What was so powerful
that it caused someone to do that to that child?
And
then it hit me -- It must
have been their religious beliefs! My first reaction was I
would never do anything like that to my grandson! But as I thought about the preacher,
Jim Jones, who orchestrated the things that happened at Jonestown, I realized
that I preached many of their same things at my church. Many of the doctrines
of my church were things the people at Jonestown believed. We both preached
from the same Bible, and we both promised our members they would go to Heaven
when they died and spend eternity with God. As a matter of fact, later after
listening to a tape of the last things Jones said as people were drinking the
poisoned drink that killed the little child in the picture – Jim Jones promised them they would all
be together in Heaven with God that same day!
I
had very strong
feelings attached to those same beliefs – beliefs about
what happens when believers die. That was the first time I realized this:
My strong feelings
were based on “unexamined” beliefs.
“Feelings”
and “accuracy” are two very different things. I knew that examining
my beliefs would be “an uncomfortable experience,” but not when compared
to the unintended consequences that could possibly happen, “feelings
were not important.” That was a life changing experience for me. I was
fortunate enough to have something that the people in Jonestown didn't have
-- a guideline to help me
explore my belief system. I created it a few years before in order to
help members of my Bible study groups deal with situations that arose when
belief conflicts occurred.
My Belief System will
be large enough to include all facts,
open enough to be examined
and questioned,
flexible enough to change
when errors or new facts are discovered.
After
using this guideline for a while, I discovered something that was important -- examining your belief system alone is
impossible. In 1990 the science needed to understand the brain’s functions
related to beliefs did not exist. Belief systems are biological functions that
take place within the extraordinarily complex neural networks of the brain.
Examining
beliefs takes place at the conscious level of the brain. The processes linked
to beliefs takes place at the subconscious level -- which processes information
one million times faster than the conscious level. What are the chances of a
professor in a university library finding information faster than a kid with a
smartphone asking Google questions?
Back
in 1990, belief systems were viewed as large filing cabinets with files for
each belief. It was thought that the brain pulled belief files out as they were
needed. Today science has revealed that the brain uses belief models to
generate and live stream realities that individuals experience as life!
Our realities
-- waking lives and dreams -- emerge from the brain’s billions of zapping cells and trillions of synaptic
connections. It is from this
inner universe of synaptic constellations that human decisions arise and
imaginations are forged.
All of our life experiences take place in
storms of activity
within the computational
material of our brains.
From
the moment we awaken in the morning, we are surrounded with a rush of light and
sounds and smells. Our senses are flooded. All we have to do is wake up every day and without thought or effort –
We are immersed in our individual irrefutable realities;
an awareness of
everything we sense, believe and think.
We all assume our “irrefutable reality” to be that
of the entire objective world, but we all live in our own bubbles of rightness in which our
belief models are the ultimate standard for determining what is right.
Stomachs digest solids and liquids and
turn them into energy.
Brains ingest electrochemical
information and turn them into realities.
Exploring
Beliefscapes
and Exploring Biblical Heritages give readers the
knowledge and skills needed to identify and examine beliefs.
Never forget those
“little shoes”!
Please
share and discuss it with others.
Jim Myers
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