My position is kind of difficult to explain. I have always believed in a spark of the Divine inherent in everyone (a leftover belief from when I was a Quaker), what George Fox - the founder of Quakerism - called "That of God in every man". This divine spark may well be the closest thing to an actual god you're ever going to find.
What I'm "agnostic" about is the existence of a personal God, i.e., a "guy-in-the-sky" named God (or Jehovah, Allah, or whatever).
As to tyhe afterlife, I lean in favour of reincarnation, but I've adopted a wait-and-see attitude. If there is an afterlife, so much the better, but if there isn't, well it won't matter because by the time I get that far I will have ceased to exist and will therefore never know I was wrong.
What I'm "agnostic" about is the existence of a personal God, i.e., a "guy-in-the-sky" named God (or Jehovah, Allah, or whatever).
As to tyhe afterlife, I lean in favour of reincarnation, but I've adopted a wait-and-see attitude. If there is an afterlife, so much the better, but if there isn't, well it won't matter because by the time I get that far I will have ceased to exist and will therefore never know I was wrong.
Jeff a.k.a. wheatpenny
"If God sends me to hell I will start a commune there. And it will be the greatest commune ever because all the best people will be there"
(Osho)
"If God sends me to hell I will start a commune there. And it will be the greatest commune ever because all the best people will be there"
(Osho)