Academy of the Beyond

Academy of the Beyond The Academy is a method of examination and evaluation of existing beliefs, which confine the human intellect to strictures of unsubstantiated scriptures.

07/21/2024

Warren WhiteRam
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DIVISION IS REVISION
from The Academy of the Beyond
We go beyond belief.
Difference of opinion is normal among people. Politicians and Priests want us to think like they tell us. The educational system teaches students WHAT TO THINK, BUT NOT HOW TO THINK. As does religion and politics.
There are about in excess of 4,000 different religions in the world today, each one proclaiming THEY have the One True God.
There are more than 45,000 denominations globally. 45,000 is a lot! A lot of difference. A lot of division.
Followers of Jesus span the globe. But the global body of more than 2 billion Christians is separated into thousands of denominations. Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Lutheran, Baptist, Apostolic, Methodist — the list goes on. Estimations show there are more than 200 Christian denominations in the U.S. and a staggering 45,000 globally, according to the Center for the Study of Global Christianity. So why does Christianity have so many branches?
A cursory look shows that differences in belief, power grabs and corruption all had a part to play.
But on some level, differentiation and variety have been markers of Christianity since the very beginning, according to Diarmaid MacCulloch, professor emeritus of church history at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. "There's never been a united Christianity," Division is revision.
The early church, which spans from the start of Jesus' ministry, in A.D. 27, to A.D. 325, was divided primarily based on geography. Worship styles and interpretations of Jesus' teachings varied based on regional cultures and customs, according to Bruce Gordon, a professor of ecclesiastical history at Yale Divinity School.
But there were also major breaks, or schisms, over Christian theology during this time. One of the most notable early schisms, the A***n controversy in the early fourth century, divided the church on Jesus' relationship with God. Arius, a priest from Alexandria, Egypt, claimed that because Jesus was "begotten," or brought about by God, he was a lesser divinity than God. But Athanasius, an Alexandrian theologian, claimed that Jesus was God incarnate.
"This caused major upheaval in the Roman Empire," said Christopher West, a doctoral student of ancient Christianity and medieval studies at Yale University. "It split Christians in the Roman Empire in half." The Council of Nicea — a group of theologians and scholars gathered by Emperor Constantine I in A.D. 325 — ultimately sided against Arius. But despite the church's official view, Christians continued to be divided on the subject for more than a century.
Then, in 1054, the Eastern Orthodox Christians split from the Western Roman Catholics in what's known as the Great Schism. The two groups disagreed on the taking of the sacraments — religious symbols believed to transmit divine grace to the believer. Furthermore, the Eastern Orthodox Christians disagreed with the Roman beliefs that priests should remain celibate and that the Roman pope had authority over the head of the Eastern church.
There was even a temporary schism, known as the Western Schism, within the Catholic Church itself in 1378, when two men, and eventually a third, claimed to be the true papal heir. The division lasted almost 40 years, and by the time it was resolved in 1417, the rivaling popes had significantly damaged the reputation of the papal office.
Despite this handful of schisms, the Catholic Church successfully suppressed other potential Christian offshoots "partly by sustained persecution [including] actual military expeditions against some labelled heretics, but then also a new system of enquiries into people's beliefs, called inquisitions. With the backing of secular rulers, heretics might be burned at the stake or forced into denying their beliefs," using extreme torture.
But after the Protestant Reformation in 1517, the number of denominations really began to multiply.
The Reformation — instigated by a number of events, most notably Martin Luther's 95 Theses — emphasized a personal faith. This movement was in reaction to the fact that interpretations of the Bible, grace (spontaneously given love and mercy from God), the absolution of sins and entry into heaven were all mediated through priests in Catholicism. Luther and his followers claimed that the Bible, not a church hierarchy, was the ultimate authority over all people, including priests and the pope, and that several ecclesiastical practices, such as granting indulgences (paying the church money to be absolved of sins), were corrupt.
Initially, there were just a few major Protestant groups, but ultimately, the Reformation ushered in more Christian offshoots. It seems Everybody wanted to get in on the act...AND the Money. Funny how God always needs your money.
By the 17th century, the contemporary word "denomination" began to be used to describe religious offshoots. Protestants had used scripture to critique the Roman Catholic Church, claiming that any believer could read scripture and have a personal relationship with God. But then, "the obvious problem emerged: Whose interpretation of scripture was the right one?" Everyone believed they were right. As believers debated the scriptures and sacraments, churches formed and split based on myriad biblical interpretations, ways of worship and organizational structures. From these debates, denominations such as the Presbyterians, Mennonites, Baptists and Quakers, among others, took root.
Other Protestant denominations were formed out of a play for power, such as when Henry VIII started the Church of England in 1534. "He wanted to establish the political autonomy of England, and one way to do that was religious autonomy from Rome," He also famously wanted a divorce that the church refused to grant.)
Although schisms may be seen as divisive or even lead to violent conflicts between rival denominations, these splits do have an upside. "There's kind of an anti-corruption mechanism in the fragmentation," as these splits can offer agency to people in lower social positions. For instance, after the Reformation challenged papal authority, townspeople could begin to question religious authorities about corrupt or questionable practices.
There's likely more denominational splitting and forming to come. Every goof ball with a cracked pot can claim divinity and start a cult/religion.

