just some thoughts that form while reading your post (maybe cheated a little bit but its still inspired :)
1. John 1:3
King James Version
3 All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made.
2. Romans 8:5-6
For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit. For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life and peace.
3. Ecclesiastes 1:9
“The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which is done is that which shall be done: and there is no new thing under the sun.”
King James Version (KJV)
4. Proverbs 3:5
King James Version
5 Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding.
6.Revelation 22:13
I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last.
Thanks for sharing the scripture itself! Like I've said many times in the past you can read the Bible a million times and each time a new truth will be revealed to you and that's part of "Revelation". When you read the Bible it's suppose to "reveal" something to you. I'm not sure if it's in the book of John but I'm pretty sure he says something along the lines of, "The Bible is not meant to be a "guidebook" on how to live but rather it is suppose to reveal something deep within you. This is why I often say scripture of any religious text means different things to different peoples. It can mean ABSOLUTELY nothing at all
and in the same tongue contain the totality of all of existence itself in all its glory. Something you may have read and consider to be mundane, non-sensical, and borderline illogical may have given the greatest form of "meaning" some other person has ever felt in their entire life. Scripture can give meaning to life when it seems like there is no meaning/purpose behind existence itself.
&&& I've found that to be true in my own life that you can read one line of scripture from the Bible, Bhagavad Gita, and other major religious texts and be profoundly changed. You can also read the whole thing and non "get it" because it is not meant for everyone. Therefore when someone denounces any religious texts at all I just consider them ignorant because every text written contains a grains of knowledge/wisdom that are essentially unfathomable and must be EXPERIENCED/FELT not intellectually discerned.
can you briefly respond that if there is no free will or a self how morality can exist in a meaningful way
if free will or the self doesn't exist how can we arrive at knowledge
Great question!
Because the ego does not actually exist the natural implication is that there is no "good and evil" only the mind makes it so. This means there is no free will because as soon as you "identify" with the ego you essentially forfeit the "true knowledge" you were given at birth. Instead of trusting the universe that spawned you we hold on to silly stories that we as "humans" use to "navigate existence". These are "methodologies".
Knowledge is the ability to "differentiate" and realize that there is no such thing as "separation". Words/symbols/numbers all just meaningless mumblings and rustling of the human mind. The human mind/ego doesn't exist and that's why philosophers in the east often say things like, "Silence is golden"////"The thought free state is the only real state of existence"///"In the beginning was the Word and the Word was God((no separation)). The mind/ego is a metaphysical representation of what Abrahmic folks call the "devil/satan/jin" because your mind will convince you that some worldly thing means more then being with God alone. When you've read all the scripture and it's done what should remain is "God alone" which is actually "you". You are God but not the "patriarchal zeus god". The formless god.
What then happens is you finally stop "lying to yourself" and "pretending" you "know all things" and you finally "let go" knowing "God/existence" was always in "control" and that your feeble attempt to even try and understand "GOD" is foolish.
This then becomes the great dilemma between Buddhism and Hinduism and is a major part of their "epic debates".
Knowing you are "God" and that "God alone acts" why even do anything at all? If there is no good and evil who cares if I do bad? This is exactly what Swami Vivekananda disagreed vehemently with about the East. So you know your God but you want to sit in a cave or temple and dwell on God all day everyday. You are in a constant state of "pure bliss consciousness". Good for you but good for YOU only. Essentially saying to Buddhist that they are selfish and instead of doing the "hard work of God" they just become "spiritually lazy". The Abrahamic were given that meaning/purpose in their foundational scripture.
In Hinduism the 3 major "gods" of their triumvirate are Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva much similar to the Christian Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Brahma the creator god responsible for bringing the universe into existence(Father), Vishnu the preserver god tasked with maintaining cosmic order and protecting the world(Son), Shiva the destroyer God who destroys in order to recreate and transform(Holy Spirit).
So after a person realizes God(Brahman)(Atman) and the oneness of all things he also knows "free will does not exist" "there is no such thing as morality" and only the mind/ego is making it so. So what is the goal of all scripture? Disolution of the ego so one can have a pure bond with whatever "god" is/means to them. Your mind will constantly impede your realization of God. The mind is a road block on your way to realizing God and people foolishly give all their energy to that name/ego which Jesus/Buddha etc. would say is "not real".
Jesus died on the cross taking all previous and future sins because he KNEW god his father he didn't just believe.
