Jediism and/as a religion

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15 Feb 2015 03:55 #181395 by
Jediism and/as a religion was created by
I was just doing some reading completely unrelated to Jediism, but it brought my thoughts here.

I am not intending to start a debate, and I am not here with any agenda. To those of you that know me, leave your thoughts and prejudices at the door. If I write again in this thread, it will only be for further questions.

I want to know why you all chose Jediism, what you mean or expect it to be, and what it is to you.

This is my perception of the whole thing, and correct me if I say anything wrong. I do not want to speak in error about anything. From what I have seen of Jediism, it is sort of a "come as you are" deism or agnosticism, for those who adopt it as a religion or spirituality. It seems that most Jedi (but not all- more on that in a minute) look at it as a faith that doesn't assign a name or extremely specific attributes to God or a higher power, except perhaps "the Force." This is actually what drew me to it initially. While I have been a religious person for almost five years, which means I had been religious for two years before approaching Jediism, I was drawn to it at a time when I began investigating Freemasonry. To me, the two bear striking similarities, aside from the secretive and exclusive nature of Freemasonry and the openness of Jediism. They both welcome both the religious and non-religious, both demand religious tolerance, and both want to better a person morally, as well as spiritually, if the person wishes, without imposing religious dogma or too many rules (side note: Freemasonry is usually very tolerant once you're in, and there's a wide array of diversity to be seen). I ultimately decided against Jediism, and have ceased involvement in Freemasonry due to the fact that I prefer to take my religion as it is, without adding in other philosophies or belief systems, but that's just my way of thinking, and I'm not calling anybody wrong for thinking otherwise. It's an issue of the brain, not the heart. I just think concretely that way. I initially was moderately involved in Sufi Islam, but now am two months away from being baptized into the Eastern Orthodox Church.

On the other hand, I've seen people claim both Jediism and atheism, which makes me wonder if Jediism is similar to Hinduism in that it accepts full-fledged atheists, or if Jedi atheists are more like "Christian atheists," who basically believe that Jesus was a good person, but reject most of the Bible, tradition, a belief in God, and so on (Jewish atheists would possibly be another good example, but the question of "who is a Jew" would make the comparison too convoluted).

What is Jediism? Is it a philosophy? A religion? Does it require a belief in some higher power, no matter how vague? Or it is truly as multifaceted as Hinduism, and accepts all of the above without contradiction?

I have read the doctrine and all, but it's still a bit vague to me. I just want to hear what you all came here for, why you joined (or didn't), and what you get from it, or expect to experience.

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15 Feb 2015 10:13 #181433 by Gisteron
Replied by Gisteron on topic Jediism and/as a religion
The perception of vagueness is quite correct in many ways. There is not a strict, let alone agreed upon definition of Jediism or of Jedi.

Since pantheism is in a multitude of respects indistinguishable from atheism, it is not a stretch to imagine a Jedi being an atheist also. I shall leave it to the philosophers to decide whether Jediism qualifies as a religion. Since Jediism has no unified definition as such, I would argue that it is more of a philosophy of life than a religion. There are no strictly required or prohibited beliefs but somebody who barely stands for any Jedi ideal will likely not qualify as a Jedi. I have heard people who argued that belief in the Force is a required one, though only few will specify what they mean by the Force. Others will disagree. If on the other hand someone stands for passionate and aggressive resolution or escalation of conflicts they seek for the conflict's own sake, I don't think any Jedi would welcome them among their midst or call them one of their own at this point.

I for one care for labels only in so far as they carry a message. To call yourself a Jedi really barely tells the rest of us anything about you, even less than calling yourself a Catholic or a Hanafi would. It seems to me that you view it the same way, too, given how you are free to swap your label at will irrespective of whether you believe anything those labels supposedly represent. By that token, feel free to adopt or reject the Jedi label as much as you please. We would only care about the person underneath them all anyway.

You also asked why we individually joined and what we gained.
Judging by my early writings here it seems that I was in a state of severe insecurity and likely emotional distress when I joined. The prescript to calm oneself and to focus on the moment was likely helpful to quite some extent. The IP and especially my early apprenticeship contributed a lot to who I am today eventhough to pinpoint specifics would be difficult, ignorant of where I'd have gone if it weren't for that.

