I will start with the disclaimer that I am not a Hindu.
When my kids are missing something, I tell them to look for it. When they return empty handed I tell them, “Now look in the places it shouldn’t be.” That’s usually where it is. Jesus told us to seek and we will find. He didn’t say keep looking through Scripture until you do. On my quest for truth, I have found many missing puzzle pieces in places that were unexpected.
When one believes that he is right, the assumption that all who disagree are wrong. We then stop listening, focussing our minds on rebuttal, opposed to understanding their view. God said, “He is the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end.” I find it interesting that this is the key principle of the Hindu triune godhead. Brahman is their god, complete in three personas; Brahma (the creator), Vishnu (the sustainer) and Shiva (the destroyer). Essentially the beginning and the end. Shiva makes an appearance in Revelation 9:11 (I just realized it was 9/11), Abaddon, in Greek Apollyon, the Destroyer, the angel of the bottomless pit. This is no surprise why Shiva, is the face of CERN, the large hadron collider. These scientists are practicing functional witchcraft and reportedly opening dimensions.
My point is that words are audible/legible thoughts. We write things down as a more permanent record. Those who wrote things down thousands of years ago were trying to tell us something. We often ignore the message because of the expression or the messenger. It doesn’t mean those who saw something significant enough to write them down, should be dismissed based on collective belief.
When a scared child says something is outside their window, you don’t say, “No, there’s not.” You examine and solve the mystery. Civilizations have left us clues, or puzzle pieces so that we can hopefully gather and form an image. This isn’t universalism. I’m not saying that the boogeyman, and the tree outside the window are equally true. I’m stating that people have been intelligent and forming beliefs based on observations for a long time. It is in our best interest to evaluate what the thoughts were that seeded these belief systems to give us a greater understanding of our world and our future.
When my kids are missing something, I tell them to look for it. When they return empty handed I tell them, “Now look in the places it shouldn’t be.” That’s usually where it is. Jesus told us to seek and we will find. He didn’t say keep looking through Scripture until you do. On my quest for truth, I have found many missing puzzle pieces in places that were unexpected.
When one believes that he is right, the assumption that all who disagree are wrong. We then stop listening, focussing our minds on rebuttal, opposed to understanding their view. God said, “He is the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end.” I find it interesting that this is the key principle of the Hindu triune godhead. Brahman is their god, complete in three personas; Brahma (the creator), Vishnu (the sustainer) and Shiva (the destroyer). Essentially the beginning and the end. Shiva makes an appearance in Revelation 9:11 (I just realized it was 9/11), Abaddon, in Greek Apollyon, the Destroyer, the angel of the bottomless pit. This is no surprise why Shiva, is the face of CERN, the large hadron collider. These scientists are practicing functional witchcraft and reportedly opening dimensions.
My point is that words are audible/legible thoughts. We write things down as a more permanent record. Those who wrote things down thousands of years ago were trying to tell us something. We often ignore the message because of the expression or the messenger. It doesn’t mean those who saw something significant enough to write them down, should be dismissed based on collective belief.
When a scared child says something is outside their window, you don’t say, “No, there’s not.” You examine and solve the mystery. Civilizations have left us clues, or puzzle pieces so that we can hopefully gather and form an image. This isn’t universalism. I’m not saying that the boogeyman, and the tree outside the window are equally true. I’m stating that people have been intelligent and forming beliefs based on observations for a long time. It is in our best interest to evaluate what the thoughts were that seeded these belief systems to give us a greater understanding of our world and our future.
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