Conan Posted September 4, 2018 Greetings to the forum Ā Iāve been reading some TDB threads here ever since I discovered some books relating to Daoism. Before that I had no idea what Daoism is, other than the somewhat misleading ancestor and spirit worship connotations I picked up here and there as I went through life. Ancestor worship is, of course, part of what is practiced to varying degrees depending on the branch of Daoism, but it canāt be stereotyped as an indispensable part of Daoism. And even if it were more indispensable, my rejection of anything linked to ancestor veneration said more about me, than about Daoism. Ā To someone whose mind was somewhere in between science and lingering biblical indoctrination, anything with pagan connotations would end up in the mental category of āthings I shall remain suspicious to from now onā. I only learned very slowly over the last ten years that it was safe to let go of my biases against spiritual traditions. I had already shed most of my biblical beliefs, but I still wasnāt ready to let go ofĀ indoctrination in the department of āyou just donāt dabble with the supernaturalā. These beliefs had penetrated very deeply in the core of my identity, whereas other beliefs (e.g. the lacking historicity of parts of the bible) were easy to correct. So, Iām glad to say Iāve finally been able to shed this last(?) bastion of childhood indoctrination. Not necessarily in order to dabble head-first into certain practicesĀ myself, but to allow myself to do research and to recognize truth, regardless of the tradition it comes from. Ā Iām still careful and suspicious, but itās a healthy level of suspicion. The way I see it, the supernatural is part of nature (despite its name), being neither good nor bad. For instance, prayers, the placebo effect and visualizations (e.g. as used by athletes and hypnotists), use the same mechanism through which some forms of bad luck workĀ (e.g. self-fulfilling prophesies or ācursesā). In my view, nothing in nature is inherently good or bad, let alone āoff-limitsā. Weāre already working with these forces without even knowing it. Everyone has had experiences with synchronicity, whether you're skeptic, see it as evilĀ or don't know anything about it. So, to me, anything supernatural is comparable to other forces of nature (e.g. nuclear power, EMP energy) in the sense that the meaning changes depending on prior intentions, ethics and commitments. Where there is great power, there must be great responsibility. Ā Anyway, that was a little about me and my growth. I hope Iām not too late on this forum. Some forums have their best days behind them and the most productive members are no longer posting. I hope Iāll be able to make some contributions as well.Ā 5 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fa Xin Posted September 5, 2018 Hello, Conan,Ā and welcome. Ā Your membership is approved and we're happy you found your way to us. We look forward to accompanying you on some of the way that you still have to go. Ā Please take the time to read the post pinned at the top of this Welcome page and take a look at the forumĀ Terms and Rules.Ā Ā Ā This covers all you need to know when getting started. Ā For theĀ first weekĀ you will be restricted toĀ tenĀ posts per day but after that you can post as much as you like. Also, until youāve postedĀ fifteenĀ times in the forums, youāll be a āJunior Bumā with somewhat restricted access and will be allowed onlyĀ twoĀ private messages per day. Ā Good luck in your pursuits and best wishes to you, Ā Fa Xin and the TDB team Ā Welcome Conan, Ā I was raised with the same sort of upbringing, and getting free of those conditioned responses is extremely liberating.Ā I think your on the right path, for sure.Ā Ā Glad your opening up to the beauty of other traditions. Enjoy the forum. Ā You are welcome to jump right in to the ongoing discussions, revive an older thread, start a new thread of your own, or start a discussion in the "Newcomer Corner" sub-forum to expand on your introduction or ask general questions to help you get started. Ā May you enjoy your time here. Ā Fa Xin Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sustainablefarm86 Posted September 5, 2018 (edited) x Edited July 23, 2022 by King Jade 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Marblehead Posted September 5, 2018 6 hours ago, King Jade said: leave the exceptions aside, of courseĀ . Yes, ignore people with similar understandings such as I have.Ā There's not many of us. Ā Hi Conan.Ā Welcome. Ā I think the Dao Bums can be proud of the fact that we are almost totally without censorship.Ā Everyone gets the chance to express their understandings and opinions as long as we comply with the few rules we do have. Ā Enjoy your time here. Ā 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Conan Posted September 6, 2018 On 9/5/2018 at 4:28 AM, Fa Xin said: Welcome Conan, Ā I was raised with the same sort of upbringing, and getting free of those conditioned responses is extremely liberating.Ā I think your on the right path, for sure.