabilities...
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#5 User is offline   jerryb

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Posted 18 June 2009 - 09:34 PM

View PostTimeflows, on Jun 18 2009, 06:11 PM, said:

I found this question quite surprising because I have never known anyone to look up in prayer.
I see it in religious images etc, but in the churches I have belonged to, everyone has always bowed their head downward when in prayer or reflection.
To be honest, I never thought of prayer residing in a specific bodily location like heart or head.
If I were to raise my head, it would be more about intensity of thought, than any sense of God being "up there."
(But then maybe this is a Christian cultural remnant that I have unconsciously adopted, like beard stroking, which is something some people also do when in thought, even without beard!)
Recently, I have been reading Barbara Brown Taylor's "An Altar in the World" and she talks of our physical bodies as being part of an ongoing prayer life. eg. prayer walking, but also hanging out laundry as being like hanging prayer flags.
It is about every aspect of our lives becoming opportunities for thankfulness.
This kind of prayer requires no set posture or practice at all.
I think being progressive, means opening prayer up to all sorts of practices and there are some exhausted and emotional times when wordy prayer is just beyond my capabilities...



hi time,


I totally agree with your post.....especially the part about our physical bodies being part of an ongoing prayer life.
And lately I am "haunted" by this sobering question: What if the only God there is, is the God inside us?
God help us if that is a fact.....reminds me of the old cliche..."If it is to be, it is up to me".


blessings,

jerryb
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#6 User is offline   October's Autumn

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Posted 19 June 2009 - 12:46 AM

When my husband was little he asked the minister at his church why people bowed their heads and looked towards hell when they prayed.

I personally don't close my eyes or bow my head. I think I started not closing my eyes when I wore contact lenses and it irritated them.

I don't think God is anywhere. God just is, like time.
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#7 User is offline   Timeflows

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Posted 19 June 2009 - 05:37 PM

View Postjerryb, on Jun 19 2009, 12:34 PM, said:

Hi jerryb,
I think prayer is the most challenging aspect for me as a progressive Christian.
I know that many people, having reached this point on the journey, where they no longer believe in a God who intervenes, give it up completely.
I was never raised to think of prayer as an opportunity to ask a kindly "dad" figure for help ( I was also raised to think parents had to pay for the gifts Santa Claus brought each December) but I have a very dear friend, who is travelling this path with me, who feels alone, now that she believes that she cannot call on God to step in and save her loved ones in times of danger/sickness/emotional distress. It saddens me to have pushed her a little further along the path, than perhaps she was ready for. She feels very alone.
For me, prayer was always about giving thanks and asking for non-tangible stuff like tolerance and patience (although I know plenty of people who pray for parking spots and the like!)
If there was a request to be made, it was more a corporate thing, food for the poor, comfort for the lonely.
Having said that, I can honestly say that I pray less now and I do have questions about why I am doing it.
Sometimes it is just a daily spiritual audit about what I did well and where I fell down, and a list of things that I am thankful for.
Other times it is just quiet contemplation. I listen to my feet as my march my way through my daily walk and am thankful that I have a strong body to carry me about.
I still really enjoy the prayers of people like Walter Brueggeman and if it turns out to be simply powerful poetry, that grabs me in my chest and makes me sigh, I am okay with that.
I feel connected to a community of believers and prayer connects me to them, regardless of our differences.
In terms of god being inside us and within everything, I really don't know.
Am I praying to some collective goodness? I have no idea.
I do know, that when I first realised that I no longer believed Jesus to be the biological son of God, that I had the thought "What am I doing in church then?"
It was the knowledge that I still really respected the teachings of Jesus and that was still my life, that kept me hanging in there.
With time, my understanding has changed and I still feel that I belong there.
I feel the same about prayer. I am hanging in there, in the hope that wisdom hits me sometime soon.
Until then, I am happy with "I don't know."

