48 episodes

Back to the garden is a podcast dedicated to the inquiry of philosophical/theological questions and topics that have challenged mankind since the time man reached self awareness. The aim is to aid those in search for a better understanding of man's role and purpose in the universe. My starting point I share with Socrates: I am the wisest man in the world, for I know that I know nothing. Welcome! tomas (tommy) deleon

Back to the Garden Tommy de Leon

    • Religion & Spirituality
    • 5.0 • 4 Ratings

Back to the garden is a podcast dedicated to the inquiry of philosophical/theological questions and topics that have challenged mankind since the time man reached self awareness. The aim is to aid those in search for a better understanding of man's role and purpose in the universe. My starting point I share with Socrates: I am the wisest man in the world, for I know that I know nothing. Welcome! tomas (tommy) deleon

    What's Mine To Do?

    What's Mine To Do?

    How many times have you heard someone bring up the question: what is my purpose? Have you ever thought about that question? Do we have a purpose?

    I have heard many people say that God has a purpose for us. A plan for each and every one of us. Is that true? If it is, what are the theological ramifications? If it is not, does that mean life has no purpose?

    Most people don't think about these things. I do. Most people are content to simply say “God” has a plan for me, and leave it at that. Join us this week as we examine the questions: What is mine to do? What is my purpose?


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/back-to-the-garden-podcast/message

    • 22 min
    Unity Principles #5: Walking the Walk

    Unity Principles #5: Walking the Walk

    In today's episode, we finish our review of Unity's Five Principles with a look at Principle #5 and a general overview of the Principles.

    When the Unity Movement began in the late 1800s, Unity co-founder Charles Fillmore never wrote anything down for the first twenty years. His reasoning was: the person I am today, is not the person I will be tomorrow. He knew that to hold a steadfast set of beliefs was, and is, a limitation contrary to life’s unlimited nature. Eventually, he was persuaded to compile some kind of “theology” for the sake of passing on this new understanding of the relationship between God and Mankind.

    Many years later Charles' great-granddaughter, Connie Fillmore Bazzy, was asked if she could summarize Unity teachings for a Daily Word article back when she was the president of Unity school in Kansas City.
    She came up with five principles that have since become the cornerstone of our teachings.
    These Five Principles are:
    1. God is absolute good, everywhere present.
    2. Human beings are created in that image of God and our very essence is divine; therefore, we are inherently good.
    3. We create our life experiences through our thoughts and beliefs.
    4. Through affirmative prayer and meditation, we connect with God and bring out the good in our lives.
    5. I do and give my best by living the Truth I know. I make a difference.


    In this episode, I will focus on Principle #5 which essentially is “walking the walk”. That is to say, putting the knowledge we have of the principles to work in our lives. Join us this week as we conclude our review of Unity’s Five Principles.


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/back-to-the-garden-podcast/message

    • 23 min
    Unity Principle #4 : Communion with God

    Unity Principle #4 : Communion with God

    In the episode, we continue our review of Unity's Five Basic Principles with a look at principle #4 which states: prayer is creative thinking that heightens the connection with God-Mind and therefore brings forth wisdom, healing, prosperity and everything good.

    In her book titled The Five Principles, author Rev. Ellen Devenport, begins her chapter on the fourth principle: "Prayer would seem to be the simplest and most familiar of spiritual concepts. Even little children understand it. Prayer has been practiced by human beings throughout the ages, in many different forms, addressed to gods of many different names. And yet this is where confusion usually sets in regarding the Five Principles."

    But what could be confusing about prayer? You talk to God, you ask for this or that, sometimes the petition is granted, sometimes it is not. What's confusing about that? Isn't that the way it works?

    No, that isn't the way it works! That is a view of God that is external, and anthropomorphic. A God that is fickle and capricious. The confusion for beginning Unity students is in regards to the radical departure from this whimsical God which one has to petition to.

    In Principle 1 we see God as Principle. In Principle 2 we see God as personal, expressed through each of us. In Principle 3 we learn that it is we who create our own destiny, through the activity of our thinking, believing, and feeling (free will). Given these three principles, then it seems we truly are in control of our own destinies. Then who or what am I praying "to", or why is prayer necessary at all?

    In its simplest form, the answer is that we are an expression of this ONE greater Mind (consciousness), and through affirmative prayer (not supplication) we align ourselves with this greater good to "...bring forth wisdom, healing, prosperity and everything good". To use a metaphor, there really is a “river of life” that flows in the expansive and positive direction. Prayer then becomes aligning ourselves with this flow, to manifest that which is consistent with its general nature.

