Phemanderac wrote on Sep 24
th, 2014 at 5:36pm:
Seems to me that humans at some point are going to have to seriously ask and seriously answer, then seriously act on the question "do we as a species want to work towards enlightenment or simply make do with Organised religion?"
History seems to fairly clearly demonstrate that the institution of Organised religion has fairly consistently made life a mess both for those within and particularly those on the outside of the particular organised religion.
For my part, if we as a species decided to do away with all forms of organised religion, that would be our first intelligent step towards a spiritual existence.
I think of religion as a personal thing. My religion is not something that someone else tells me is correct. Further, my religion is not interested in telling you (any of you) how you have to live your lives. I find Organised religion to be a very effective tool used by minorities to exercise power and control over majorities and, in short, a mechanism to grow material wealth with.
Not too much of worth there in my world view.
It also seems to be a tool that those with the greatest wealth have utilised very effectively to maintain the status quo (in a general sense) for those who have the least. As is typical when the idea of suffering is raised in a religious context. The promise of some wonderful afterlife whereby everything is provided is some kind of carrot dangled in front of those who are not having a very wonderful current life in order to keep them in order as it were.
I also think that there is probably a better word to have used than "enlightenment" so my apologies for my limited vocabulary on that one.
I would call it "personal spirituality", myself. I ask nobody nor expect nobody to believe in what I believe, in regards to God and spirituality. I see God as a very different being than the one that organised religions see it, and though I may mention my "version" from time to time, I'm not asking anybody to believe. Especially when most people would probably see me as a nutcase anyway, so it's pointless and really not my responsibility or business to tell others "how it is". What makes humans unique from one another is, after all, what they believe, and the varying differences. This forum itself is a beautiful example of diversity, I've observed many people from all different walks of life with different opinions and beliefs. Though it is a little annoying to have your posts picked a part, analysed, and over-analysed, I can still appreciate and understand why the opposition sees the world the way they do.
I have a theory about organised religions -- especially Christianity -- that they originally started out as schools of thought and were much more basic, but due to years of distortion, such as interpretation and edited bibles, it has become simply a tool to control, to trap somebody in a particular mindset. This mindset is extremely promoting lack of self respect, in my opinion, but in a way, also encourages selfishness and greed -- simply because people only obey the ten commandments so when they die, they get to live forever in a beautiful paradise known as heaven. Where is the self-responsibility, the desire to be a decent person without the expectation of something in return?
The bible also tells you not to worship at all, yet we see a continuous reverence of the Lord Jesus Christ.
And then there is the logic in committing a sin, whenever you want, just so long as you repent. So technically it means you can do whatever you like, but it's all good and all is forgiven if you "repent". How do you repent, exactly? All you have to do is confess your sins, when true repenting is becoming aware of a mistake you have made, and learning from it.
Also, the commandments of God sounds eerily like the "you can't do this, you can't do that" we get from authority. The elite of our world has very carefully and intelligently turned spiritual enlightenment into a tool of control, which destroys actual spiritual evolution.
To me, spirituality is about waking up, knowing that you are alive, and learning about life through experiences on a personal level -- it doesn't actually involve other people, but obviously you experience many things through interacting with others.
Spirituality doesn't always mean "good and evil" you can be "evil" and "spiritual". Good and evil are just narrow-minded concepts, I prefer to use positive and negative. We can use positive energy or negative energy in our experiences.
As to your first question, I think when people find out for themselves that organised religion is just a scam, they are more likely to disregard spirituality altogether because most don't know of anything better.