Really good to know.
08/26/2022

Really good to know.

We take for granted that time is real. But what if it's only an illusion, and a relative illusion at that? Does time even exist?

11/30/2021

Most antiquities scholars think that the New Testament gospels are “mythologized history.” In other words, based on the evidence available they think that around the start of the first century a controversial Jewish rabbi named Yeshua ben Yosef gathered a following and his life and teachings pro...

We invent and imagine our gods.
11/28/2021

We invent and imagine our gods.

Regularities, which we associate with laws of nature, require an explanation.

08/10/2021

Summation of where we are so far… Humans have continued to misinterpret written and oral history from lost civilizations that perished due to cataclysms both naturally and man-made over the ages. E…

08/09/2021

If you have been taught to believe rather than to question, you can discuss with us.

08/09/2021

If you are uncertain about belief join us for discussion.

10/11/2020

Question: Is Truth inherent or subjective?
There are many notions of "Truth." There is subjective truth, which is personal and individual and cannot be proven except in the mind of the believer. There is objective truth which is based upon factual evidence which can be proven. This is why there are about 4,200 different religions in the world. "God" was created by human desire to believe in something. Most people are so desperate to believe in something, they will believe in Anything. Belief is an attempt to comprehend or explain what is not understood. Belief is limiting and restricting. Doubt is based upon inquiry, examination, evaluation. Doubt is freeing. Those who accept false information, alternative facts, phony prayers prophets/preachers/politicians are trapped in the misery of their own ignorance.

10/11/2020

Information for Seekers
from our Science Protocols at The Academy of the Beyond.

Doubt belief.
Belief is limiting. Doubt is freeing. All good science thinking originates with doubt. "Proofs" are questioned. This is the nature of scientific inquiry.

Question: Why is evolution often presented as fact when it is still a theory?
Let's examine theory. A conspiracy theory conjures suppositions and assumptions rather than evidence or facts.
Furthermore, why are schools and universities still teaching as fact the idea that pathogens, or “germs,” can lead to disease, when Germ Theory is…well, a theory?
And why is the idea that matter is composed of discrete units called atoms being taught as fact when it, too, is just a theory (Atomic Theory)?
Can you believe some people still insist on passing off as fact the idea that all living organisms are made up of cells, that these cells are the basic structural/organizational unit of all organisms, and that all cells come from pre-existing cells?
Yes, Cell Theory is indeed being taught as fact!
Outrageous!
There are even those who are teaching, as fact, that the Earth orbits the sun (Heliocentric Theory) and that the Earth's outer shell is divided into several plates that glide over the mantle (Theory of Plate Tectonics).
This insult to intelligence cannot be allowed to stand!
However, before we descend upon our institutions of higher learning, torches and pitchforks in hand, let’s pause and think about this for a moment.
Could it be that the word “theory” means something very different when used in a scientific context than when it is used by the scientifically illiterate?
Yes, I think that is it.
In fact, a quick search of the Interwebs reveals that according to the American Association for the Advancement of Science:
A scientific theory is a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world, based on a body of facts that have been repeatedly confirmed through observation and experiment. Such fact-supported theories are not "guesses" but reliable accounts of the real world. The theory of biological evolution is more than "just a theory". It is as factual an explanation of the universe as the atomic theory of matter or the germ theory of disease. Our understanding of gravity is still a work in progress. But the phenomenon of gravity, like evolution, is an accepted fact.
The saddest part of this discussion, which pops up on Quora every few weeks no matter how often it gets addressed, is that the vast majority of the scientifically illiterate who misunderstand the term “theory” have absolutely no interest in rectifying their ignorance.

10/11/2020

OK. Many of you have asked what is 'incarnate spirituality.' The way we define it at the Academy is the construction of the eternal essence into a physical reality. The formation and application of the esoteric on to the essential quadratic. It is the physical application of wisdom within the All to create the All.

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