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Eternism & Religion



1 Diversity
2 Similarity
3 Universality
4 Animism
5 Hinduism
6 Buddhism
7 Taoism
8 Judaism
9 Christianity
10 Islam
11 Tolerance

9 - Christianity: Eternon Love

Christianity is an offspring of Judaism. It is founded in events we know through the New Testament. The Old Testament is basically the Jewish bible. The New Testament and its Gospels begin at the birth of Jesus Christ.

During his life, Christ never traveled more than 90 miles away from his birthplace, but his teaching is the most widely spread. He did not write a single line, but his words are the most widely read. He lived only a brief existence, but his passage has marked the following millennia like no other Eternon.

Christianity’s originality lays in its intense message of love. Deep inside each of us, Christ says, there is an unlimited potential of love. It is released by the love of God, and , in a chain reaction, flows in turn toward others.

Is Christ a god? Is he a human? The doctrine of Incarnation has been a vast subject of discussion, within and outside Christianity. A god may incarnate, but why would he accept to die at the hands of cruel humans? Or, conversely, how could a simple Jewish carpenter claim to be of divine essence?

The Church says that Christ is, fully and simultaneously, divine and human. This duality is the very one we observe with the Leading Eternon and the human structure. In Christ, however, the Eternon and its human incarnation attain a rare level of intimacy. The wisdom of the Eternon comes to light in the deeds of the human, while the human is shining from its cosmic origin.

Christ, a superior Eternon, used expressions and parables targeted at a simpler audience. What would have been the reaction of his listeners, had he spoken of Absolute and energy field? Instead, he described a fatherly God and a Holy Spirit. Likewise, he did not mention quantum waves but flames and light, not psychic healing but communion, not ethereal Eternons but angels and demons, not space but heavens.

Eternism also shed light on the obscure doctrine of Trinity. God is three-in-one: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. God being, God creating, and God reasoning. Theologians have given the most disparate interpretations of this obscure notion. The Church itself declares it a mystery. For Eternism, however, the Holy Spirit is knowledge and creative information, in short Universal Energy. Thus, the trinity God-Christ-Holy Spirit coincides with the trilogy Absolute-Eternon-Universal Energy.

It is worthwhile noting that the birth of Christ confirms once again: genetic parents are not the key element in a new life. They only supply a mold into which pours the Eternon energy leading and animating the new being.

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