Religion

From L'avenir de l'humanité

Religion is a cultural system of behaviours and practices, world views, sacred texts, holy places, ethics, and societal organisation that relates to a humanity.

Relegeon[1] is a cultural system of behaviours and practices, world views, historically popular (influential) but useful texts, historically famous well used places, naturally developed ethics (common law), and naturally occurring societal organisation that relates to a humanity.


What are five important aspects regarding Earth religions?

  1. Religion is only a primitive machination by Man to command, suppress and exploit others, to which only life forms that are weak in their consciousness succumb.
  2. When Man indulges in his religions, i.e. malevolent, erroneous doctrines, his consciousness wastes away more and more and ultimately leads to a bottomless abyss.[2]
  3. Earth is the only planet within the Milky Way galaxy that has religions of our form. Our religions control people’s lives and the welfare of the whole planet retarding our world by thousands of years in spiritual development. [3]
  4. Every aspect of spiritual evolution is blocked by these religions, making any genuine progress impossible.[4]
  5. Our religions still contain some real worth, but this becomes so overshadowed that only a few people are able to see any effective truth in them.[5]


FIGU Forum Questions Answered by Billy

Why have we not yet destroyed ourselves like other star systems have done so because of religion?

From the FIGU Forum (Questions Answered by Billy):

Semjase said that the damage from the Christian religion had spread to other systems and galaxies and even caused their destruction. How is this possible when, as crazy as things are here, we haven't yet destroyed our own world over this, at least not to the extent she describes?


ANSWER: Hi Michael,

The other ones had more sophisticated weapons and technology to destroy themselves. We are still bound to our planet (luckily, in this respect). We are still in our baby shoes compared to them (in technical aspects).[6]


Indexed terms



Keyword Index:

Bible


Keyword Index:

Religion


Keyword Index:

Creation


Keyword Index:

God



Religion and Relegeon

What is Religion and What is Relegeon?


Relegeon Examples. ~ with British Isles as the example used here on this occasion. The British Relegeon.

  • Vikings, dragons, pirates, cowboys, Guy Fawkes, aliens, red double deck buses, parliament and horses.
  • Pomp and ceremony, Pride and Prejudice, Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson and water based transportation.
  • Merlin, Robin Hood, witchcraft, wizardry, medieval fables, anecdotes, tea, big ben and hackney carriage.
  • Davy Jones' locker, mermaids, giant octopuses, simpsons cartoons, kraken, Cromwell and oak trees.
  • Ambrosia, ghosts, ghouls, wisps, rods, hag attack, black shuck, banshees, folklore and beasts.
  • Football premier league sponsored by coca-cola, Rugby league, Cricket, dances and yorkshire pudding.
  • passionate time travelling inventors, nutty professors and philosophical scientists and roast beef.
  • Einstein's 'Does the Inertia of a Body Depend upon its Energy-Content?', sherwood forest and electricity.
  • The daily telegraph, Sweeney Todd, Shakespeare, Newton, Nelson, Darwin, Beckham and red telephone boxes.
  • Jane Austen, Emmeline Pankhurst, Richard Branson's Virgin, fish and chips, buses, trains and royalty.
  • eccentric artists, classical musical composers, actors, actresses, directors, espionage and spies.
  • honest politicians, beer, ale, liqueurs, pubs (public house), middle earth, gastropubs and cafes.
  • movember, santa's little helper, road trip, hippie, halloween, noob, pancake day and valentines day.
  • hopeless romantic, heartbroken, psychic medium clairvoyant, face book, parks, gardens and graveyards.
  • Prime ministers, kings and queens, guards, bridges, wildlife, birds and bird watching and coastline.




Common misconceptions

List of common misconceptions about the FIGU information by subject
Explanation about the broad subject of why


  • You make your own luck.[7]
  • Everyone is the architect of his or her own fortune.[8]
  • Everywhere, everything is well ordered. Law and regulation and natural principles prevail.[9]


Further Reading


References