Ā Ā Glad your opening up to the beauty of other traditions. Enjoy the forum. Ā You are welcome to jump right in to the ongoing discussions, revive an older thread, start a new thread of your own, or start a discussion in the "Newcomer Corner" sub-forum to expand on your introduction or ask general questions to help you get started. Ā May you enjoy your time here. Ā Fa Xin Ā Thatās good to know there are others here with my type of background. Itās good to be among like-minded people. IRL Iām used to keeping this stuff to myself and I do research strictly by myself. So itās satisfying to be among people who are closest to my journey right now (which I consider Daoist self-cultivation to be).Ā 4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fa Xin Posted September 6, 2018 6 minutes ago, Conan said: Ā Thatās good to know there are others here with my type of background. Itās good to be among like-minded people. IRL Iām used to keeping this stuff to myself and I do research strictly by myself. So itās satisfying to be among people who are closest to my journey right now (which I consider Daoist self-cultivation to be).Ā Ā Great to hear. It is good to be around people of a like mind. In my view, the New Testament points to the same truth that the Dao de Ching points to... its just that some āreligions/groupsā have misinterpreted the teachings.Ā Ā I rejected the Catholic stuff at a young age, despite being raised in it, because in my heart I knew it was bogus (for me). Dived deep into Buddhism and Taoism for years...and only recently come full circle to see the true side of Jesus. Itās good to step out of tradition and explore our own hearts.Ā 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Conan Posted September 6, 2018 On 9/5/2018 at 5:53 AM, King Jade said: Hi Conan Ā Ā In the internet and for one of myĀ christian acquaitances it seems like religions are only about which name to worshipĀ Ā the buddhists? they worship the buddha, the daoists? they worship the dao!Ā leave the exceptions aside, of courseĀ .I believe, from reading here, not from practiceĀ , thatĀ in reality it's more mutual work and respect than venerating and worshipping. And besides that,Ā meditators here in the thedaobums say time is an illusionĀ so that must only meanĀ I'm already completeĀ with the Ultimate DaoĀ andĀ anyone who wants to be overly demandingĀ can screw right off, Ā I trust the bums but in real lifeĀ results may varyĀ Ā , I'll come back to hauntĀ those pesky liars, should anything go wrong Ā Yes, there is also the issue that these practices canāt really all be lumped together as worship or veneration. Asking for and giving assistance is not the same thing as deification. Unfortunately people from my familyās religious background, at least, donāt see this as a meaningful distinction. Itās all bad in their view. Ā I happen to be reading about this time aspectĀ right now. Apparently some who do regression work are able to contact incarnations of their subjects from other times. These other incarnations then speak through the 'current incarnation' (although current, as you point out, may be a misleading word). So it's apparently possible for multiple incarnations to converge and share information through a middle man who knows how to set this up. This relates to the observation of many traditions that the past and future are not necessarily 'closed' and 'unopened' chapters respectively. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Marblehead Posted September 6, 2018 32 minutes ago, Fa Xin said: ⦠explore our own hearts. I just wanted to amplify this.  1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Conan Posted September 6, 2018 (edited) 41 minutes ago, Fa Xin said: Ā Great to hear. It is good to be around people of a like mind. In my view, the New Testament points to the same truth that the Dao de Ching points to... its just that some āreligions/groupsā have misinterpreted the teachings.Ā Ā I rejected the Catholic stuff at a young age, despite being raised in it, because in my heart I knew it was bogus (for me). Dived deep into Buddhism and Taoism for years...and only recently come full circle to see the true side of Jesus. Itās good to step out of tradition and explore our own hearts.Ā Ā I had some thoughts recently about the bibleās etiology of Jesusās abilities after reading about some talented extremely talented psychics and meditators. Jesus' miracles seemed indistinguishable from what these people were/are capable of. Some scholars have noticed similarities between Jesus' teachings and some Asian religious traditions. So it occurred to me that Jesus may have been a cultivation practitioner of some kind during the first 30 years of his life (which are largely undocumented).Ā Edited September 6, 2018 by Conan 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fa Xin Posted September 7, 2018 12 hours ago, Conan said: Ā I had some thoughts recently about the bibleās etiology of Jesusās abilities after reading about some talented extremely talented psychics and meditators. Jesus' miracles seemed indistinguishable from what these people were/are capable of. Some scholars have noticed similarities between Jesus' teachings and some Asian religious traditions. So it occurred to me that Jesus may have been a cultivation practitioner of some kind during the first 30 years of his life (which are largely undocumented).