Better to leave questions unanswered than answers unquestioned
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15 Feb 2015 11:13 - 15 Feb 2015 11:18 #181435 by
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I think the main problem with defining jediism as a religion is the aspect of worship. We have nearly every other definition of a religion (agreed practices is not necessary really). In my experience we don't worship the Force, we acknowledge it's existence and that it is part of everything, including ourselves (hence the introspection because to know ourselves will help us to 'know' the Force). With regards to agreed practices a) most religions practices are centred on worship so it is irrelevant here and b) most pagan/heathen religions (including Hinduism) agree one their deities but the practices of worshipping them are very personal and so differ for each practitioner.

The creed and maxims etc are definitely a philosophy for living your life. I think belief in the Force, though, pushes it into religion.

With regards to why I joined: I have had my beliefs for a long time, but researched other religions and attended congregations etc in an attempt to find a community of like minded individuals. I eventually found that here. With respect to my actual beliefs, as I studied other religions I noticed essential similarities between them and worked on my own beliefs to accommodate a 'common' underlying belief. And that is where I am. To me, all religions 'fit' with jediism (and it seems I'm not the only one who thinks so given the special interest groups etc) though I do not adhere to another system of belief myself.

I would also add that I do have quite a definite 'vision' of the Force that is certainly no more vague than the concept of 'God', but as I belief that all religions are essentially different paths to the same destination I acknowledge that my interpretation of the Force likely differs from others.
Last edit: 15 Feb 2015 11:18 by . Reason: extra info

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15 Feb 2015 11:49 #181436 by Loudzoo
Replied by Loudzoo on topic Jediism and/as a religion
"Doubt is an uncomfortable position, but certainty is a ridiculous one" - Voltaire

To me, Jediism is a little like Buddhist dharma. It is a dialogue, a process, a method, a guiding hand through the forest - but even less prescriptive than Buddhism. After all, there are loads of ways through the forest. The Temple, here, is a little like the Buddhist sangha - its a community, and a place to thrash things out.

I completely agree with Gisteron. Don't worry too much about labels - unless you're doing that for the fun of it! I like it here because nobody claims to have come up with anything new (like some "new" "religions": Mormonsim, Scientology). Just look at the Initiate Program - its like a distilled gallop through much of accumulated human wisdom. You have that guidance, but with none of the cultural baggage of older "religions" or narrower philosophical systems (war, inquisition, missionary efforts, unfashionable morals) that I personally feel uncomfortable associating with.

You will carve your own path whatever you choose - but you don't need to do that alone. You can follow the Eastern Orthodox path and be a Jedi B)

I still struggle with the notion that you can't have your cake and eat it :)

The Librarian
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If peace cannot be maintained with honour, it is no longer peace . . .
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15 Feb 2015 14:41 #181445 by Edan
Replied by Edan on topic Jediism and/as a religion

I want to know why you all chose Jediism, what you mean or expect it to be, and what it is to you.


It's difficult to say that I 'chose' Jediism..
I came here at a time when I realised that the way I thought, the way I dealt with things, with people, was not working and it was affecting me in a negative way. I googled Jediism out of curiosity one day and the doctrine appeared to me everything I already believed in, but could not always express. So I stayed. Unlike with other religions, I didn't feel like I had to force fit beliefs into my own system.

On the other hand, I've seen people claim both Jediism and atheism, which makes me wonder if Jediism is similar to Hinduism in that it accepts full-fledged atheists, or if Jedi atheists are more like "Christian atheists," who basically believe that Jesus was a good person, but reject most of the Bible, tradition, a belief in God,


I don't claim atheism, I claim a belief of 'I don't care if there's a God, it makes no difference to me', I also don't believe we can know if there's one or not, so you'd probably call me more agnostic.
I'm not religious though about Jediism.. I've wrote about this a lot recently but it's only viewable by apprentices and above... where I've said that the idea of religion, clergy etc within Jediism is a puzzle piece that doesn't fit for me. I understand why others do it, but it's like going to a foreign country and knowing the language, but not fitting in with the culture.

What is Jediism? Is it a philosophy? A religion? Does it require a belief in some higher power, no matter how vague? Or it is truly as multifaceted as Hinduism, and accepts all of the above without contradiction?


