Well, trust me out of DC and Marvel in Star Wars and every fiction in the world the force grants you numerous infinite powers. So yeah, I will take the force. And have any kind of power. I will want. all of them
@user-yc9vv9xb8s I recommend that you read Yogananda's book: "Autobiography of a Yogi" when you can. Then the Meditation Guide I made. They talk about exactly that, and about things I can't talk about here...
George Lucas used my religion, Christianity, as a framework and has repeatedly referred to himself as a "methodist-buddhist." While I don't agree entirely with the former and I think the ladder is heretical, I think it still shows that Christianity was a heavy inspiration for George Lucas. Especially considering how prevalent it is in The Last Crusade and Raiders of the Lost Ark, both projects he was heavily involved in. I view the force as an attempted imitation of the Holy Spirit's divine will within a fictional setting. The force is not real, but the Holy Spirit is. And He wants you to accept Him so that you may be saved. This is not me cramming religion down your throats nor being forceful. This is me giving you a choice. Do you want to pretend you're able to use some fictional plot element from a movie you like in the real world, or do you want a true spiritual connection with the holy and the divine?
Link to Meditation Guide from Zero to Advanced: hotm.art/KnowledgeAcademy
Well, trust me out of DC and Marvel in Star Wars and every fiction in the world the force grants you numerous infinite powers. So yeah, I will take the force. And have any kind of power. I will want. all of them
@user-yc9vv9xb8s I recommend that you read Yogananda's book: "Autobiography of a Yogi" when you can.
Then the Meditation Guide I made. They talk about exactly that, and about things I can't talk about here...
Wow so I’m already a force powerhouse 😂!!
@gabrielaj2066 🤣🤣
George Lucas used my religion, Christianity, as a framework and has repeatedly referred to himself as a "methodist-buddhist." While I don't agree entirely with the former and I think the ladder is heretical, I think it still shows that Christianity was a heavy inspiration for George Lucas. Especially considering how prevalent it is in The Last Crusade and Raiders of the Lost Ark, both projects he was heavily involved in. I view the force as an attempted imitation of the Holy Spirit's divine will within a fictional setting. The force is not real, but the Holy Spirit is. And He wants you to accept Him so that you may be saved. This is not me cramming religion down your throats nor being forceful. This is me giving you a choice. Do you want to pretend you're able to use some fictional plot element from a movie you like in the real world, or do you want a true spiritual connection with the holy and the divine?