BTW I don't believe in hell and when I bow my head and close my eyes, I am just shutting out the world. Yes, I am using gestures that meant other things to ther people, in other times, but that is what it means for m


Hi jerryb,
I think prayer is the most challenging aspect for me as a progressive Christian.
I know that many people, having reached this point on the journey, where they no longer believe in a God who intervenes, give it up completely.
I was never raised to think of prayer as an opportunity to ask a kindly "dad" figure for help ( I was also raised to think parents had to pay for the gifts Santa Claus brought each December) but I have a very dear friend, who is travelling this path with me, who feels alone, now that she believes that she cannot call on God to step in and save her loved ones in times of danger/sickness/emotional distress. It saddens me to have pushed her a little further along the path, than perhaps she was ready for. She feels very alone.
For me, prayer was always about giving thanks and asking for non-tangible stuff like tolerance and patience (although I know plenty of people who pray for parking spots and the like!)
If there was a request to be made, it was more a corporate thing, food for the poor, comfort for the lonely.
Having said that, I can honestly say that I pray less now and I do have questions about why I am doing it.
Sometimes it is just a daily spiritual audit about what I did well and where I fell down, and a list of things that I am thankful for.
Other times it is just quiet contemplation. I listen to my feet as my march my way through my daily walk and am thankful that I have a strong body to carry me about.
I still really enjoy the prayers of people like Walter Brueggeman and if it turns out to be simply powerful poetry, that grabs me in my chest and makes me sigh, I am okay with that.
I feel connected to a community of believers and prayer connects me to them, regardless of our differences.
In terms of god being inside us and within everything, I really don't know.
Am I praying to some collective goodness? I have no idea.
I do know, that when I first realised that I no longer believed Jesus to be the biological son of God, that I had the thought "What am I doing in church then?"
It was the knowledge that I still really respected the teachings of Jesus and that was still my life, that kept me hanging in there.
With time, my understanding has changed and I still feel that I belong there.
I feel the same about prayer. I am hanging in there, in the hope that wisdom hits me sometime soon.
Until then, I am happy with "I don't know."

BTW I don't believe in hell and when I bow my head and close my eyes, I am just shutting out the world. Yes, I am using gestures that meant other things to ther people, in other times, but that is what it means for me today.
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#8 User is offline   jerryb

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Posted 19 June 2009 - 08:51 PM

Deleted 2 double quoted posts without a response - Joseph(Moderator/Admin2)
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#9 User is offline   soma

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Posted 20 June 2009 - 01:52 PM

Great question, Where is God? God is in everything...............................compost, a sweet fragrance, the brilliance in fire, the life in all beings, a dream, a delusion, and in all religions. God is calling to us in the five senses to be aware of omnipresence. I think the most important thing is that God is everywhere, but where there is nothing. This is not contradictory. You think the fragrance comes from the flower and it does. Expand consciousness and the doors open wider so we stop identifying, labeling the fragrance so it comes from God so is God. There is no where we can go to hide from God if we see nothing outside of God. To see God we need to see no-thing.

You are like a mirage in the desert, which the thirsty man thinks is water; but when he comes up to it he finds it is nothing. And where he thought it was, there he finds God. Similarly, if you were to examine yourself, you would find it to be nothing, and instead you would find God. That is to say, you would find God instead of yourself, and there would be nothing left of you but a name without a form. ~ Al-Alawi
A soul with a body, not a body with a soul. http://thinkunity.com
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#10 User is offline   jerryb

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Posted 21 June 2009 - 09:50 PM

View Postsoma, on Jun 20 2009, 02:52 PM, said:

Great question, Where is God? God is in everything...............................compost, a sweet fragrance, the brilliance in fire, the life in all beings, a dream, a delusion, and in all religions. God is calling to us in the five senses to be aware of omnipresence. I think the most important thing is that God is everywhere, but where there is nothing. This is not contradictory. You think the fragrance comes from the flower and it does. Expand consciousness and the doors open wider so we stop identifying, labeling the fragrance so it comes from God so is God. There is no where we can go to hide from God if we see nothing outside of God. To see God we need to see no-thing.

You are like a mirage in the desert, which the thirsty man thinks is water; but when he comes up to it he finds it is nothing. And where he thought it was, there he finds God. Similarly, if you were to examine yourself, you would find it to be nothing, and instead you would find God. That is to say, you would find God instead of yourself, and there would be nothing left of you but a name without a form. ~ Al-Alawi


Good post soma.....especially the part where you said"if you were to examine yourself,you would find it to be nothing"....I felt like that many times when I was a fundelmentalist singing that old hymn that says,"Amazing grace....that saved 'a wretch like me'. But I am most thankful that God helped to realize,finally,that I was not a "wretch", but a divine creation of God.
Thank you for reminding me.


blessings,

jerryb
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#11 User is offline   soma

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Posted 22 June 2009 - 05:09 PM

jerryb, We are so fortunate to see God everywhere. I also need to be reminded that God visits when I leave. Salutations to the Divinity within you. I think it is such a nice gesture to bow when meeting someone else and acknowledging that God within that person.
A soul with a body, not a body with a soul. http://thinkunity.com
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#12 User is offline   AllInTheNameOfProgress

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Posted 22 June 2009 - 05:31 PM

Timeflows,
Would you like to start a new topic on prayer for more discussion. It would be interesting to see how progressives weigh in on that. I think very few if any of us pray to the bearded old man in the sky expecting physical interventions. Zap!

