Why God and Apocalypse Don’t Mix
June 26, 2010 by Kimberly Darwin
Filed under Live Guilt Free, Parenting
Would you Burn your own Child?
People say that the Mayan calendar says the world will end in 2012. The Popol Vuh, an ancient book of Mayan history, describes the first three creations that the gods failed in making and the creation of the successful fourth world where men were placed. We are living in the fourth world, in the 13th era of existence.
“Maya inscriptions occasionally reference future predicted events or commemorations that would occur on dates that lie beyond 2012 (that is, beyond the completion of the 13th b’ak’tun of the current era). In fact, there are predictions of events that occur in the 80th era, which equates to 21 October in the year 4772.
“Despite the publicity generated by the 2012 date, Susan Milbrath, curator of Latin American Art and Archaeology at the Florida Museum of Natural History, stated that ‘We have no record or knowledge that [the Maya] would think the world would come to an end’ in 2012. ‘For the ancient Maya, it was a huge celebration to make it to the end of a whole cycle,’ says Sandra Noble, executive director of the Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies in Crystal River, Florida. To render December 21, 2012, as a doomsday event or moment of cosmic shifting, she says, is ‘a complete fabrication and a chance for a lot of people to cash in.’”
via Mesoamerican Long Count calendar – Wikipedia.
So why the fear? I’m not sure it is as base as wanting to cash in, but I certainly do believe that most apocalyptic beliefs in the United States are misdirected interpretations of one religious scripture or another. After all, we are sinners (if you don’t know me, then please note that this is sarcasm), and we all deserve to be punished. Shame on us for believing that we share the same attributes as God. For such impure thoughts, they say, God will rain down fire and fury on our world, and burn us up like forgotten toast. On December 20, 2012, to be exact, as if he’s penciled it in his cosmic appointment book.
Oh please. People! We are God’s children, and he would no more incinerate us (or flood us, or freeze us) than you would to your own children. Children share blood with their parents, and parents are, generally-speaking, good protectors of their children. Parents want to see their children learn, explore and make mistakes in order to become decent human beings, who have children of their own.
If you are worried about the end of the world, then you must be focusing your attention outward at all the horrific things that other people are doing. Are you judging? Are you fearful for those people that are tearing your world down because you feel that their actions will rain fire on your parade? Well then go out and touch one of them. Go to a prison and visit. Work at a food bank. Help abused animals. Do something about what’s going wrong in our world.
This is what God wants.
God’s Faithful Servants Judging Others
April 1, 2010 by Kimberly Darwin
Filed under Awareness, Relationships
I Truly Doubt that God Hates Fags
I felt sick inside when I read about the upcoming Supreme Court case of a radical church’s right of free speech to protest a fallen soldier’s funeral. According to this article, the Westboro Baptist Church picketed Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder’s 2006 funeral in Westminster, Md., because it believes troops’ deaths are God’s revenge for the United States’ tolerance of gays.
Let’s get real here. This is not about free speech. This is a case of judgment.
First, we know that Baptists refuse to interpret the Bible any other way than literally. That means that whichever old man wrote whichever book they are reading, and whichever translator translated it into English, was doing so with the exact syntax intended by our Lord above. Nothing lost in translation here, could there be, folks? I may be pissing off 35 million people out there for what I am saying, but I really don’t care, because I am a sinner in your eyes anyway.
Christianity is about giving, loving, and lack of judgment. That part of the Bible, if you read it literally, is pretty darn clear.
So how could these monsters, who call themselves faithful to God, speak out about their fellow man in such a judgmental manner when they can visibly see people suffering at the loss of a loved one? Can they really be so offended and threatened by something that doesn’t match their (myopic) beliefs that they must lash out in anger? That they must put “GodHatesFags.com” on a T-shirt and make an 11-year old girl parade around in it?
For these children will be making laws someday, will be lynching people on trees in the forest, will be scorning society’s advances because of an ancient book that was written by dozens of people, and translated dozens of times throughout the years. That, to me, is scary. That, to me, is tearing down what the modern world is attempting to do in its shift toward spiritualism. Read the book, folks, and understand that it was meant for guidance, and it does not give us judgment rights against our brothers.