It depends how you believe. As I stated above, I am not religious.. for me Jediism is not a religion, it is merely an expression of beliefs that I have. Take away the word and I'm still all the things I am, it's just the word 'Jedi' tells people in a word a general idea of what I am. It's probably more appropriate to say that I'm a member of the Temple of the Jedi Order, than it is to say that I am a Jedi, because the community as a whole doesn't have a proper definition. 'Jedi' means a hundred things and more, to each person it is different.

The only higher power I believe in is... well.. I don't believe in one. The Force to me is energy and the connection between everything. It is an acknowledgement that I am not a disconnected part, I am part of the whole. I don't believe the Force can be strong in some areas or weak in others, I don't believe the Force can 'guide' us. It is everywhere, in everything, but it is down to us to see the connections and understand the implications of them.

I don't think vagueness of a trait of Jediism is a bad thing. I think it allows people to expand their minds without having to conform to something they don't believe in.

I just want to hear what you all came here for, why you joined (or didn't), and what you get from it, or expect to experience.


I don't think I can tell you what I expect, only what I've got from being here. The amazing support and friendliness of the people here, and the challenge I get from thread discussion, the conversations I have over PM, and my apprenticeship, have allowed me to break out of my restricted and narrow view of things and develop more positive views and behaviours.

"Evil is always possible. And goodness is eternally difficult."
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15 Feb 2015 16:05 #181454 by
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It seems safe to say that people can take different things from jediism and so whether or not they consider it a religion will depend on what they take from it.

I know of people who identify themselves as Christian but do not believe in God or heaven and hell, they attend church for the community and agree with the lessons and message of the bible (I.e. be good to each other). If Christianity was not officially classed as a religion then technically for these few people it could be considered more a philosophy.

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15 Feb 2015 17:02 #181456 by
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In addition to Gisteron's identifying Jediism as having aspects of both pantheism and atheism, I would add monism: the belief or acknowledgement that reality is one; and animism - particularly, for example, Shinto. Force symbolism has similarities to kami. On this view, Jediism can also have atheistic characteristics like Daoism, where Dao and Force denote principles of reality rather than a deity. In this way, atheistic Jediism (of which I include myself) can include a spiritual attitude similar to these religions. Dao, Force or kami express a spiritual understanding of this monistic principle symbolizing the sacred nature of reality. For me, Jediism is a form of spiritual atheism.

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15 Feb 2015 17:14 - 15 Feb 2015 17:16 #181458 by void
Replied by void on topic Jediism and/as a religion

Gisteron wrote: Since pantheism is in a multitude of respects indistinguishable from atheism, it is not a stretch to imagine a Jedi being an atheist also.

Yeah, except that Jediism (at least in canon) is panentheism, not proper pantheism, because it maintains that the Force is separate from the universe itself (i.e., the Force exists in the Universe but isn't the universe), and the Force is a singular, eternal, animating force in the universe.

Burn_Phoenix wrote: I think the main problem with defining jediism as a religion is the aspect of worship. We have nearly every other definition of a religion (agreed practices is not necessary really). In my experience we don't worship the Force, we acknowledge it's existence and that it is part of everything, including ourselves (hence the introspection because to know ourselves will help us to 'know' the Force).

This has always been my definition of religion--I consider something a proper religion if it has a cosmology and worship practices. It's not a dictionary definition, or an official stance, but it's my subjective connotative understanding of religion. Which is why I've always considered my personal expressions of things like Jediism and most Eastern religions as philosophical additives to religion, and not religions on their own.
Last edit: 15 Feb 2015 17:16 by void.
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15 Feb 2015 17:29 #181461 by
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As a principle regarding the nature of the universe, I agree that the principle is not identical with the universe. Similarly, wouldn't the principle of universe then not be identical with the universe itself. But it seems a troublesome distinction that the Force is of but not in. This reminds me of the Aristotelian distinction regarding the relationship of soul, as the principle of life, to the body which is alive. Perhaps, we might think of the Force as a principle analogous to the principle of life. It is the principle of the Force that makes the universe (or reality in general) this kind of universe. The Force is the realization of a universe of this kind.

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15 Feb 2015 17:39 #181462 by
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Gisteron wrote: Since pantheism is in a multitude of respects indistinguishable from atheism, it is not a stretch to imagine a Jedi being an atheist also.


