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  • Dec 7, 2025
    ·
    1 reply

    when u die they gonna pick outta a hat which heaven u going to

  • Dec 7, 2025
    Project

    when u die they gonna pick outta a hat which heaven u going to

    nah he going to quintuple hell

  • Dec 7, 2025

    shyne turned jew

  • Dec 7, 2025
    ·
    2 replies
    whitegirl

    "I want to be with god but i dont like when god said xyz so im just going to pretend he never said that"

    Is basically what protestants do. Its like guessing what god believes

    Im not christian so to me its all ed as f***, theres a lot of rules and beliefs most people (protestants) ignore

    I see people from every religion doing that all the time

  • Q3D

    I see people from every religion doing that all the time

    yeah theres not a single religion where ppll dont do this lol

  • Dec 7, 2025
    ·
    1 reply
    Q3D

    I see people from every religion doing that all the time

    you have to embrace the dialectic

  • Dec 7, 2025
    WRU

    you have to embrace the dialectic

    Give me that sweet dialectic

  • I do the same in a sense but it’s not for salvation purposes. I genuinely have non dualistic perspective and see unity in them all.

  • Dec 7, 2025

    The entire concept of islam is to not follow any other religions so you're kinda diluting your beliefs

  • Dec 7, 2025
    Project

    all those religions cancel each other out how is that even possible

    They don't really. Just our understanding of them is off

  • Dec 7, 2025
    whitegirl

    "I want to be with god but i dont like when god said xyz so im just going to pretend he never said that"

    Is basically what protestants do. Its like guessing what god believes

    Im not christian so to me its all ed as f***, theres a lot of rules and beliefs most people (protestants) ignore

    Thank you for the last sentence. It all makes sense now

  • Stankie

    Recently started implementing Buddhist practices/principles in my life, so far I’ve found a cohesive method to weave the following religions into one simple program designed at afterlife guaranty:
    -Christianity
    -Islam
    -Judaism
    -Buddhism
    -Hinduism

    I’ve been using ChatGPT and Gemini to help divide up the scriptures of each religion and find common threads/themes. I then take the boiled down lessons and implement them step by step. I actually can feel myself becoming purer as each passing day goes by lol. Any suggestions on which one to start implementing next? Or any ways to make my process/workflow more efficient?

    Funny enough, I did this while I was in jail

    I was the pod pope lmao

  • Dec 7, 2025
    Gosh

    You forgot one

    Juggalo

    Ever since I started being a Juggalo I have felt one with the universe and one with Jesus simultaneously like I’m being penetrated by both at the same time

    I’m proud of you tho, can’t wait to see you add more and really find enlightenment

    Unironically, yea

  • Day One Isher

    You wont be let into Jannah if you following other religions outside of Islam. Shirk is a real thing man.

    But ultimately this

  • Stankie

    Recently started implementing Buddhist practices/principles in my life, so far I’ve found a cohesive method to weave the following religions into one simple program designed at afterlife guaranty:
    -Christianity
    -Islam
    -Judaism
    -Buddhism
    -Hinduism

    I’ve been using ChatGPT and Gemini to help divide up the scriptures of each religion and find common threads/themes. I then take the boiled down lessons and implement them step by step. I actually can feel myself becoming purer as each passing day goes by lol. Any suggestions on which one to start implementing next? Or any ways to make my process/workflow more efficient?

    This is a fascinating and ambitious theological experiment. I understand you're approaching it from a risk-management perspective on the afterlife. Let's examine the profound challenges and potential synergies in your approach.

    Core Incompatibilities You're Navigating

    1. The Nature of the Divine:

    · Judaism/Christianity/Islam: Singular, personal, creator God (monotheism)
    · Hinduism: Potentially monotheistic (Brahman) but often expressed through many deities
    · Buddhism: Generally non-theistic; enlightenment isn't about relating to a creator God

    2. Salvation/Enlightenment:

    · Abrahamic faiths: Salvation through relationship with God and divine grace
    · Hinduism: Moksha (liberation) through realizing one's unity with Brahman
    · Buddhism: Nirvana through ending suffering via the Eightfold Path (no permanent soul to save)

    3. Afterlife Concepts:

    · Heaven/Hell (Abrahamic) vs. Reincarnation (Hinduism/Buddhism) vs. Non-existence (Buddhist nirvana)

    Potential Points of Synthesis

    Interestingly, your approach mirrors some historical interfaith explorations:

    1. Ethical Common Ground:

    · The Golden Rule appears in all five traditions
    · Compassion, charity, and moral living are universally emphasized

    2. Mystical/Experiential Overlap:

    · Christian mysticism, Sufi Islam, Kabbalah, Hindu bhakti, and Buddhist meditation share experiential similarities
    · These emphasize direct spiritual experience over dogma

    3. Practical Integration:

    · Buddhist mindfulness with Hindu yoga
    · Abrahamic prayer with meditative contemplation
    · Shared ethical practices across traditions

    The "Salvation Portfolio" Paradox

    The main theological challenge: Most of these religions require exclusive or primary commitment for their promised outcomes:

    · Christianity: "No one comes to the Father except through me" (John 14:6)
    · Islam: Explicit rejection of associating partners with Allah (shirk)
    · Judaism: While not emphasizing converting others, it's an exclusive covenant
    · Hinduism/Buddhism: Require deep, dedicated practice along specific paths

    Possible Frameworks for Your Approach

    If you're committed to this path, consider these lenses:

    1. Perennial Philosophy: Viewing all as expressions of one underlying truth
    2. Spiritual Toolkit Approach:Using practices while remaining theologically flexible
    3. Process Theology:Understanding your path as ongoing revelation

    Questions for Your Reflection

    1. Are you seeking theological consistency or practical benefits from each tradition?
    2. How do you resolve contradictory truth claims between the religions?
    3. What happens when religious obligations conflict (e.g., dietary laws, worship requirements)?

    A Suggested Balanced Approach

    Rather than trying to fully believe all doctrines simultaneously (which may be intellectually impossible), you might:

    · Adopt shared ethical practices from all
    · Engage in contemplative practices from each that resonate
    · Study scriptures with a comparative lens
    · Remain humble about the ultimate mysteries of existence
    · Focus on being a compassionate human here and now

    Final thought: The very attempt to weave these together puts you in the company of mystics and philosophers throughout history who sought unifying truths. Whether any tradition would consider this approach "salvation-worthy" is debatable, but the sincere search for meaning across wisdom traditions is itself a profound spiritual journey.

    Your approach raises deep questions about certainty, humility, and what we really mean by "salvation." Perhaps the journey itself—with its tensions and insights—is as important as the destination you're trying to ensure.