Ā Ā Have you read the Gospel of Thomas? Thatās one of my favorite writings attributed to Jesus. We did a verse by verse dissection of it here at the forums, you may be interested in reading. I think youāll find many of our interpretations read as if we are examining the DDJ or some Sutra š Ā Ā 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Conan Posted September 8, 2018 23 hours ago, Fa Xin said: Ā Have you read the Gospel of Thomas? Thatās one of my favorite writings attributed to Jesus. We did a verse by verse dissection of it here at the forums, you may be interested in reading. I think youāll find many of our interpretations read as if we are examining the DDJ or some Sutra š Ā Ā Thanks. I will see if I can find a good book that deciphers this text for lay people like me. Iām afraid Iām too āleft-brainedā to get much out of such cryptic texts on my own.Ā Ā One book Iām reading now (conversations with Nostradamus) mentions the gospels and it predicts new ancient texts about Jesusā life will be found in an archaeological site in southern Arabia. (The book claims Nostradamus mentioned this when a psychic connection was made through hypnotic regression work). The book claims these texts will shed light on aspects of Jesusā life not recorded in the bible. I have not made up my mind about the claims made in this book. But if there are links between Jesusā teachings and eastern traditions, such ābiographicalā texts will be our best hope of finding out. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fa Xin Posted September 8, 2018 (edited) 12 minutes ago, Conan said: Ā Thanks. I will see if I can find a good book that deciphers this text for lay people like me. Iām afraid Iām too āleft-brainedā to get much out of such cryptic texts on my own.Ā Ā One book Iām reading now (conversations with Nostradamus) mentions the gospels and it predicts new ancient texts about Jesusā life will be found in an archaeological site in southern Arabia. (The book claims Nostradamus mentioned this when a psychic connection was made through hypnotic regression work). The book claims these texts will shed light on aspects of Jesusā life not recorded in the bible. I have not made up my mind about the claims made in this book. But if there are links between Jesusā teachings and eastern traditions, such ābiographicalā texts will be our best hope of finding out. Ā Nostradamus has always interested me. Could he have been talking about the Nag Hammadi texts perhaps? That were discovered in the 40s? Ā Im not sure if there are any eastern links - such as the āIssaā story - that a prophet named Issa came to learn and teach in India, who some think was Jesus. Iām not too well read on that one, though Iāve dug into it a little.Ā Ā I meant more that Jesus was pointing to the same thing as the Eastern religions. For example - if you think of āsinsā as attachments, and think of ārepentanceā - which actually means āturning aroundā - you can think of how that could be interpreted when you know about Buddhist philosophy. Turning inward, turning to āGodā. Thereās others, of course. Ā it makes you think of the Bible differently when you get out of the āCatholic Guiltā paradigm.Ā Ā And I would venture to say, like the Dao de jing, could be interpreted different ways depending on onesĀ clarity.Ā Ā All fun stuff š Edited September 8, 2018 by Fa Xin 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Conan Posted September 10, 2018 On 9/8/2018 at 3:37 AM, Fa Xin said: Nostradamus has always interested me. Could he have been talking about the Nag Hammadi texts perhaps? That were discovered in the 40s? Ā Ā In the book Nostradamus relates the undiscovered texts to one of his prophesies (see the second, third and fourth lines of Century VII-14). According to the book, Nostradamus knows how our time (the time from which the psychic connection was made), relates to the time of his prophesies. So, the book says Nostradamus is aware of the scrolls that have been found in our time. The scrolls found so far are only part of the prophesy, according to the book. So hopefully, weāre in for this other treat.Ā Ā What are this forumās rules for posting book excerpts? Iād like to post excerpts that discuss these texts. The book also has a session where one of Nostradamusā students paraphrases a lost text (lost to our times, but apparently it was shown to Nostradamusā students in secret). Supposedly, the lost text described an incident in which a young Jesus killed someone psychically (or, at least energetically, a la dim mak) but then revives the person after regretting it.Ā Ā On 9/8/2018 at 3:37 AM, Fa Xin said: Im not sure if there are any eastern links - such as the āIssaā story - that a prophet named Issa came to learn and teach in India, who some think was Jesus. Iām not too well read on that one, though Iāve dug into it a little.