--- In [email protected], "jim_flanegin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "John" <jr_esq@> wrote:
> >
> > Barry,
> > 
> > That's an interesting scenario you just created.  If that story 
> > actually happened, I would think that the child would be 
> respected, 
> > perhaps even venerated by the mainstream Christians.  But 
> questions 
> > will remain as to the validity of that DNA.
> > 
> > To put it in another perspective, humans may already have the 
> genes 
> > necessary to claim a seat to divinity.  For Christians, the 
> > appearance of Christ on earth as a human being is a proof of this 
> > conjecture.  With this human body, he was able to perform 
> miraculous 
> > works, even die and resurrect.
> > 
> > In vedic literature, Krishna took birth as a human being and 
> > displayed superhuman feats while here on earth.  Then, at the end, 
> > after participating in a battle fought between relatives, he 
> > disappeared.  Vyasa mentions that most of the the devas who were 
> > present were puzzled as to how Krishna did this.
> > 
> > Similarly, Guru Dev, Maharishi and other vedic books have hinted 
> that 
> > the human brain, in particular, is the most sophisticated 
> development 
> > in nature.  According to TM literature, the human brain can 
> maintain 
> > divine bliss even while living here on earth.
> > 
> > If one is not a believer in any religious dogma, it is possible to 
> > believe in the future of human evolution to enable humans to 
> discover 
> > scientific findings which we might consider godlike at this point 
> in 
> > time.  If one does not not entertain any of these thoughts, then 
> why 
> > bother talking about it.  
> > 
> > Regards,
> > 
> > John R.
> > 
> 
> Your post got me thinking about every day miracles that we no longer 
> notice, like the fact that there are enough connections in the brain 
> to provide an individual personality to all 6,579,457,582 humans 
> currently on the planet. Surely if our nervous systems can achieve 
> that level of refinement naturally, supporting a divine being should 
> not be a problem either.
>

I have NO idea where you got this figure from.


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