As you no doubt understand, there are a few distinct forms of pantheism, at least two of which are distinguishable from atheism (dualist & monist idealist pantheism). It's true that the most popular pantheist movement at the moment is naturalistic (monist physicalist), and I recognize that you were making a generalization to express an idea (which makes sense and I agree), so I'm not arguing with you. I simply wanted to clarify this additional point for those who aren't as familiar with pantheism.

steamboat28 wrote: Yeah, except that Jediism (at least in canon) is panentheism, not proper pantheism, because it maintains that the Force is separate from the universe itself (i.e., the Force exists in the Universe but isn't the universe), and the Force is a singular, eternal, animating force in the universe.


I see what you're saying, but I'm definitely not panentheist. :) There are always going to be exceptions, I suppose.

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15 Feb 2015 17:46 #181463 by
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I don't know that Jediism maintains the Force as separate from the Universe: ultimately, everything is 'part' of the Universe, and I've always felt that the Force is one of the natural mechanisms by which it operates. Even presupposing the existence of God (which, for reference, I don't - I'm Agnostic!), one could infer that such a being could 'create' the Universe, but also set up self-perpetuating mechanisms to ensure it's continuation. Evolution serves as a mechanism to enable life to grow, develop and advance beyond any 'original' specifications, and life perpetuates itself through procreation: thus, no deity or higher power needs to involve itself in the creation of every living thing: life does that automatically!

As far as Jediism as a religion goes, you have to remember why it was created in the first place: as a means for religious practitioners to continue following their faith within the structure of a Jedi Order. The idea was that anyone could be a Jedi: Christian, Buddhist, Muslim, Jew etc, provided they worked and lived within the tenets of the Jedi Order. The Force itself requires no reverence, nor worship: to a Jediist, simply living by the doctrines and methodological tenets of their faith was sufficient as a form of worship. Thus, the idea was never to supercede existing religious beliefs, but rather to incorporate them under the Jedi umbrella. You can believe that God is your saviour and that Christ died for you, or that the ultimate aspiration for any being is to reach Enlightenment, or that the words of the Prophet are sacred to Allah - regardless, these beliefs serve to reinforce their pursuit of the Jedi Path, rather than contradict it.

This is where the distinction came when looking at Jedi Realism: Jediism was religious in nature, and focused upon incorporating Jedi ideals into a person's religious life, serving as act of worship and as a living embodiment of those beliefs. Jedi Realists, however, aimed to change the individual beyond that: instead of exemplifying religious faith through their pursuit of the Jedi Path, they sought to become Jedi only, seeking an ideological path rather than a religious one: where benevolent acts and ethical behaviour were not the result of a sense that it was appropriate to their faith, but rather because of the sense that all things are connected through the Force, so ethical behaviour ultimately stems from the desire to serve the Force in a non-religious fashion: thus, life is sacred, but God...the existence of such isn't entirely held relevant. If such a being exists, that would not influence the path we walk. If not, then again, there's little difference. Thus, where Jediism and Jedi Realism made their primary distinction was in the role of the Jedi Path: one, as an act of worship, the other as an expression of ideological choice and personal journey.

Worth noting I'm speaking of the origins of the two movements: this was 10-15 years ago now. I daresay many things have changed, perhaps rendering the distinctions more meaningless than they used to be, but that's how things were. Just thought I'd add my two cents, so to speak!

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15 Feb 2015 19:33 #181466 by void
Replied by void on topic Jediism and/as a religion

Aslyn wrote: As far as Jediism as a religion goes, you have to remember why it was created in the first place: as a means for religious practitioners to continue following their faith within the structure of a Jedi Order


Source, please?

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15 Feb 2015 19:45 #181467 by
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Past experience, and having been there when it happened ;) Sadly the sources for that disappeared years ago, from what I can tell: the original Jediism sites are gone, as are many of the original ones used for Jedi Realism. A lot's changed in the Community over the past decade, and even the older sites have transferred to newer places, losing many of their Archives in the process. thejedi.org is gone, the Force Academy has moved and become far less active, Fatum Operandi is gone, Unified Jedi Order died a while ago (as, sadly, did it's creator rather recently). There's a lot that has been lost, I'm sad to say, and I only ever kept a few hundred pages of notes (mostly training manuals written by others, or my own, of course). Most of those pertain to Jedi Realism, rather than Jediism, alas.

