Friday, November 22, 2013

On both Nietzsche and Religion lacking the Twofold Path


Nietzsche said nature is expelled from morality when it is said, “Love ye your enemies,” nature says love your neighbor and hate your enemies, and studies in human nature over many years have confirmed this. But Nietzsche was seeing things outside the context of the Involutionary and Evolutionary Paths, or outside the Twofold Path.

Jesus said love your enemies within the needs of the Involutionary Inward Path to the Father Within, which requires the blocking of such territorial and xenophobic instincts as hating your enemies, among other things, because they are obstacles in the way of the desire-less state of the Father Within.

Paul carried the Church away from the primitive purity of Jesus and the Inward Path. In this way the Church was, as Nietzsche said, the barbarization of Christianity, and this became the deception of Christianity. But Nietzsche sees only the Will-To-Power of the Church, he did not appear to properly acknowledge the goal of the desire-less state of the Father Within or the God Within as preached by Jesus, which has been experienced by sages through the ages, mostly in India, applying much the same ascetic formula.

Nietzsche does not see human nature within the context of the Twofold Path, which can show us that there is no need to expel Christianity. We evolve to real Godhood in the material and supermaterial world, activated by the Spirit-Will-To-Godhood---not the “will-to-power”---shaped by outside evolution and natural selection, and this is the God first seen in the Inward Path as the Father Within, which is a symbolic experience of real Godhood reached by evolution. Here is where religion, on the other hand, needs to acknowledge the Evolutionary Outward Path.

Science can join religion. The spiritual can join the material. Culture can join biology. Nietzsche can join Christ, in the Twofold Path, giving religious and philosophical direction to the modern world.

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