Sermon

Interpret your Interpretations

July 21, 2013

 

                Every day in our lives we are faced with the question of interpreting what we see, hear, smell, etc.  Once we come up with our answer is that it?  Do we simply accept what our first impressions lead us to? Or, do we then strive to continue expanding on what we believe to be able to make the most informed choice?  This is the question I have been pondering for some time.  I have almost always gone with my gut when making on the spot decisions.  If later I change my choice does that mean I was wrong or, was it right with the information at the time?  So, what is right, the first thought or the second? 

                Several conversations have led me to this thought.  About a month ago I was discussing the question of if an act in and of itself was evil.  The discussion began simply as: Is shooting someone evil?  Several said yes.  We continued expanding on the scenario slowly with small pieces of information and kept asking with this information, is it still evil?  With each piece some changed and some stayed the same.  In the end most believed that the act was not evil under the circumstances given.  So again, were we right at first or right in the end?  Is it possible that we were right both times?  I believe that truth is the answer given with the facts at hand.

                Recently there was a debate about the Jedi Code.  One side believed the code was a lie because in their opinion the code contradicts itself on every line.  The other believed it to be more of a guideline or goal to strive for.  As interesting as it was to hear both sides of the conversation, what interested me more was what seemed like unwillingness on both sides to hear the other argument.  Why not agree to disagree and see what we can learn and use to reevaluate what our beliefs are?

                I guess the point of all this, is not to be so quick to judge what is right and what is wrong.  Allow yourself to ponder the possibility that there is no wrong answer and that each person’s interpretation of something may not be a lie to one nor the other but, the truth for that one individual.  For someone that has color blindness the sky may very well be purple.  It is not a lie just the facts as they see it because of their unique point of view.  You may think you are short but to someone shorter than you, you are tall.  Again, it is not a lie to think you are short or for them to think you are tall; it is all about how each interprets the world.

                During the week I challenge you to go out and try to view the world from a new point of view.  In the movie “Dead Poet Society” the teacher had the students stand on a desk to see how the room looked different.  Try sitting near a sidewalk and looking up at people that pass.  Cover one eye and look around.  Find some way to see things in a way different than you are accustom and then ponder which reality is the truth, which is fiction, or is it all just in the interpretation of the facts that we have at the time?

Please watch: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2EdWgsTUhmI

Comments (11)

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"what interested me more was what seemed like unwillingness on both sides to hear the other argument."<br /><br />"Allow yourself to ponder the possibility that there is no wrong answer and that each person’s interpretation of something may not...

"what interested me more was what seemed like unwillingness on both sides to hear the other argument."<br /><br />"Allow yourself to ponder the possibility that there is no wrong answer and that each person’s interpretation of something may not be a lie to one nor the other but, the truth for that one individual."<br /><br />Amen Brother! :lol:

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excellent points indeed.<br />your sermon reminded me of something i read the other day:<br />Tao Te Ching 13 (translation S. Mitchell)<br /><br />....see the world as your self.<br />Have faith in the way things are.<br />Love the world as your...

excellent points indeed.<br />your sermon reminded me of something i read the other day:<br />Tao Te Ching 13 (translation S. Mitchell)<br /><br />....see the world as your self.<br />Have faith in the way things are.<br />Love the world as your self;<br />then you can care for all things.<br /><br />this will be my new point of view this week

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Always perception...<br /><br />Thanks Damion....:)

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Strange that a sermon on perception be this week after I just finished "Peaceful Warrior", I've been pondering over the quote "there is always something happening" and trying my best to notice everything that is going on around me, thankyou for...

Strange that a sermon on perception be this week after I just finished "Peaceful Warrior", I've been pondering over the quote "there is always something happening" and trying my best to notice everything that is going on around me, thankyou for the inspiring sermon.

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Awesome thank you

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wow, how topical. it reminds me of a quote by gautama buddha:<br /><br />“All things are perfect exactly as they are.”<br /><br />from this i took it to mean it is only your interpretation of a person, place, thing or event that is imperfect, not...

wow, how topical. it reminds me of a quote by gautama buddha:<br /><br />“All things are perfect exactly as they are.”<br /><br />from this i took it to mean it is only your interpretation of a person, place, thing or event that is imperfect, not the thing itself.

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A man who fed monkeys with chestnuts said to them:<br />"Three portions in the morning, four in the afternoon."<br />All the monkeys got angry.<br /><br />The man then said:<br />"Alright, four in the morning and three in the afternoon."<br />All...

A man who fed monkeys with chestnuts said to them:<br />"Three portions in the morning, four in the afternoon."<br />All the monkeys got angry.<br /><br />The man then said:<br />"Alright, four in the morning and three in the afternoon."<br />All the monkeys were pleased.<br /><br />~ Chuang Tzu

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Paraphrasing:<br /><br />A man went to the master and asked him to make a wonderful wall hanging. "I want it to be about the ultimate happiness," he said. The master agreed and said the water color would be done in a week.<br /><br />A week...

Paraphrasing:<br /><br />A man went to the master and asked him to make a wonderful wall hanging. "I want it to be about the ultimate happiness," he said. The master agreed and said the water color would be done in a week.<br /><br />A week passed and the man went to the master to collect his water color. The master presented it and it said "Father dies. Son dies." The man was furious! "How is this about the ultimate happiness!?" he demanded.<br /><br />Taking up his brush the master wrote,<br />"Son dies. Father dies."<br />Then he asked the man, "Would you prefer it in this order?"<br />-Chuangzi-<br /><br />Thank you for the excellent sermon! I thoroughly enjoyed it! Oh and I must agree that the Jedi code is utter nonsense, one can't speak of the Force, it is indefinable.

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Contriving:<br /><br />A woman goes fishing in the river near her hometown. She hooks a giant catfish, obviously larger than older than she was, for she was quite small and slender. After wrestling the catfish ashore, she exclaims, 'wow, you're...

Contriving:<br /><br />A woman goes fishing in the river near her hometown. She hooks a giant catfish, obviously larger than older than she was, for she was quite small and slender. After wrestling the catfish ashore, she exclaims, 'wow, you're huge! you must be the oldest thing in the river!'<br /><br />the catfish eyes her lazily and says something in a language the woman doesn't understand, because catfish don't speak english.

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One side believed the code was a lie because in their opinion the code contradicts itself on every line.<br /><br />That was my view at first till I realized that you have to take into account certain things. For example:<br /><br />Who...

One side believed the code was a lie because in their opinion the code contradicts itself on every line.<br /><br />That was my view at first till I realized that you have to take into account certain things. For example:<br /><br />Who wrote/spoke the passage and to whom was it addressed?<br />What does the passage say?<br />Are there any words or phrases in the passage that need to be examined?<br />What is the immediate context?<br />What is the broader context in the chapter and book?<br />What are the related verses to the passage’s subject and how do they affect the understanding of this passage?<br />What is the historical and cultural background?<br />What do I conclude about the passage?<br />Do my conclusions agree or disagree with related areas of Scripture and others who have studied the passage?<br />What have I learned and what must I apply to my life?<br /><br />These questions are basic questions that one should use for interpretation of the bible, and can be used for interpretation of the Jedi code too. But I had not taken the time to do this, so I was only looking at the code from a literal view instead of looking at it as a esoteric code with hidden meanings within it.

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