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15 Feb 2015 20:39 - 15 Feb 2015 20:50 #181469 by OB1Shinobi
to me a jedi is a person who is commited to truth, personal excellence, and service

anyone who lives by that commitment is a jedi

in a thousand years

(if the species survives, which it probably will because there will be jedi around to see to it)

the definition i just gave will be the nucleus of the jedi community

this is not a definition i feel it necessary to impose on others

nor is it just some random thing ive made up

every sincere jedi that ive ever spoken with can say that they embody that definition to the best of their ability

becoming a jedi proper is to make this commitment a conscious proccess

People are complicated.
Last edit: 15 Feb 2015 20:50 by OB1Shinobi.
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15 Feb 2015 21:39 - 15 Feb 2015 21:56 #181473 by Adder
Replied by Adder on topic Jediism and/as a religion
The Jedi in the original movies were referenced as being religious/ a religion, not that it matters but still that gives it some foothold for those who view religion in useful terms...

The religious elements of any path I associate to the training of the subconscious mind, pure and simple, because in my experience 'spiritual experience' relies on the extra power of the subconscious. Valid mechanisms to this seem to include belief and faith. Whether that connects to some supernature or just broader human experience is not important to this end of experience, but is a great place to associate concepts of the Force
:whistle:

This is a large part of my Jedi training and so the concept of religion fits perfectly. A lot of media seems to talk about religion being the human activities of operational management/mismanagement and the question of truth about dogma or practices, but I find those irrelevant to the root purpose of religions for spiritual growth. A lot of the time they could just use the word organization instead of religion and it would be more accurate use of a label IMO.

In that regard I view the Jedi Realist v Jediist argument a bit weird, and so instead I tend to joke Jediism is shorthand for Jedi Realism, because I'm sure we are all Jedi Idealists at heart.
:silly:

steamboat28 wrote: Yeah, except that Jediism (at least in canon) is panentheism, not proper pantheism, because it maintains that the Force is separate from the universe itself (i.e., the Force exists in the Universe but isn't the universe), and the Force is a singular, eternal, animating force in the universe.


I don't think it tries to define the Force to that level of detail. They discuss approaches to understanding, not material truth of something... its meant to be experiential (but not to the dramatic extent shown), and its nature probably meant to be beyond the capacity for us to understand - which points again to mystery, curiosity and experience as fundamental elements of the path, IMO, and also powerful drivers for engagement, growth, and mastery of life.

Introverted extropian, mechatronic neurothealogizing, technogaian buddhist.
Likes integration, visualization, elucidation and transformation.
Jou ~ Deg ~ Vlo ~ Sem ~ Mod ~ Med ~ Dis
TM: Grand Master Mark Anjuu
Last edit: 15 Feb 2015 21:56 by Adder.
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15 Feb 2015 22:45 - 15 Feb 2015 22:46 #181480 by
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Panentheism is, on this view, making the Force into a high 'deity' over a universe of pantheistic attributes. This is problematic in that Force is reified, that is, the concept or principle is made into something concrete, or as having being, or as being a distinct and separate reality. My belief is that the Force is a symbol for the perceived structure or order of the cosmos (or universe, etc.). In this regard, Force is synonymous with Heraclitus' logos. The Force then is a symbol for the order of things. It has no reality other than how humans represent it. As a species, human beings have developed the capacity to perceive the order of things and in this way is it an expression of our rationality. The logos (or Dao or Force, etc.) is like a force or thought that 'steers' or orders all things, but it isn't, not really. I don't believe the Force is the kind of power as it is depicted in Lucas' fictional universe.
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15 Feb 2015 23:29 - 15 Feb 2015 23:31 #181487 by OB1Shinobi
ive recently come to two conclusions about the force andnmy interaction with the jedi community (not suprisingly) is at the heart of at least obe of them

ive always belived that the force speaks to all of us equally

that is its always whispering in our ears or shouting in our faces and every oncein a while it even grabs us by the scruff of the neckk and shakes the shitake out of us

but ive come to realise that at an internal level we all speak our own language, even where we use the same words really

and so we all relate to the force in our own way

for this reason i am open to the wisdom that the force is whatever a sincere individual says it is, for them

