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Jesus and Deepak in Midtown

Alison Rose Levy - February 20, 2008

Last night, on the eve of the publication of his book, The Third Jesus, (Harmony, 2008) --currently a high-ranking Amazon bestseller, Deepak Chopra spoke of Jesus. Dressed in an elegant black Sherwani, (an Indian long coat with a Nehru collar), Chopra stepped forward from the nave of Manhattan’s St. Mary the Virgin Church, and casually positioned himself between the first rows of pews, speaking to the six hundred people assembled by the New York Open Center.

“When Jesus said, “I’m the son of God,” Chopra tells the audience, “His meaning wasn’t ‘I’m the son of the Boss,’ or I’m his son and you’re not.’” Instead, in Deepak's view, that declaration invites us all to realize our own divinity. While he honors what he calls the first two Jesus: Jesus, the real man, and the Jesus, “built up over thousands of years by theologians and …scholars,” Deepak focuses attention on the third Jesus, a model/teacher of universal/Christ consciousness.

As readers of this blog well know, Deepak's definition of consciousness reaches beyond the confines of biochemisty, which defines it as a brain secretion, to physics, in which consciousness is seen as a “field of uncertainty containing all potentialities that collapse via space-time events into consensual reality.”

What consensual reality are we jointly creating?

Deepak sees mankind poised at a crossroads. “Will we destroy ourselves or heal the rift in the collective soul?” he asks.

We have the potential to actualize Christ consciousness just as Jesus, Buddha, and other great beings did. But it’s up to each of us to fulfill that potential. From many passages of the bible, Chopra singles out certain teachings as tools for spiritual contemplation.

“The Kingdom of Heaven is within you.”
“Ask and ye shall receive.”
“Abide in me as I abide in you.’

I must admit that “Abide in me as I abide in you,’ really struck a chord. Perhaps it was Deepak’s voice or the setting, redolent with incense, but through this merging of Eastern and Western mysticism, I saw that in some mysterious way, some kernel of self, hidden within, is also the pervasive essence, which surrounds and permeates us.

Without a doubt, Chopra knows his bible, although he contends that the many contributors to the New Testament have sometimes confused Jesus’ core view. In particular, he takes issue with notions of sin and retribution, as well as with sexism, homophobia, and other forms of exclusion. “It’s not healthy to seek divinity while coming from a place of guilt and shame,” Chopra the doctor reminds us.

Instead he recommends translating the teachings into self-inquiry, not condemnation of others. “Is my behavior consistent with my beliefs? What is the quality of my intention?” he offers as examples of his own process.

Belief is less important than experience and behavior, Chopra implies, since all too often “belief can be a cover up for insecurity. Once you actually experience the reality of Christ consciousness, you don’t have to profess belief in it.”

A number of distinguished Christian theologians praise The Third Jesus. Whether or not other Christians will appreciate this foray into Christianity, Chopra is not, as some might expect, a newcomer. The famous doctor- author who seamlessly integrates science and spirituality is himself the product of a Christian education.

“At home, I was immersed in the Hindu traditions and rituals of my family, while at school, I was taught by the Irish Christian brothers,” Chopra tells the audience.

In the questions and answers that follow, one young woman asks, “What does Jesus think of your book?”

“I hope he likes it,” Chopra responds, “since Christ consciousness is within you, I hope you like it.”

In a thinly veiled question, one audience member tries to suss out whether Chopra supports either Obama or Clinton.

“Whoever wins,” Chopra declares, “The fact that we can entertain as presidential candidates a woman and a non-Anglo Saxon male shows that we are at the edge of a shift in consciousness.”

“What makes Jesus unique?” asks another audience member.

“Throughout history, many people gave us Christ consciousness, as Jesus did,” Chopra responds. “But Jesus gave us his story—which many have rightly called, ‘the greatest story ever told.’”

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Posted by Alison Rose Levy at February 20, 2008 08:56 AM

  
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Comments

Thanks for sharing this Alison. Deepak will be speaking on his Jesus book close to where I live (Berkeley-1 hour away) in early March, but I'm not sure if I can make it on a Monday, so I was curious what it would be like. Maybe I will make the effort and overcome my fear, as something troublesome always seems to happen when I try to see Deepak in person and this has been going on for 2, maybe 3 years! And it's always been a great challenge to see him speak, even when I could get there, i.e., like I have to climb a mountain of many obstacles. But I do miss his in-person speeches.

Love, Char

Alison, you might find the Lethal Text Series a collection of related dissertation, interesting. [Click my name]

The next phase is the end beliefs, which are not a requirement but a host for fictions. Of course many are not comfortable with that idea of not needing beliefs especially since many confuse their identity with their beliefs, which means the world has an identity crisis, which hopefully the Third Jesus may help to resolve.


What is Lethal Text?
The Apocalypse αποκάλυψις Began (it's all about the revelation)

On The Rise Apostasy (dissolution of institutional religion leaving the underlying spirituality intact)

The Antichrist exposed (dissolution of institutional religion leaving the underlying spirituality intact)

Easter the resurrection of a truth lost

A world of Fiction

The cults of social fiction

Knowing, possibility, and probability in contrast to fictions and belief.

A world without belief - The Infinite Player

kool. thanks for this. it was as if i was there - almost.

Yes, Deepak is able to eloquently put the essence of Jesus into perspective. Too many distort the meaning of Jesus teachings. Jesus was completely compassionate, selfless and self-unobserved... secrets.. most Catholics already knew. But, it's nice to read it within Deepaks clarity..

Jesus also believed, many priests were false prophets, and many places of prayer.. a false pretense of what Jesus and God strived for... as religion defines.. it also discludes.

Nice write-up, Alison!!

Love,
North

Yes, very well written Alison. We could use some Jesus miracles in my bio-region. A mighty land developer is destroying yet another forest to build more condos and retail stores. Soon we'll look like LA...whoopy! Could we all act as healers and say: "Enough destruction!" Could we all walk on water straight to our city halls and legislators and say: "Enough destruction!" Could we all heal the blind and deaf by adding common sense to the "more is better" frenzy? Could we offer the healing that we want to see in the world? Would we?

The moon, earth and sun move in miraculous ways...so can we.

Trish~~

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