Janet
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#13 User is offline   jerryb

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Posted 23 June 2009 - 09:40 PM

View PostAllInTheNameOfProgress, on Jun 22 2009, 06:31 PM, said:

Timeflows,
Would you like to start a new topic on prayer for more discussion. It would be interesting to see how progressives weigh in on that. I think very few if any of us pray to the bearded old man in the sky expecting physical interventions. Zap!

Janet



Hi Janet,

Lately....when I try to define prayer,I really lean toward Bishop Spong's definition" I do my praying as I do my living....my very life is a prayer".
And since I personally believe that God lives inside of us, instead of somewhere "up there"...prayer has become extremely more intimate for me. I find that exciting and challenging at the same time.

Oh by the way...have you ever seen God answer prayer without using a human being? I can't say that I have.

blessings,
jerryb
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#14 User is offline   davidk

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Posted 12 August 2009 - 12:31 PM

View Postjerryb, on 16 June 2009 - 10:19 PM, said:

luke 17:21 clearly states..."the kingdom of God is 'within you'. If this is true...why do we look up when we pray? Shouldn't we instead place our hand on our heart, and pray to the God who lives there/




Just wondering,

jerryb

A curious question, jerryb,
It matters not where you look or place your hand, "The kingdom of God is not coming with signs to be observed; nor will they say. 'Look, here it is!' or, 'There it is!' For behold, the kingdom of God is in your midst."
- Lk 17:20- 21;

The kingdom of the Messiah is not temporal or external; it's spiritual. Look for the kingdom of God in the revolutions of the heart, not of the civil government.

To that point-
The pharisees, to whom Jesus was speaking in v. 20 & 21, were looking for a discourse from Christ concerning the signs of the coming kingdom of God, that is, the kingdom of the Messiah, which was now shortly to be set up, and of which there was some great expectations.

The term "within you" is also translated as "among you" or "in your midst". Since the Pharisees were unaware of where the coming kingdom was, it was not yet "in" them.
---
I'm a little puzzled over the 'Amazing Grace' posting (June 21 @ 10:50). Are you agreeing with Soma, or criticizing his comment about us being nothing's? It appears your thanking Soma for reminding you that you are a "nothing".
(Do you think you may have misinterpreted the meaning of "Amazing Grace"?)

Do you mean by saying "divine creation" that: what was created was by God; or that it is God?

Just curious.

Dk

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#15 User is offline   soma

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Posted 12 August 2009 - 03:10 PM

Quote

I'm a little puzzled over the 'Amazing Grace' posting (June 21 @ 10:50). Are you agreeing with Soma, or criticizing his comment about us being nothing's? It appears your thanking Soma for reminding you that you are a "nothing".
(Do you think you may have misinterpreted the meaning of "Amazing Grace"?)

Do you mean by saying "divine creation" that: what was created was by God; or that it is God?


DavidK I hope this quote clears up divine creation and nothing for you.
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was made. In Him was life, and the life was the light of men. And the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not comprehend it." John 1:1-5

Related to the quote above I will clear up about being nothing. DavidK are you your bank account? your social security number? your name? your title? your body? your race? these are things. Do you relate to these things to other worldly things or to no-things your divine self?

