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Author Topic: What does Jung teach? What are the 30 lessons?  (Read 493 times)
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rb
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« on: December 11, 2006, 08:57:22 PM »

He teaches that he is the Messiah. He never says it directly, and the members won't, but they all hint at it. The 30 lessons are Jung's new teachings, his "Complete Testament" to replace the Bible (but sold as an interpretation of the Bible). Don't mistake though: "knowing" that Jung is the Messiah is the most important thing; knowing the 30 lessons are secondary. The 30 lessons are more so a vessel to reach the "realisation" of Jung's Divinity so that they may be his slaves than anything else. A person can become a full member without having studied them all, but not without claiming Jung is Messiah to the other members.

From the wikipedia page as it currently is:

    The 30 lessons are built around a model based on the seven day week. The first four days, corresponding to the approximately four thousand years between Moses and Jesus, describe the period of time referred to as "the Old Testament". The next two days, corresponding to two thousand years, describe the time period labeled "the New Testament". Finally, the last day, corresponds to a thousand years starting roughly now, and said to be "the Complete Testament".
[1] It is taught that each time period has a major "Central Figure", or Messiah,[2] and that heaven cannot be reached without this man.[3] He teaches that the new Messiah is Jesus' second coming, however, he will not come again as himself but "spiritually", that is, by influencing and talking through a physical person alive at that time.[4] He will come with new teachings, different to those of the "New Testament" and "Old Testament" time periods.[5] The 30 lessons reaches its climax when Jung interprets certain Biblical verses that the Messiah will come from Korea, is currently alive and will come with new truth that will answer questions people have about the Bible.[6] It is not said who exactly this man is. While the order of the lessons can differ, this general sequence and climax remains. It should also be noted that the sequence is taught in more detail, with other related teachings, over a period of time like a month.

The 30 lessons also put emphasis on not reading the Bible literally, not accepting revelations unless they are confirmed by the "Central Figure of this time period" and the Bible, reading the Bible figuratively to resolve problems relating it to common life, a view of the spiritual world similar to Korean Shamanism, not having sex unless certain conditions are met, and that the original sin or fall of Adam and Eve was sexual. It is also true that the 3 time periods are also described as the time of slaves, the time of sons, and the time of lovers, in that in the current time the Providence members should consider themselves brides of God. Former members assert that this goes further to viewing themselves as Jung's brides.[/list]

He also teaches that anyone who criticises him are evil and should be cursed 100,000 times, anyone who listens to anyone who criticises him will receive the same punishment as the ones who criticise him (eternity in Hell), anyone who leaves Providence goes to Hell, God is 10,000x more sensitive than a human and will respond aggressively to even the slightest sins, God is extremely jealous and quick to anger, God looks down at us with "fiery eyes" and sharpens his sword daily, God raised Hitler to take out revenge on the Jews for killing Jesus, Princess Diana was killed by God because she slept with a Muslim, all natural disasters are God taking revenge, etc... Essentially he molds God into a pathetic child more akin to himself than to anything of beauty.

He does talk about love, but actually not that much. When I was trying to find quotes for wikiquote, I found it much harder to find quotes about love than ones about destruction, boasting, asserting he is the messiah or that the 30 lessons are the Complete Testament. This surprised me actually. His sermons will often be half full, or even entirely full, of trying to convince the members not to leave. Sometimes, he will talk for 20 minutes about the evils of cookies (he doesn't want them to get fat and unattractive). Other times, he will use the entire sermon to threaten the members. He has mood swings as well, so sometimes he is very boastful and other times a little honest, but usually boastful. Just sometimes he will talk about love or tell the members they are precious, in times of "persecution" when he thinks it is necessary to stop them leaving. However, the members cherish this, and so they present an image of Jung that talks about love much more than he actually does.
« Last Edit: December 11, 2006, 09:10:35 PM by rb » Logged
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