I still maintain that going to Heaven is by proper arrangement no matter your religious sect.
An interesting rite of the Buddhists of Tibet and the Parsi of India was to offer their deceased human members of the community to birds of prey. These traditional “sky burials” grew out of a practical necessity in Tibet, later becoming part of the Buddhist tradition in Tibet. In India, the practice grew from the Zoroastrian religious tradition. What are the pros and cons of sky burials?
Why, if God was such a superior being, did he (or she) need a day of rest?
“I believe in and love God,” writes one professed Christian. “But…church bores me.” Do you share those feelings? The fact is, boredom, dissatisfaction, and frustration have caused some to invent their own ways of worshiping God.
Many religious people today have all kinds of ideas about the bible some seem to think it is just a guide, and that one does not need to abide by it in order to be saved. Some say one is saved by grace through faith, and that there is nothing else that is required for one to do in order to be saved. The bible.
Realities as they pertain to the workplace.
Can hymns really be referred to as outdated?
A symposium, with “tradition” and “true interpretation” under examination.
The Himalayas are controllers of much of our weather, the source of many of our major rivers,the great bulwark against freezing winds from the north and from invading hordes and thanks to their glaciers and forests they are the perennial preservers and replenishers of our land.
What would God say about our religious practices and traditions if He showed up at church this Sunday? Have we allowed things to enter into His program that would actually keep us from truly knowing and worshiping Him? Amos 4-5 has some insight, through the discussion of three cities, that might offer us some valuable reminders of what God desires in our faith.