It’s fear that creates the feeling of offense. It’s the inability to put oneself in another’s shoes, and judgment of a person’s outer shell rather than of his soul. It’s the lack of certainty about who we really are that makes us offended, because if someone else believes differently from us, then we must protect our beliefs lest the ego begin to falter. It’s sad, but we all do it sometime or another and it affects our life and all others we meet.
It takes great effort to see a soul in today’s times. When so much focus is put on the outside, we make our shallow judgments based on external criteria rather than the more spiritual kind. And because we must protect, at all costs, our tiny selves.
The Universe is full of so many choices–neither good nor bad–but merely those with different consequences. Those that choose to judge others for the sake of preserving their antiquated notions about “what God wants” from us will experience a very different life than those of us that choose to see the soul and know that we are ALL God’s people.
I know which life I choose. And I can pretty much bet that God doesn’t hate fags. (There I go, sinning again).
The main reason religions don’t like the Law of Attraction
April 24, 2009 by Kimberly Darwin
Filed under Law of Attraction, Live Guilt Free
I am not religious, but I am spiritual. What this means is that I believe in a higher power, but don’t necessarily think that I have to follow certain rituals found in organized religions in order to connect with it. Religions would like us to believe that we are subject to a vindictive, jealous and easily angered God that we must constantly please by staying on the “straight and narrow.” Otherwise, if we stray (SIN!!!) then God won’t love us and will banish us to eternal damnation.
Why must God have the same attributes as humans? That is preposterous. What this makes God is just as irrational, selfish and immature as we are. And that just doesn’t do it for me.
Therefore, when we learn from the recent masters who teach the Law of Attraction, we finally understand that the power has been in OUR hands, not that of a white-bearded God that sits up above and casts his glances upon us all, blessing some and condemning others. Organized religion loses its power on us, and those in charge can no longer control their flock.
But what needs to be noted here is that the Law of Attraction works BECAUSE of God, not WITHOUT him. For we are all one–individual waves of the same ocean, and we are all GOD. Rather than being an old man with a white beard, he is YOU, and he is ME, and he is that annoying high-pitched scream of the baby in front of you in the grocery line. He is the guy who cut you off in traffic this morning, and the hair-flipping girl who would rather flirt with her co-worker than sell you a ticket at the movie theater. God is the leaf you kicked on the way to your car, and the wilted flower you plucked off of the bush in your front yard. He is not UP there. He is HERE.
So the next time your religious leader condemns the Law of Attraction as blasphemy, open your mind just a tad and consider that he may be threatened by something unknown to him (of course if he looks in the Bible hard enough, he will find Jesus’ reference to it in just about everything he says!). Love him for the fact that he is God, challenging you to open your mind and show compassion. We are all at a different level. But we are all in the same cycle of life.
If you haven’t read the Conversations with God books, I suggest you try one and see if it fits your beliefs, or at least gives you another perspective on why we’re here.
For more on past lives, religion and reincarnation, visit my blog RecycleMySoul.com
The Imperfect Path to Enlightenment
April 23, 2009 by Kimberly Darwin
Filed under Awareness, Live Guilt Free
If you’re like me, fully self-actualized and near perfect (NOT!), then you have all of the time in the world to spend on the path to enlightenment.
Just like me, you get up at 3:30am, meditate for 30 minutes, practice your tai chi and yoga for another 90 minutes, and eat your vegan breakfast with spirulina before you cook the rest of the day’s meals and then sit down at your perfectly-organized desk for a day’s work in complete concentration.
If you weren’t laughing at the beginning of this post, you probably are now. But really, I do know someone like that. Of course she is a Tibetan nun who is supported by a group of kind and loving followers. Even worse, she doesn’t even do her own dishes, and if she drops something on the floor someone else picks it up for her.
The rest of us just don’t live that way. But does that mean that we can’t follow some different path to enlightenment? What if we could set a goal to meditate sometime in the day, even if it’s in the car before we get out for our latte. Or to write in our journal about what we’ve learned about the human condition as we nod off over our writing utensil? Is that good enough for God?
Why wouldn’t it be?
After all, if God had wanted us all to follow the same path, then he wouldn’t have created so many different ones to tempt us. We wouldn’t have been given free choice at all. So if you’re in self-flagellation mode about your imperfect path to enlightenment, thank God that he gave you so many choices to get there, even if you can’t get up at 3:30 in the morning.