Ā Ā Ā Yes. There are also more recent ādevelopmentsā on this. One author Iāve come across made a similar claim after being introduced to Jesus by his spirit guide (during his astral travels). But there is the problem of ādiffusionā. Two of these (the priest and the journalist who published the Issa story) used the same source texts and both reached the west. So we canāt rule out that some people who seem to confirm this story are subconsciously influenced by the same Issa texts. Ā On 9/8/2018 at 3:37 AM, Fa Xin said: I meant more that Jesus was pointing to the same thing as the Eastern religions. For example - if you think of āsinsā as attachments, and think of ārepentanceā - which actually means āturning aroundā - you can think of how that could be interpreted when you know about Buddhist philosophy. Turning inward, turning to āGodā. Thereās others, of course. Ā it makes you think of the Bible differently when you get out of the āCatholic Guiltā paradigm.Ā Ā And I would venture to say, like the Dao de jing, could be interpreted different ways depending on onesĀ clarity.Ā Ā All fun stuff š Ā I see. I agree that looking for common themes in between religious traditions can lead to great insight. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fa Xin Posted September 10, 2018 1 hour ago, Conan said: Ā In the book Nostradamus relates the undiscovered texts to one of his prophesies (see the second, third and fourth lines of Century VII-14). According to the book, Nostradamus knows how our time (the time from which the psychic connection was made), relates to the time of his prophesies. So, the book says Nostradamus is aware of the scrolls that have been found in our time. The scrolls found so far are only part of the prophesy, according to the book. So hopefully, weāre in for this other treat.Ā Ā What are this forumās rules for posting book excerpts? Iād like to post excerpts that discuss these texts. The book also has a session where one of Nostradamusā students paraphrases a lost text (lost to our times, but apparently it was shown to Nostradamusā students in secret). Supposedly, the lost text described an incident in which a young Jesus killed someone psychically (or, at least energetically, a la dim mak) but then revives the person after regretting it.Ā Ā Ā Yes. There are also more recent ādevelopmentsā on this. One author Iāve come across made a similar claim after being introduced to Jesus by his spirit guide (during his astral travels). But there is the problem of ādiffusionā. Two of these (the priest and the journalist who published the Issa story) used the same source texts and both reached the west. So we canāt rule out that some people who seem to confirm this story are subconsciously influenced by the same Issa texts. Ā Ā I see. I agree that looking for common themes in between religious traditions can lead to great insight. Ā Interesting stuff, thank you for sharing. Ā When quoting, I don't think there's any type of rules - except of course, to make sure it's quoted accurately and the source provided. I would be interested in reading the excerpts, so please let me know if/when you post them. Ā Ā The problem I have with the Issa story is that it assumes that the only place Jesus could have learned his "wisdom" is from other Yogis, or other traditions - or that the "East" has exclusive rights to inner mysticalĀ work.Ā My viewĀ is that Jesus was a "prophet" (meaning he received his teachings from "God" and not from a person), and brought forth a powerful teaching/lineage, and that most people that surrounded him (Mary Magdalene, John the Baptist, the apostles) were high level practitioners in their own right.Ā 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Conan Posted September 11, 2018 On 9/10/2018 at 4:41 AM, Fa Xin said: Ā Interesting stuff, thank you for sharing. Ā When quoting, I don't think there's any type of rules - except of course, to make sure it's quoted accurately and the source provided. I would be interested in reading the excerpts, so please let me know if/when you post them. Ā Ā The problem I have with the Issa story is that it assumes that the only place Jesus could have learned his "wisdom" is from other Yogis, or other traditions - or that the "East" has exclusive rights to inner mysticalĀ work.Ā My viewĀ is that Jesus was a "prophet" (meaning he received his teachings from "God" and not from a person), and brought forth a powerful teaching/lineage, and that most people that surrounded him (Mary Magdalene, John the Baptist, the apostles) were high level practitioners in their own right.