Monday, December 6, 2010

Virtual Reality

There are lots of a tech talk these days of a 3D virtual world where people occupy avatars and inhabit electronic environments via digital cameras and other technical interfaces. Players put on special gloves that allow them to feel and touch their virtual environment, one turns their head and it is like looking around inside the virtual world while sitting on the sofa.


Personally, I am a fan of some of these developments. From a therapeutic perspective, speaking as a clinician who has absolutely no competence in the area of psychiatry - so please excuse any claim of knowing what I am talking about - virtual reality has proven effective in treating some people with post-traumatic disorders. Combat veterans, for example, return to the battlefield and immerse themselves in war games that allow them to bridge reality with their emotional pain of a experience from the past.

Virtual reality also has a social significance. It allows people to be someone they are not. For example, there are 3D worlds where people can put on bodies and faces that in no way represent their true identity. They can meet people and appear to have a beauty about them when, in reality, they are a little overweight or have a mole on their chin.

I wonder sometimes if in the matter of spiritual things we also experience a type of virtual reality. We are shielded sometimes from knowing who we really are, our moral identity is inflated by attitudes of self-righteous behavior. Our actions and words shield us from the real world of pain, suffering, or just how depraved we really are. For example, we might not think anything is wrong by viewing pornography or meeting a sexual partner for our fantasy world.

Indeed, the picture of he sultry woman on the web page may not be all you think she is. Could she be a victim of child molestation? Was she forced into the world of prostitution to escape an abusive father? Is this the victim of drugs, the pornography being the only way to cope with the cost? Could she have been taken off the streets as a runaway and litterally have no place else to go but in front of a camera?


Is our viewing these pictures a type of "virtual reality" ?

I sometimes wonder, especially as we celebrate Christmas , if we think the whole "CHRISTMAS THING" is a virtual reality.

After all, this is really God we are talking about. Certainly God's own Son didn't leave paradise and enter the world born into a poor carpenter's family. Maybe electronically he "beamed" himself down under that north star, right?

So, was this "God" protected from the real-world experience?

While wealthy women today give birth in expensive hospitals with epidural anesthesia, 2000 years ago a Hebrew woman cries out in pain. This town of Bethlehem, foretold more than 500 years  before the selected date by the prophet Isaiah, could it be real? Is this really happening? Is God visiting man and his world?

Let's contine to ask the hard questions.

Why would God occupy the body of a frail Jewish infant and fall asleep in a cattle trough? Surely this child is insignificant, after all Herod would not send soldiers a few days later to slaughter hundreds of babies just to kill this one?

Jesus' appearance must be a myth or maybe the story is inflated a bit! Perhaps over the years many would embellish the story of this Christ child.

God really doesn't want to visit us, does he? Isn't God removed from the affairs of men? Why would we come into the world we inhabit?

Surely if God did come, he was shielded from the true experience of being human. Perhaps God put on some of the virtual electronic glove when he reached up and touched the hand of Mary!



In John 1, there's a different account from the virtual reality one.

Incarnate literally means embodied in flesh or taking on flesh. God took us "on," he wanted to know what it was like to experience lust, hunger, pain and suffering.

From the beginning he knew the ancient Hebrew law - not to commit adultery, not to steal, and not to even covet  - could not be fulfilled on our own. He also knew that there was a consequence for disobeying the law, a penalty to be paid. So why not just look the other way? Let man live his or her sinful life and just excuse it?

If you been wondering this year what sets Christianity apart from other religions or philosophical belief systems, consider this moment in Bethlehem  as the starting point in your inquiry.

OTHER VIEWPOINTS

Many of the world's religions respect this Jesus as a great teacher or a prophet, but not as equal to God. According to Islam, Jesus was born to a virgin. In fact, many Muslims count themselves more faithful to the teachings of Jesus than Christians! Indeed, I've met Muslim people more moral than I am! Indeed, if we are to be  saved by our religiosity than there would be many more Islamic friends that would enter paradise rather than me. I openly admit it, I have no power to save myself no matter how good I want to be.

So who is Jesus under Islamic teaching?

He is not God. God sent Jesus as a prophet maybe, but the great prophet would not accept this Jesus as God's son.  In Islam, it is possible that God allowed the prophet Jesus to go through a trial under Pilate. But, God would not allow people to spit on him or call him names. Many of my Muslim friends believe that God spared Jesus the prophet from death on a cross. He left his body, only a spiritless Jesus died on the cross.

Maybe you are of the Eastern religious viewpoint, to you Jesus is a great moral teacher. By his example we learn to love others and to love God. We may perceive him to have a more powerful "chakra" than other people. Indeed, there are six chakras and many believe this is the spiritual energy or the spiritual "portals" of a person. I do not say this in a mocking way, don't interpret what I am writing as silly. However, Jesus is not just had more energy than anyone else. This is not why he healed people. In any case, the chakra exists in Hindu and other Westernized forms and, for some, fits the modern definition of health science as we seek to manipulate energy fields through therapeutic touch to bring about healing.



VIRTUAL - NOT

This child , who was he? Chakra personified by healing or prophet defeated by crucifixion?

The bible says that Jesus represents all we need to know about God. Through Jesus, he knows all about our world.  Not a virtual reality world, but the real world. Read Luke 2:1-7 and discover for yourself the identity of Jesus. Ask the hard questions, did this really happen? Would a census have been taken? What is the historical context for his birth? Is the birth of Jesus a myth? Is it all imaginary, inflated by years of copying ancient text filled with errors? Are the main characters also imaginary - Caesar Augustus? Wise men? Why was it unorthodox for a Jewish man (Joseph) to attend a woman in labor? Why was there no room in the "hotels" of the day? What significance do these things have in understanding the identity of Jesus of Nazareth? Tell me what you think!

4 comments:

  1. Thanks Ken!!! For taking our eyes off the craziness of Christmas (shopping and presents and lights and food) and putting them back where they belong - on the babe in the manger! Come to bring life!!

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  2. Dear Ken

    Thanks for your thoughts. For progressive atheists like myself, throughout my life it seamt religious people live in a vitual world, removed from the rest of us. The best of that being for them, they do not even need any technology to achieve that state. I am wishing, peace be with all your religions, that you may all descend from your vituality, and ccome back down here on earth with us, and start dealing with real worl problems.

    Your Friend.

    Jens

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  3. sorry for my typos :-D you know what I meant to say.

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