|
Post by xxxxxxxxx on Mar 30, 2019 15:08:43 GMT
Movies/shows are art, art is a representation of some truth.
This scene represents similar notion to the battle Arjuna faces in the Bhagavadgeta. There are alot of elements that reflect in a variety of faiths, all seemingly referencing "The Holy One".
"God works in mysterious ways. Each one of you ask yourselves: Do you know his ways? Can you be so sure to know the divine mind that guides all things?
|
|
|
Post by joustos on Mar 30, 2019 20:36:27 GMT
Movies/shows are art, art is a representation of some truth.
This scene represents similar notion to the battle Arjuna faces in the Bhagavadgeta. There are alot of elements that reflect in a variety of faiths, all seemingly referencing "The Holy One".
"God works in mysterious ways. Each one of you ask yourselves: Do you know his ways? Can you be so sure to know the divine mind that guides all things?
Nobody knows if there is a divine mind. Assuming that there are gods (with minds), many ancient people believed that they could learn about it by DIVINATION, that is, by interpreting the sign language of the gods, such as the formation of a flight of birds [Augury], the spots on the liver of a sacrificed animal, any unusual physical event, dreams, and inebriated prophets.
|
|
|
Post by Eugene 2.0 on Mar 31, 2019 15:35:22 GMT
Bhagavad Gita - is the purest dialectic. Dialectic - is an art of war. War is a way of how things going.
Look up for your own Dao...
|
|
|
Post by jonbain on Mar 31, 2019 19:38:32 GMT
Movies/shows are art, art is a representation of some truth.
This scene represents similar notion to the battle Arjuna faces in the Bhagavadgeta. There are alot of elements that reflect in a variety of faiths, all seemingly referencing "The Holy One".
"God works in mysterious ways. Each one of you ask yourselves: Do you know his ways? Can you be so sure to know the divine mind that guides all things?
Nobody knows if there is a divine mind. Assuming that there are gods (with minds), many ancient people believed that they could learn about it by DIVINATION, that is, by interpreting the sign language of the gods, such as the formation of a flight of birds [Augury], the spots on the liver of a sacrificed animal, any unusual physical event, dreams, and inebriated prophets. xxxxxxxxxThere is undoubtedly a Divine mind. And it is just as contrary as any one of us. Once you think you know someone, and tell them this, they tend to change their mind so as not to be known. God is not all that different from a script-writer or author, after all. Still, we face Arjuna's dilemma - even those that refute it - daily. Do we allow those who have wronged us to stay unrepentant by doing nothing, or do we seek to aim our arrows as if they were flung direct from the Lord's bow? Do those that wrong us have a similar notion? Or are they blind to their own wrongs, getting worse and worse, because none have courage to correct them?
|
|