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Such as Bible, Koran, Talmud, Book of Mormon, Bhagavad Gita, etc.

2007-03-13 15:25:31 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

16 answers

I have read the Bible, Book of Mormon (and their other religious texts) and the Dhammapada.
I would like to read the Quran but havent had the time yet

2007-03-13 15:34:54 · answer #1 · answered by Together 4 · 0 0

I have read the Bible, the Koran, the Torah, the Bhagavad Gita, Gilgamesh, Jonathan Livingston Seagull, On the Origin of Species, The God Delusion and Cosmos. They are all sacred texts as far as I'm concerned.

2007-03-13 15:33:47 · answer #2 · answered by Gene Rocks! 5 · 0 0

As a Christian, I have borrowed an idea from a Buddhist monk who teaches placing focus on daily meditation over all else. What that means for me is prayer is more important than feeding my mind the ideas and concepts of religion. After 20 years of such academic theological and doctrinal study, if intellectualism were going to make me a better person, it would have. Actually, that approach has failed miserably.

2007-03-13 15:36:19 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

all of the Bible, some Koran (coaching passages), some Vedas and Upanishads, some Tao Te Ching, Greek and Roman mythology, Celtic mythology, distinctive anthologies of community American folktales, "African Myths of beginning," some books approximately Wicca, a e book approximately Druids, a e book comparing Buddhist concept and Einstein's rates, Zen parables, "Hardcore Zen," St. Augustine, and a number of different collections of international mythology. between others, like New Age nonsense, reincarnation, debts of medieval convents, etc. i do no longer think there's a distinction between faith and mythology, besides the certainty that one seems geered in direction of clarification, the different in direction of doctrine. i grew to become into an anthropologist interior the sector before figuring out on a museum place, so my activity in faith comes from faith being the main effectual definition of community and self in previous cultures. that's real, the extra you realize, the less you have faith.

2016-10-18 08:02:15 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Old Testament, New Testament, Koran...If you're not reading them with a prior assumption that they are God's true words, they're not easy to get through.

2007-03-13 15:29:04 · answer #5 · answered by Eleventy 6 · 0 0

In the Bible I read the prophecies and in the new york times, the fulfilment.

2007-03-13 15:37:04 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Torah

2007-03-13 15:30:35 · answer #7 · answered by man of ape 6 · 0 0

I've read the bible before, but didn't particularly enjoy it.

2007-03-13 15:27:48 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

bible, gnostic bible, zohar, gita, physics, phillosphy, koran that's what iam reading pot of lately.

2007-03-13 15:31:02 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I read books pertaining to enlightenment
doreen virtue, suzane croquette, and many others

2007-03-13 15:29:09 · answer #10 · answered by amber 5 · 0 0

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