for this reason it is mandatory for me in my own being to acknoledge everybody's interpretation equally while keeping the confidence that a theory or description of the force on which we can for the most part all agree will be reeached (or has been reached) from the experience of heing exposd to so many personal descriptions of the force that the mind finally CLICKS tothe common theme within them all

i do belive in universalenergy - including life energy and personal energy

my latest evolution of belife is to begin from premise that everything is energy

im energy water is energy electicity is energy mars is energy the spoon is a form of energy ect ect

then move to acceptence of the essential truth of the "law" that energy cannotbe created or desytroyed but can only change its form or shift states

and then extrapolate that ultimately all energy is the same thing

ithat there is only one energy and it covers the full spectrum of existence a d has learned how to express itself in a seeminglyninfinite number of states

in fact it seems to be playing a game of using one form of itself to learn how to become another form of itself

whichn i think is pretty clever

(the energy is clever i mean, not necessarily my theory)

People are complicated.
Last edit: 15 Feb 2015 23:31 by OB1Shinobi.
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16 Feb 2015 00:37 #181501 by
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To paraphrase Joseph Campbell, "we are all manifestations of the Force" :) (I can't remember if he actually says Buddha consciousness or the divine, but the message is the same!)

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16 Feb 2015 21:24 #181649 by Jestor
Replied by Jestor on topic Jediism and/as a religion

Star Forge wrote: I want to know why you all chose Jediism, what you mean or expect it to be, and what it is to you


Hiya Star Forge...

Nice to see you...:)

This is a bit long, so, I apologize to everyone up front, :lol:....

In 1977, I saw the first movie...

I had already been attending religion classes for a couple if years, Sunday school too...

Like, I think, all children, I ask a lot of questions... Of myself now, but then, of things I was told... Ok, maybe things I'm told still too, lol...;)

I felt more explanation in that episode, than I ever did by those who tried to answer my questions...

And, then the one person Luke is going to learn from, dies...

So, he is kinda on his own for figuring things out...

He didn't grow up, going to church every Sunday with Uncle and Aunt... At least we were never lead to think this... I know men that remind me of Uncle Owen, and they find their religion in their lives, rather than church... Maybe the Aunt would take a little Luke, as Moms and Aunts do, lol, to church, but we never know...

And, when Obi-Wan talks about the Force, , Luke asks "What is it?"

So, as Luke had to figure stuff out (later being able to ask Yoda), I thought asking questions and figuring stuff out is the best path...

This was my path here... A very succinct version, lol...

I didnt know "pantheism" and "monotheism" and "secular" and so many other terms you guys use... And "logical fallacies"... Freaking logical fallacies... lol... I learned that using them, doesn't make my arguement wrong, but, it can make it seem questionable... Some here, pride themselves on their logic... I don't know them (the fallacies) but, as I don't EVER use them intentionally, I can only assume the accuser feels I'm not worth the conversation... lol, OK, I'm good with that... (sorry, stick in my craw for too much logic, not enough, uh, "gooeyness", lol...)

I kinda do now... I still have to look them up, but just to make sure I'm right in my understanding... :lol:... I'm not very smart about these terms, but I've only had 5 years of using them to learn them, lol...

But I do know the ideas they symbolize... I do understand the concepts.. I just have to look them up to remember which is which... :lol:...

+++++++++++++++
Like a monk (idk what else to compare it too) I've contemplated (meditated on?) life down to the nuts and bolts of it all... But not from school... Not theory, but experience.....

Why is grass "green"? Oh sure, chlorophyll, but why "green"? Why not call "gyroscope"? One word is as arbitrary as another... We've just agreed on these words we use, definitions we have... Yea, yea, it evolved there, but, the first different gutteral noises began to identify the world, a howl might have symbolized a canine, a roar or meow meant feline... And somewhere, the gutteral noise sounding like "green" became the word we associate with the color...

How about "power"? I baby sat children, helped my mom with a daycare... Had pets and a younger sister... Was I always the good boy? Was I a bully out of curiosity? Was I just not thinking about the consequences as I was arrested for domestic battery? Warned for mob action? Kicked out of Sears for shoplifting?

How about when I stuck the barrel in my mouth?

Did drugs.. Broke into houses... Ran my car I to a telephone pole 4 times... Bang, back up, hit it again BANG, back up do it again...

