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http://www.despardes.com/India/ent/dec05/5.html

2006-06-15 22:25:13 · 7 answers · asked by ۞Aum۞ 7 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

7 answers

Anything can shake a weak religion. that z why they try to change whole world to their relgion so that no one questions

christ was in India and learnt Yoga there. It is a truth

2006-06-17 17:34:35 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 3

The only thing that this as well as the DaVinci code will shake is those of weak faith or the nay-sayers. Who knows truly where Christ walked? We'll have to wait for the real answers, but we know He died on Calvary. What people fail to focus on is that when Jesus rose from the dead 3 days after dying on the cross, He stayed here on earth for forty days before He bid the disciples farewell and ascended to Heaven, and on the fiftieth day afterwards was when he sent the Comforter (Holy Spirit). Lots of places He could have gone during that fourty days. You'll have your chance to ask Him in due time.

2006-06-15 23:06:34 · answer #2 · answered by green93lx 4 · 0 0

If they had wanted Jesus to be killed, he would have been stoned to death, not crucified. Crucifixion was exclusively used by Rome to execute the enemies of Rome. It was never a Jewish form of capital punishment. If he really was crucified, he did something to provoke Roman wrath, not Jewish wrath.
Another historical impossibility in the crucifixion story is the removal of the body of Jesus from the cross. According to Roman law at the time, a crucified man/woman was denied burial. The person was left to the elements, birds, and animals.
There is no verification of a significant crucifixion in the writings of historians such as Philo, Tacitus, Pliny, Suetonius, Epictectus, Cluvius Rufus, Quintus, Curtis Rufus, Josephus, nor the Roman Consul, Publius Petronius. The crucifixion also was unknown to early Christians until as late as the Second Century.
The punishment for robbery was not crucifixion.

2006-06-16 00:15:16 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Anything shakes the christian world. It's the old media thing again. If somethings up and popular they wanna knock it down. Christianity(in it's many forms) is the most popular(fashionable) religion at the minute and the media's ready to have a go.

Although the Free P's and some other Christians will kick up a fuss about anything!!!

2006-06-15 22:30:37 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Born on Long Island in 1939, Adi Da describes his early years as being focused in two fundamental activities: investigating how to realize truth, and developing the ability to communicate that truth through artistic means (both visual and literary).

Adi Da graduated from Columbia College in 1961, with a B.A. in philosophy, and from Stanford University, obtaining his M.A. in 1966, with an MA in English literature. His master’s thesis, a study of core issues in modernism, focused on Gertrude Stein and painters of the same period.

In 1964, he began a period of practice under a succession of spiritual masters in the United States and India. Six years later, he experienced a spontaneous awakening that signaled the end of his spiritual quest. As an expression of the import of this awakening, he eventually took the name "Da," the fundamental meaning of which (in various languages) is "the giver." Understood esoterically, it is a reference to the Divine as the Giver of sound and light—that is, the Giver of the entire realm of manifest existence.

In the years since, Adi Da has created a large body of spiritual writings—over 60 published books—and is widely recognized as one of the most significant spiritual masters living today. In the early 70s, Alan Watts, writer of numerous books on religion and philosophy, acknowledged Adi Da as "a rare being," adding, "It is obvious, from all sorts of subtle details, that he knows what IT’s all about." In the late 90s, poet Robert Lax said of Adi Da’s innovative novel, The Mummery,” Living and working as a writer for many decades, I have not encountered a book like this, that mysteriously and unselfconsciously conveys so much of the Unspeakable Reality."

2006-06-15 22:56:28 · answer #5 · answered by soulsearcher 5 · 0 0

Didn't think the Da Vinci Code shook the Christian world, so I doubt this one will either....... Faith is exactly that so why would it?

2006-06-15 22:29:59 · answer #6 · answered by break 5 · 0 0

are there any, dances around the pillars.....

2006-06-15 22:28:32 · answer #7 · answered by kaka90250 5 · 0 0

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