Belinda wrote: ↑Sun Oct 05, 2025 12:51 pm
It is true what Alexis Jacobi says that (I paraphrase) nature is cruel, and the Christian/Jewish/Islamic God created nature as it is with plagues, ice ages, sociopathic men, volcanic eruptions, asteroid strikes, babies born with cleft palates, and so forth. However Christians believe that God moves in mysterious way his wonders to perform so we cannot understand why God made us to suffer so much.
I wish to add that a long long while before the Levantine religions emerged, those “ancient Rishis” of ancient India
saw the world with similar eyes. They became aware of an impermanent, ever-mutable world where “the rule of fishes” (the violent world of nature where creatures devour creatures) reigned and where terrible mortality was the end for all creatures.
They
saw that they existed in just that world, but they also
saw that if our world existed, within infinity of time and space, that other worlds — any number of them, and also infinite — must necessarily exist. The world was utterly mysterious just as
EXISTENCE is utterly mysterious.
So they focused on the pattern or the prototype of the “dome” of the heavens in our world, supposing that in other worlds there too were such “domes” and inside of them “spaces” where lives — different lives, and life under different conditions — existed.
And they noticed that day and night
circulated and “dawn” must be a feature of all possible worlds: the entry of “surya” (sun) into our world and by logical extension all worlds in the cosmos. The dawn is symbolic of our awareness, our awakening, and obviously our seeing on all manner of levels.
All elements in the visible world were understood to have symbolic and allegoric meanings, I guess you might say
poetic meanings. Dawn, night, manifestation, cataclysmic endings, birth death rebirth.
The underlying understanding though (speculative knowledge) was that our world is an intermediate world. It has extraordinarily beneficent features but always underneath it the encroaching horror of mortal endings. And everything so fragile. Nothing comes easily. Everything must be struggled for.
Naturally it was supposed, or realized, that there are worlds far more brutal and terrible than ours (hellish realms), and also worlds where bodies existed as vessels of consciousness, but not flesh and blood biological bodies, but bodies of lighter, less destructible, less fragile composition.
So again the Science of Religion and a Science of dealing with incarnation in a
specific realm took shape. The
science of awareness, what it is, how it is developed. Ethics certainly, moral orders, but also something like spiritual science based in metaphysical concepts.
We need, don’t we, a Master Metaphysician to make sense of ourselves and things in this world …