Why do people need religious beliefs and ideas?
I am replying to your couple of posts previous to the last. When you suggested on what important idea stands out, I did reflect on what I thought about was that considering that I started this thread on religious beliefs, I have not in my own responses touched on the idea of God. I don't know if this is apparent to others, but I am asking myself about this. I have spoken about my own difficulties arising from my religious background and about the importance of looking at all religious perspectives, but I seem to stop there. I probably do believe in some divine power and I don't really believe that life or evolution is merely random, so in that sense I do believe in God.
In looking at religion , I think that there are big differences between that which is taken literally and that which is symbolic. It is hard to know how far to take this though, especially when reading the NewTestament. I don't really believe in the virgin birth of Jesus. I also struggle to know what to make of the miracles and the resurrection of Jesus. One idea which some hold to is the idea of the resurrection may have been of a spiritual body rather than a physical one. Perhaps, living with in a climate of thinking based on the Newtonian-Cartesian paradigm physical reality is stressed too strongly as the supreme reality. The Eastern thinkers have a more fluid picture.
I have a sympathy with theosophy and the ideas of Blavatsky. A few years ago I read the writings of Benjamin Creme, and I don't know if you have come across him. He was the founder of transmission meditation and I attended some workshops in this meditation. The meditation is based on the idea of levelling down the energies and the divine hierarchy. I am aware that the idea of a divine hierarchy is questionable in itself. One idea in Creme's teaching which I found interesting was that Jesus was only Christ during the time of his actual ministry. Creme thought that Jesus and the Buddha were both representations of the Christ consciousness.
For a while I was enthralled by Creme's ideas and read a number of his books. However, the biggest problem I found, and I think many other people saw too, was his belief that the Maitreya was living in East London and waiting to emerge. It also appears that he had been awaiting this emergency since 1977, and there were various sightings of him, especially one in Nairobi. However, Creme died in his 90s and Maitreya never made his expected emergence on a wider scale.
I see Creme's ideas as an example of spiritual teachings being interpreted too literally. He relied on what he believed were 'channelled' messages and he seemed to take them too literally. In contrast, to his waiting for Christ consciousness as the Maitreya appearing as a person perhaps Rudolf Steiner's idea of the Cosmic Christ which can be known in our own consciousness may be more helpful.