they are all GOD — Miguel
Keep in mind that this is a rough draft. It's the first time I've written down my philosophical thoughts and it all just came about in a burst of inspiration. — Miguel
(Beware that this is not a theology but a philosophy. I use God for lack of a better word. Spinoza uses the word God as well as (maybe more fitting?) Nature, Shankara uses Brahman/Atman, Schopenhauer and Nietzsche use Will. I use the word God simply as a word for something that is omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent. — Miguel
I think the world—the geological and the biological, the mountains, trees, animals (including humans), bacteria, oceans, volcanoes, even laws like the law of gravity, and molecules, atoms, protons and neutrons and electrons—they are all GOD. — Miguel
everyone and everything IS God. — Miguel
My mom used to think God was INSIDE everything and everyone, but I take it a step further — Miguel
And in fact, can the universe not be seen as an organism, growing and developing until it’s grown old, then shrinking again and ‘dying’? — Miguel
and there may be an even larger system that we do not know of. Also that is God. All is God. All is one.
Science can be incorporated easily, for science is God. Example: the theory of evolution is God, for evolution is one of God’s many ways to grow and expand and develop itself. — Miguel
Now that we have established all this; — Miguel
We ARE everything around us and everything around us is us! — Miguel
because they are just as much a part of God
The world bends to our deepest wants. — Miguel
Of course, that said, God has free will — Miguel
we have free will
The world bends to our deepest wants.
The world bends to our deepest wants. Not because we are on a pre-destined path and it is simply accomplishing its role in that path: but because we are shaping a path with our mind and our surrounding reality with it. — Miguel
(Beware that this is not a theology but a philosophy. I use God for lack of a better word. Spinoza uses the word God as well as (maybe more fitting?) Nature, Shankara uses Brahman/Atman, Schopenhauer and Nietzsche use Will. I use the word God simply as a word for something that is omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent. — Miguel
I arrive to the conclusion that there is this ‘God’ because of the fact that we are all connected—not only connected, but one. If all things are one, then that One is omnipresent, because it is all things. Furthermore, if you add up the knowledge of all things—every stone, plant, animal, human, planet, star, molecule and atom—then you will have all knowledge, therefore that One is omniscient. And if that One is everything then it is all-powerful, because it has all power over itself and there is nothing outside of it: omnipotent.) — Miguel
And in fact, can the universe not be seen as an organism, growing and developing until it’s grown old, then shrinking again and ‘dying’? But then many things can be seen as organism—the Earth alone, for example, though I would argue it is more like an organ within an organism—and there may be an even larger system that we do not know of. Also that is God. All is God. All is one. — Miguel
We ARE everything around us and everything around us is us! This includes our thoughts and emotions, our convictions, hopes and dreams. We can affect our surroundings directly but also with our thoughts, because they are just as much a part of God. If we WANT something enough, hard enough, loud enough, even if it’s almost a subconscious kind of longing, then we will begin to affect our surroundings. — Miguel
The world bends to our deepest wants. Not because we are on a pre-destined path and it is simply accomplishing its role in that path: but because we are shaping a path with our mind and our surrounding reality with it. Of course, that said, God has free will: we have free will. That we have shaped a path does not mean that we must walk upon it, or walk it to the end. So then the two most important things to gain from this are these: we must want something so badly that that the world has no choice but to help us there, and: once that path in our life has begun to form, we must be fearless and confident enough to take it. — Miguel
In the end, then, we must always believe in ourselves, for to believe in ‘signs’, to believe in the world, is still to believe in yourself, for you ARE the world and you have created the signs. ‘Believe in the world: it will take you where you must be’ and ‘believe in yourself, do what must be done’ can be seen as equal statements and for maximum effect must be combined. The prerequisite, of course, is to believe in something and want something so strongly that you ‘bend reality’ with your longing. — Miguel
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