Buddha said he would reincarnate and come back to Earth until human suffering comes to an end(He knew the human condition could not be removed, the tendencies of man remain not the name)
True knowledge is realization because you are no longer looking for God/No God and attaching to any philosophy/concepts at all. The thought free state is the only real state. Why though are people scared to be alone in their own head? Why do people think just because human beings learned how to read/write/communicate in symbols/numbers that we know something.
That's the hubris of the Abrahamic faith though and as a Catholic I disagree with your statement that "India is a shit hole because they didn't have Jesus". India never needed to conquer others in the name of Jesus Christ and Jesus Christ didn't teach them anything they didn't already know. Understand chronological time and that Buddha lived 600 years before Jesus Christ and said virtually the same things. Foolishly the Christian, Muslim, and Jew think their "IMAGE" of "GOD" is the one true image and that's why they KILL for their God and it's why people of "Eastern faiths" think the Abrahamic folk are literally retarded in that sense. "My God is better then your God". How about the Bible was written by learned scribes and based off the existing "spiritual methodologies" of that time.
It is not the Indians who will bring in the "end times" it is the dumbass Abrahamic folk who can't ever be content with their "Gods will" over "free will".
How knowledge can be present if free will and the "self" doesn't exist. Because true "knowledge" is "God" and most people don't do their due diligence to understand the difference between the Abrahamic and Eastern faiths.
I do agree with
on some things because he is at least attempting to discern something. He is attempting to reveal something to himself. He is searching. If he was willing to read the Bible to try and understand from a place of "no bias" he would be profoundly changed because like you
know most these people who think God "doesn't exist" or "free will doesn't exist" care more about the concept of "no God" being true because they seek validation like any human being.
What I'm telling Saurod is that he can derive meaning/knowledge without having ever read a single line of scripture. That's why he's agnostic/atheist because he hasn't gone through the process of discernment and came to a more "concrete/absolute" answer for himself.
Just like you guys correct me when I misinterpret scripture I will correct
when he makes a baseless claim with no argument/evidence and just says "platitudes".
These are only my opinions. Nothing I'm saying is some sort of absolute. I've read many philosophical texts and religious scripture because I wanted to know/understand God from all perspectives and that includes "no God" which actually from a conceptual standpoint has to show more evidence and arguments to prove that "god does not exist" "free will does not exist" because most human beings believe there was a creative source to our human existence/consciousness permeating throughout the universe and that God gave us free will as sort of a double edged sword that one could use to do good or bad, but like I said "good" and "bad" don't exist they are words created by human beings to attempt to convey meaning or in Sanskrit "MA" to MEASURE the world around us. It is hard to admit there is no such thing as good and evil when you literally "feel a sensation". It's hard to say there is no such thing as free will when you are seemingly makings hundreds of choices a day. It's hard to say there is no such thing as morality because we've made "rules and laws". These laws/rules were not made by the "creator of the universe" they were created by man to control man and the "I" in the Bible is the "god of man".
I don't believe in the "magic man in the sky" that the Abrahamic do. I believe in the words and actions of Jesus Christ himself not what the scribes wrote to derail you from the raw truth.
Serious question
do you believe that the things Jesus Christ said were "unique and new" because I can point you to Sanskrit written 1000 years before he walked the Earth that's more "profound" then what he said.
When Jesus wandered in the desert supposedly for those "missing years" it is commonly said amongst Easterners that Jesus physically walked East until he tasted Buddhism. He was called the LAMB because he was "fair skinned" and he went to multiple "religious places" and upon his return to Jerusalem he then KNEW he was God and MEANT it. This is why Hindus/Buddhist say "Jesus Christ is God incarnate in the physical form" because he wasn't just talking the talk he literally meant everything he said in his bones.
It's why Jesus Christ will always be my Lord and Savior regardless of the idiosyncratic philosophies I use to better my relationship with him along the way.
edit: I cannot answer your question in it's totality because I myself am a conflicted ignorant human being. I would be lying and being intellectually dishonest if I said I could answer one of the most fundamental philosophical questions. Like I said there are debates between Hindus and Buddhist regarding this and it makes up a major portion of Buddhist concepts. It's why I keep pressing
to read into it because that's where Hindus/Buddhist/Sikhs/etc. each gave their strongest argument...none of which Saurod has stated even remotely correct. That's ok he admitted he is not well read in these disciplines.
This post was edited by SwamiVivekananda on Jul 20 2025 11:10am