Been at the mercy of others... Dad hitting me so hard, so many times that my head felt like jello... lol, literally ... Having a big naked dude sitting on my chest punching the shit outta my face... Sitting in a holding cell for questioning... Talking to a priest about masterbation and sin...

Defended my female friend against a group of guys... Taught my sister to drive... Raised some pretty terrific kids...

Never cheated on a wife, while the marriage was solid... Once they cheated, it was over...

Give to bums, charity, delivered food to those who couldn't afford it....

Ran for public office, and work in the public sector... So I can keep serving the people...

++++++++++++++++
Anyway...

I learned, f-ed up, and did good too...

Thought about those things, tried to fix old mistakes, and make sure there were no future ones in similar veins... :)

I had to learn from these things on my own...

I had no guru either...

And, none of these books, and theologies everyone speaks of...

I learned them all here... I joined TOTJO because it was time... I needed more than I could do for myself.... Needed to get things out of my head...

I did my own thinking.... My own conclusions...

Those who look to the fiction as canon, are, in my opinion, trading one fictional story for another....

But, if it works for them, more power to them...:)

Hopefully, they are less lost than they were/could be...

I uses to say, "I'm agnostic, but kinda like the Jedi... there's a 'force', but Im not sure what it is..."

I'm still not sure what it is, except to say "everything"... And, I'm not agnostic anymore...

I am only Jedi...:)

+++++++++++++
Some points I see...:)

Star Forge" wrote: From what I have seen of Jediism, it is sort of a "come as you are"


Yes... this is how I see it too...

Who is anyone to tell me how to.live my life?

Live your life?

Dont tread on me, and I won't on you, and if i do, I will apologize...

I won't tell you "the offence is on you", that's just crap...

I would hope for the same considerations...

No? That's OK too... You don't see the world like I do...:)

Star Forge wrote: What is Jediism? Is it a philosophy? A religion? Does it require a belief in some higher power, no matter how vague? Or it is truly as multifaceted as Hinduism, and accepts all of the above without contradiction?


I go with "multifaceted"...

:)

Star Forge wrote: I have read the doctrine and all, but it's still a bit vague to me.


You know why its vague?

Cause we, as humans, are...

We can both look at the same thing, and see it different....

The simple line "I am Jedi" cannot be agreed on by people, and you wonder about a whole doctrine?

Lol...

Burn_Pheonix wrote: I would also add that I do have quite a definite 'vision' of the Force that is certainly no more vague than the concept of 'God', but as I belief that all religions are essentially different paths to the same destination I acknowledge that my interpretation of the Force likely differs from others


"There are many paths up the mountain."

Steamboat wrote: Yeah, except that Jediism (at least in canon) is panentheism, not proper pantheism, because it maintains that the Force is separate from the universe itself (i.e., the Force exists in the Universe but isn't the universe), and the Force is a singular, eternal, animating force in the universe


Hmmm...

Not something I agree with....

I think it is everything...:)

that regard I view the Jedi Realist v Jediist argument a bit weird, and so instead I tend to joke Jediism is shorthand for Jedi Realism, because I'm sure we are all Jedi Idealists at heart.


Yea....

The distinction seems old and tired...

No offense Aslyn...:)

I called myself Jedi (halfheartedly I'll admit) before these community distinctions were an issue...

I'm Jedi, and I'm real...

Religion/philosophy/realist/realism/jediism = splitting hairs...

On walk-about...

Sith ain't Evil...
Jedi ain't Saints....


"Bake or bake not. There is no fry" - Sean Ching


Rite: PureLand
Former Memeber of the TOTJO Council
Master: Jasper_Ward
Current Apprentices: Viskhard, DanWerts, Llama Su, Trisskar
Former Apprentices: Knight Learn_To_Know, Knight Edan, Knight Brenna, Knight Madhatter
The following user(s) said Thank You: , , Brenna, Archon, Breeze el Tierno, OB1Shinobi

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16 Feb 2015 23:01 #181655 by
Replied by on topic Jediism and/as a religion
Oh, I'm not going to take offense at that one, Jestor :P We all follow the Jedi Path, one way or the other. If people are happy to dismiss the distinctions, I'm all for it. I am, however, aware that some need them, and I'm fine with acknowledging them if that's what's required. Have to fit everybody in somehow, though the Force alone knows how we manage it...

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