15"Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 16For everything in the world—the cravings of sinful man, the lust of his eyes and the boasting of what he has and does—comes not from the Father but from the world. 17The world and its desires pass away, but the man who does the will of God lives forever." 1 John 2

A claim to be something in the physical makes known a lack of relationship with God in the spiritual, a lack of being in God. 'Nothing' shows one is more inclined to the spiritual than a claim to the physical things. This is a spiritual realm in which some live their lives, a realm in which decisions, choices, behavior and character are shaped. Those people who live their lives "in God" are those whose character and behavior are shaped by God's truth and love. "Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path." Psalm 119:105 Therefore, spiritually God's truth is viewed as something that is active, indwelling, omnipresence, and powerful. This spirituality shapes the person in whom it dwells. Obviously, then, when we are reminded of God's truth within we are thankful because we are again directed to God's amazing grace. Our minds have an attraction to outer physical manifestations so when we are redirected to the inner communion with God we are amazed again at God's glory.
A soul with a body, not a body with a soul. http://thinkunity.com
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#16 User is offline   JosephM

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Posted 12 August 2009 - 05:56 PM

View Postdavidk, on 12 August 2009 - 01:31 PM, said:

A curious question, jerryb,
It matters not where you look or place your hand, "The kingdom of God is not coming with signs to be observed; nor will they say. 'Look, here it is!' or, 'There it is!' For behold, the kingdom of God is in your midst."
- Lk 17:20- 21;

The kingdom of the Messiah is not temporal or external; it's spiritual. Look for the kingdom of God in the revolutions of the heart, not of the civil government.
(snip)




Davidk,

This seems to me to be a very astute interpretation. I very much like your wording.

Joseph
Love in Christ,
JM
The only separation that could be between you and me is in ones Mind

#17 User is offline   davidk

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Posted 12 August 2009 - 06:02 PM

Why thank you, Joseph.
---

Dear Soma,

I don't follow your use of these scriptural references as they may pertain to my questions to jerryb.

In John 1:1-5, John is speaking of Jesus Christ when he speaks of the Word (see v.14). In 1:3, John unequivocally attributes none of God the Father's creation was made without 'Him- Jesus Christ.

Man is a part of creation that has been created by the uncreated Creator (whew!). The claim of a personal physical existance is not without irrefutable evidence. God made us as living beings with a physical body as well as a spiritual soul. We are meant to relate to both.

Are you suggesting by the use of the word 'divine', that it is in the sense of being supernatural as opposed to human; having the nature of a god; and being deity? If we are simply a part of God, there's no reason for our existing as individuals.

Despite those confusions, and after the first 3 lines of your last paragraph, the last of your post was well written. I could pick over a couple of small points, but overall, very nicely done.

This post has been edited by davidk: 12 August 2009 - 06:04 PM

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#18 User is offline   AllInTheNameOfProgress

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Posted 12 August 2009 - 10:34 PM

Jerry,
I'm sorry I didn't see this question until now.
"Oh by the way...have you ever seen God answer prayer without using a human being? I can't say that I have."

Many of my prayers are for strength, energy, and wisdom, so often I feel an answer in the core of my being.

Janet
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#19 User is offline   glintofpewter

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Posted 12 August 2009 - 10:41 PM

Does a vision of Jesus count? It was someone else's prayer and my sense of his presence and the request to say Yes was the answer to their prayer. Yes I made that next move. So yes a human was the agent.

Dutch
Reverence for Life leads us into a spiritual relationship with the world independent of a full understanding of the universe. [Albert Schweitzer,]
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#20 User is offline   soma

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Posted 13 August 2009 - 12:47 AM

"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was made. In Him was life, and the life was the light of men. And the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not comprehend it." John 1:1-5

I feel this quote shows that God the Father is the ultimate source of all, including Jesus and the Spirit. It shows that life did not simply come through the Word but was in the Word. The Word is the agent of all creation. The Logos of God, the Agent of Creation-created us with spiritual and physical life, but we died spiritually (Genesis 2:17)when we set up our own will against the holy will of God the Father. I feel this symbolic transgression forfeited God's divine life, and we became aware of the awful effects of physical life without the divine life of spiritual bliss. We became liable to pain, disease, and death in physical existence. Worse than that, we lost the spiritual image of God's pure consciousness.

Our heart didn't stop beating, but our spirit, which is that part of us that communes with God died. That's why we need someone, something to come and reveal the fullness of God's love to us and in the case of Jesus lay down His physical life for us. We need to be born again with a new spiritual life so that we can again connect and commune with God in spirit. Spirituality is our journey of deepening responses to God. This spirituality is rejected by some and is received by others. The rejection or reception of divine life or the spiritual life is where some are in their journey. John was trying to establish an appreciation for the divine life of spirituality.

The imagery of coming alive as God's children suggests the power is always there to produce the divine life, but it is a power that must be exercised by the person. John does not say "he made them children of God" but "he gave them power to become children of God" (John 10.2).
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