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God Without Religion: Questioning Centuries Of Accepted Truths

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In a groundbreaking approach to today’s tough spiritual and social dilemmas, God Without Religion , with a foreword by Arun Gandhi, offers an intelligent and compassionate bridge from dogmatic belief systems to progressive spirituality. Sankara Saranam shows why organized religion has long been the cause of humanity’s worst wars and most acute suffering—then guides us beyond our divisive history into more expansive perceptions capable of creating a unified, peaceful future. Through a series of penetrating inquiries and practices, readers are invited to examine their beliefs, explore the nature of the divine, and develop personal knowledge of God.

283 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2005

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Sankara Saranam

5 books6 followers

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5 stars
35 (30%)
4 stars
41 (35%)
3 stars
24 (20%)
2 stars
11 (9%)
1 star
5 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
26 reviews
May 3, 2009
As a lifetime "seeker," this is a wonderful book for those who have grown disillusioned with organized religion. Yes, God can be discovered on one's own - and not be dictated by formal dogma and theology! It's really quite simple with this guide to help develop a personal realtionship with "God",or the "higher power". Highly recommended!!
1 review
July 3, 2019
Should be titled "God Without Western Religion"
Profile Image for Pamela.
69 reviews8 followers
June 28, 2009
Hugely influential book in my life, as well as affirming the direction of my own spiritual quest for meaning outside the religious tradition I grew up with. Well-grounded in the Judeo-Christian context so familiar to the U.S. Gives permission to trust your gut. Every path is different!
Profile Image for Bruce Clark.
391 reviews
January 26, 2020
The first of three sections is good: gives a summary of modern man's current crisis with organized religion. The discussion of the Theory of Cycles in human history was interesting: no ancient aliens visited the earth. Over a 24,000 year period humans achieve advanced knowledge and then forget it. The Dark Ages was the last period of forgetfulness. We're on the way to another golden age in 5,700 years.

The next two sections discuss the practice and benefits of kundalini yoga. Too esoteric for me.
Profile Image for Roxanne Loughlin.
18 reviews7 followers
March 14, 2012
Started this book with an open. Uriosity. After reading several chapters of statements with very little or no documentation to back them up, I became wary. After several blatant inaccuracies, I became skeptical of the author's motives, and truthfully skimmed the rest of the book. It was not for me.
Profile Image for Rike Jokanan.
93 reviews13 followers
June 27, 2010
belum berani nge-review
rencana bikin review jadi ragu
yang penuh jadi kosong
yang kosong jadi penuh
Profile Image for Craig Bergland.
354 reviews9 followers
August 8, 2022
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz. Another book criticizing religion. This one posits a complex scheme to form discussion groups from diverse populations. I guess honesty, maturity, and treating others with respect is too simple? For me this book is nothing more than intellectual masturbation. But hey, if it works for you just lock the door and clean up after yourself.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Carney.
23 reviews
July 5, 2023
Probably would give this more like a 3.5. It has some really interesting concepts and great arguments against organized religion, but the proposed practice of non-religion was too metaphysical for me; there are never-ending references to “the infinite substance on the universe.”

Maybe I’ll come back in a decade and read it again and see if I’m more open to it all.
Profile Image for Joe Stallings.
8 reviews
May 27, 2017
Outstanding work delineating the (often massive) difference between what it means to be 'spiritual' versus what it means to be 'religious.' Some of the concepts are "out there," but overall, this was an eye-opener.
3 reviews
April 13, 2010
I was lucky enough to meet and have an e-mail correspondence with Sankara a few years back. I am a practitioner of Yoga as it is outlined in the lessons of SRF (Self-realization fellowship)under the teachings of Paramahansa Yogananda. By and large, Sankara's method is the same thing. What this book does is explain the system in a more scientific manner than what might be found in Yogananda's Autobiography of a Yogi. That is not to say that it is better but simply that it is explained through the lens of a modern progressive-scientific worldview.

All I really have to say is that the claims in this book about the efficacy of certain techniques of meditation over others can by and large be tested in the laboratory of your own experiences during practice. Try it for yourself. You might be surprised.

Profile Image for Peggy Bechko.
Author 24 books81 followers
November 5, 2012
An excellent book. One to get you thinking - and that's what it's all about. Open your mind and heart. Think.

Won't say I agree with everything written, but it's an excellent thought-provoker and I'd give it a high recommendation.
Profile Image for Gabriel Romero.
43 reviews1 follower
June 3, 2018
El libro es una oportunidad de conocer a Dios desde un punto de vista más conceptual y bastante lejano de lo que se difunde en las distintas creencias globales, su propuesta es básica para el crecimiento espiritual del ser humano.
Profile Image for Bulan.
25 reviews5 followers
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June 13, 2011
hadiah Kopdar Akbar GRI4 :)
Profile Image for Felly.
235 reviews
my-wishlist
January 5, 2011
liat di gramed ..kayaknya menarik juga
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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