Puzzle in the brain.

Centuries before the faculty of Theology began work on deriving our new way of thinking, the Culture of Philosophy discovered the process of logic. It defined logic as a way of thinking. From this definition, Theology drew its own conclusion, stating that the inevitable outcome of logical thinking is a new creation. The definition of logic therefore, within the confines of Theology, is “The God of Creation”.

Theology’s logic exists in all things. It is the method, the process, or the pathway, through which matter, or everything in the universe, visible and invisible, came into existence. Without logic, nothing can exist.

As a strategy to elevate our human intelligence, Theology teaches that logic is the ultimate or most important spirit or character in existence, of which if we, as humans, can imbibe, we can ourselves become logical creatures, or children of logic, able revolutionarily to bring things into existence, in similar manner as logic, evolutionarily brought the universe into existence.

Walking on water

Miracles are occurrences of higher logic. Everything we witness in our environment, which process or methodology of working or functionality we cannot fathom, is to us a miracle. When we witness or experience a miracle, it prompts questions in our minds. It challenges our understanding of how our environment works. It brings our awareness to the existence of intelligence higher than we possess.

On the rare occasions that we inquire into a miracle, seeking to understand how it works, when through trials and errors, we are able finally to recreate it, it then to us ceases to be a miracle, and it becomes logical. Through our understanding of miracles, we learn to be logical creatures. The process of transforming a miracle into logic is the lifestyle New Theology defines as righteousness.

Everything logical to our thinking today, was at one point in our primitive history, a miracle. Rain, sunlight, childbirth, an earthquake, crop fertility, healings, and more, all were miracles, the works of mysterious Gods and Supreme Deities, until we discovered their logic.

Computer code.
Logic increases

Five thousand years ago, any notion of travelling from one city to another, across mountains and rivers, within a timeframe of 24 hours, was to us illogical. Today, it is logical, because we discovered how to do it. Equally today, any notion of travelling from Earth to Mars within a timeframe of 24 hours is to us illogical. Five thousand years from now, it would be logical, when we would have discovered how it works. Logic grows, develops, advances, or increases, according as we seek it, and its increase is infinite. Each new logic we discover forms the basis on which to discover innumerable more logics.

We owe our human capability of logic to the greatest logical calculator in our possession, which is the human brain.

The Human Brain.
I Rock!

The Culture of Biology has discovered much about the brain, enough to erode many of our ancient concepts of how we believed our existence worked. Long gone are the days we thought our human thoughts came from the human heart. Today, our entire knowledge of the brain, the Culture of Psychology tells us, is still as a dip in the ocean.

From a theological perspective, the human brain has a language, which we understand only as dreams. As any language of foreign origin, it is jargon without proper translation or interpretation. In Theology, we believe dreams to be the brain speaking daily of our activities in its own language. As we go about our lives, daily making conscious choices, our brains relive those choices in logical computations, which when we sleep, are to us dreams.

These computations are of no conscious value to us, but occasionally, the brain sums up our choices for the day, week, month, or year, to make a projection or a prediction of the possible outcome of our choices. These sum of our choices, as computed by the human brain, are what in Theology we call visions or prophecies.

While the brain can calculate our individual choices, to predict our possible individual futures, the brains of specific people, rare in society, known in Theology as prophets, mysteriously can calculate the collective choices of an entire community, to predict their collective future. Prophets, burdened with this capacity, often try, though sometimes unsuccessfully, to convince our communities on what new choices we should make to either secure or avert the possible outcomes of the sum of our collective choices, as calculated involuntarily by the human brain. We have no shortage of examples.

Adam and Eve.
Adam & Eve

Starting with ancient religious records. Five thousand years ago, an unnamed person in the Judaic religion, prophesied our old way of thinking would lead to the demise of our civilization, and laid it out in the story of Adam and Eve.

Two thousand years ago, in the Christian religion, Jesus the Christ prophesied our civilization could escape demise, at which he designed our new way of thinking.

Still in the Christian religion, someone whom we know only as Paul the Apostle, prophesied in the biblical books of 1st Thessalonians chapter four, and 1st Corinthians chapter 15, the ultimate outcome of the tree of life, which is the resurrection of all dead people in our civilization. This prophecy influenced the Culture of Theology immensely, to change our entire perspective of our civilization.

In recent examples, many successful creators, inventors, and innovators in our modern world have accredited their personal life’s choices and successes to dreams or visions they had.

Take the case of Michel de Nostradamus, a philosopher of French origin. He prophesied many events of our civilization, which in his day, influenced the choices of people, and still today continues to influence ours.

Another example is a daily radio series, titled The Engines of our Ingenuity, hosted by John H. Lienhard. In the episode No 1868, the Rev. John W. Price quoted the Nobel physicist Albert Einstein as saying his entire career was an extended meditation on a dream he had as a teenager.

Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein

Taking examples from we as individuals, some of us can attest to having dreams or premonitions that came true of our personal lives.

The human brain, undeniably has its way of summing our individual or collective choices, to predict our possible futures, sometimes with impeccable accuracy, but the danger always remains of our possible misinterpretations of its language, to catastrophic conclusions, and this brings us to the topic of our thesis. While we have no guarantees that our prophetic interpretations of the brain’s predictions concerning our utopia are accurate, we nonetheless must consider them, so to increase our chances of success.

The first prophecy is from an evangelist of German origin, by the name Reinhard Bonnke. He had a recurring dream of a map of Africa splattered with blood, and a voice saying “Africa shall be saved”. By theological interpretation, this means the entire continent of Africa could become born-again.

Map of Africa.
Africa shall be saved

Another prophecy is from an apostle of British origin, by the name Sydney Granville Elton. He prophesied that Africa is going to “be shaken”, meaning that the continent would experience an awakening, unlike any region of the world has ever experience in history, and the country of Nigeria specifically would be the trigger point. By theological interpretation, this means Nigeria could be the easiest target country for constituting the cultures of faith.

To bring our dream of a new way of thinking to fruition, we need a country. The brain miraculously may have provided us one, but our duty is to derive why the greatest logical calculator in our possession would make that choice.

To understand the brain’s logic, we first must collate multiple prophecies from numerous sources concerning the same event, so to build a clearer picture. We then must proceed with a viable plan for the event, making analysis of every choice we make, learning all we can, and altering our choices wherever and whenever necessary. If incredibly, after much trials and errors, we achieve success in constituting the cultures of faith, something seemingly unbelievable or illogical to some of us now, we would then be intelligent enough ourselves to choose the next countries to be successful, revolutionarily, even as logic evolutionarily chose Nigeria.

This has been Theology’s age-old method to elevating our collective human intelligence.

 

#End of Part 4.

 

Reinhard Bonnke.
Biography - cfan.org
Biography - wikipedia.org

Sydney G. Elton.
Paid Content.
Life history - medium.com

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