    Join us this week, as we delve further into the topic of affirmative prayer.


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/back-to-the-garden-podcast/message

    • 22 min
    Unity Principle #3: Thoughts Held in Mind, Produce After Their Kind

    Unity Principle #3: Thoughts Held in Mind, Produce After Their Kind

    In this episode, we continue our discussion of Unity’s Five Principles with Principle 3 which states: “Human beings create their experiences by the activity of their thinking”

    The principle states that it is you who co-creates your experience(s)! That we are active participants in the creation process. If you’re like most, you’re probably thinking; How? By the activity of your thinking and believing, as the Principle states! The caveat that cannot be ignored is that we are not alone in the process.

    Mark 11:24 states, “Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.” Mathew 21:22 states “If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer.” Notice that, in both passages, whether what you pray for “comes to be” or not, is contingent upon YOU! You are the determining factor!

    Is there any basis for this idea in science? Yes, there is as well! Quantum physics is essentially telling us that we live in an interactive universe (the observed is altered by the observer). Roman Catholic Priest and paleontologist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin put it this way: “The universe as we know it is a joint product of the observer and the observed.”

    To repeat my personal mantra: we have GOT TO change the way we see things! The time to start is now!


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/back-to-the-garden-podcast/message

    • 21 min
    Unity Principle #2: You Are God

    Unity Principle #2: You Are God

    Unity has Five Basic Principles that summarize our entire philosophy, our theology.

    In her book about the Five Principles, Rev. Ellen Debenport writes: "As well as offering tools for daily living, The Five Principles suggest answers to the great questions of existence that humans have been asking since the dawn of conscious awareness."

    The Five Principles are:

    #1: God is absolute good, everywhere present.

    #2: Human beings are created in the image of God and our very essence is divine; therefore, we are inherently good.

    #3: Human beings create our life experiences through our thoughts and our beliefs.

    #4: Through affirmative prayer and meditation, we align with God (Source) and bring out the good in our lives.

    #5: I do and give my best by living the truth I know. I make a difference.

    If we were to express these in a concise manner, they might be something like this: GOD IS, I AM, I think (create), I pray (align), I act!

    Based on these principles, Unity's view of God, man and our "relationship" is quite different from that of traditional Christianity.

    In particular, the concept behind second principle. Of this idea Ralph Waldon Emerson wrote: the greatest revelation is that God is in every man.

    In this episode, we examine principle #2: Human beings are created in the image of God and our very essence is divine; therefore, we are inherently good.


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/back-to-the-garden-podcast/message

    • 18 min
    Unity Principle #1: No Spot Where God is Not

    Unity Principle #1: No Spot Where God is Not

    These next two weeks, Unity Spiritual Center Georgetown will be conducting new membership classes. In order to become a member of any Unity center it is not necessary to believe any particular dogma or creed. We do this for a specific reason. We teach and appreciate an open mind, and an open heart. We do so because we know that every moment is a new moment, and every day our consciousness expands as a result of the experience of the day.

    Unity co-founder, Charles Fillmore, never wrote down anything for the first twenty years of Unity’s existence. His reasoning was: the person I am today, is not the person I will be tomorrow. He knew that to hold a steadfast set of beliefs was, and is, a limitation contrary to life’s unlimited nature.

    Eventually, he was persuaded to compile some kind of “theology” for the sake of passing on this new understanding of the relationship between God and Mankind. A number of books were written as a result of this effort. It was part of the birth of the New Thought Movement.

    Many years later, Connie Fillmore Bazzy, great-grand daughter of Charles, was asked if she could summarize Unity teachings for a Daily Word article back when she was the president of Unity school in Kansas City. She came up with five principles that since have become the cornerstone of our teachings.

    These Five Principles are:

    1. God is absolute good, everywhere present.

    2. Human beings are created in that image of God and our very essence is divine; therefore, we are inherently good.

    3. We create our life experiences through our thoughts and beliefs.

    4. Through affirmative prayer and meditation, we connect with God and bring out the good in our lives.

    5. I do and give my best by living the Truth I know. I make a difference.


    ---

    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/back-to-the-garden-podcast/message

    • 18 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
4 Ratings

4 Ratings

Top Podcasts In Religion & Spirituality

The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)
Ascension
The Bible Recap
Tara-Leigh Cobble
Girls Gone Bible
Girls Gone Bible
BibleProject
BibleProject Podcast
WHOA That's Good Podcast
Sadie Robertson Huff
Unashamed with the Robertson Family
Blaze Podcast Network