Ā Ā Yes. The texts about Jesus agree that heĀ was born different, and that this manifested already in early childhood. From this perspective, itās a small step to say that Jesus arrived at his teachings through his own studies and reflections. Ā I think one major thing that gets people to speculate about Jesus being taught by a foreign mentor is what some interpret as suspicious reactions by some of his contemporaries. For instance Mark 6:1-3 is often interpreted as evidence that Jesusā ideas were regarded even then as alien in his community. It is kind of interestingĀ that people in the crowd asked āwhere did he get these thingsā. It's not necessarily their surprise, but the phrasing. Rereading the four gospels from this perspective can make people think of seemingly unconnected things (e.g. three magi from the east who brought gifts, missing account of Jesusā formative years) as a goldmine for a new theory. There might be something there, but I think weāre a long way from establishing it. Ā Iāll make a new thread with some book quotes centering around Century VII-14 tonight or tomorrow (assuming my current forum status doesnāt restrict me from making new threads). I will then post the link to the new thread here, to notify you.Ā Ā 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fa Xin Posted September 11, 2018 (edited) 4 hours ago, Conan said: Ā Yes. The texts about Jesus agree that heĀ was born different, and that this manifested already in early childhood. From this perspective, itās a small step to say that Jesus arrived at his teachings through his own studies and reflections. Ā I think one major thing that gets people to speculate about Jesus being taught by a foreign mentor is what some interpret as suspicious reactions by some of his contemporaries. For instance Mark 6:1-3 is often interpreted as evidence that Jesusā ideas were regarded even then as alien in his community. It is kind of interestingĀ that people in the crowd asked āwhere did he get these thingsā. It's not necessarily their surprise, but the phrasing. Rereading the four gospels from this perspective can make people think of seemingly unconnected things (e.g. three magi from the east who brought gifts, missing account of Jesusā formative years) as a goldmine for a new theory. There might be something there, but I think weāre a long way from establishing it. Ā Iāll make a new thread with some book quotes centering around Century VII-14 tonight or tomorrow (assuming my current forum status doesnāt restrict me from making new threads). I will then post the link to the new thread here, to notify you.Ā Ā Ā Awesome, thanks!Ā Ā Their reactions are interesting. From that verse, it reminds me of Luke 4:16 āno prophet is accepted in his home townā.Ā Ā To me, these verses speak of the conditioning of āregularā people than any reflectionĀ on theĀ prophet themselves. Even if I reach theĀ level of a saint, many people in my āhome townā know me as Fa Xin, the snot nose kid who got caught stealing candy, how could he be a prophet? I āknow his family, they are unremarkableā (son of Mary and brother of James). They hold an image of me in their minds which will be hard to break... despite changes Iāve gone thru over the years.Ā Ā It reminds me of a partĀ in Autobiography of a Yogi, when Yogananda observes Yukteswar Giri with his mother, and his mother says āDonāt you try that guru stuff on me, your still my sonā š (paraphrased) Ā Thats how I interpret those verses, but I do understand how people can get the Theories from those verses and the missing years etc. if only we could be a fly on the wall ! Edited September 11, 2018 by Fa Xin 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Conan Posted September 12, 2018 On 9/11/2018 at 12:04 PM, Fa Xin said: Ā Awesome, thanks!Ā Ā Their reactions are interesting. From that verse, it reminds me of Luke 4:16 āno prophet is accepted in his home townā.Ā Ā To me, these verses speak of the conditioning of āregularā people than any reflectionĀ on theĀ prophet themselves. Even if I reach theĀ level of a saint, many people in my āhome townā know me as Fa Xin, the snot nose kid who got caught stealing candy, how could he be a prophet? I āknow his family, they are unremarkableā (son of Mary and brother of James). They hold an image of me in their minds which will be hard to break... despite changes Iāve gone thru over the years.Ā Ā It reminds me of a partĀ in Autobiography of a Yogi, when Yogananda observes Yukteswar Giri with his mother, and his mother says āDonāt you try that guru stuff on me, your still my sonā š (paraphrased) Ā Thats how I interpret those verses, but I do understand how people can get the Theories from those verses and the missing years etc. if only we could be a fly on the wall ! Ā Good point. This conversation takes me back to my Christian days, when my only sourceĀ of specialized religious information (biblical texts) was ambiguous.Ā Even this question posed by Jesus' contemporariesĀ can have several interpretations.Ā Ā I'm glad my religious research interests nowadays don't have as many 'dead ends'. The things I'm investigatingĀ now are easier to crack and understand. It can really be draining when answers toĀ important questionsĀ are just out of reach. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Conan Posted September 12, 2018 Here is the link to the new thread, Fa Xin.Ā 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fa Xin Posted September 13, 2018 (edited) 5 hours ago, Conan said: Here is the link to the new thread, Fa Xin.Ā Great! Thank you for sharing. Reading over it now š Lots of good info! Edited September 13, 2018 by Fa Xin 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites