The liturgies teach that all people are liars and hypocrites, whether a person admits to it or not. If a person does not admit to being a liar and hypocrite, a person is pious and not humble.
If a person admits to being a liar and hypocrite and seeks "forgiveness" and "forgives," then a person is humble and not pious (or, "arrogant" is another word for pious).
That all people are liars and hypocrites stems from the teaching of "eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth;" which is why Jesus (an erudite) taught "forgiveness," but not to "forget."
Not to "forget" (in other words, "remember") is so that a person may be able to learn from one's mistakes and also learn to "love."
Therefore, the liturgies teach that "God is love:" not that there is a "God" or "gods," but just that "love" prevails.
The liturgies also teach that "the sun shines on the wicked and good alike."
What the so-called "wicked" do is okay in their understandings and what the so-called "good" do is okay in their understandings, with criss-crossing between good and evil in infinite dimensions.
Therefore, there is no "good or evil" and the "world" is "A-moral."
"Life is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing." - Shakespeare
Life is all about "pushing up daisies" or "blowing in the wind."
$975 at the crematorium is a deal compared to the plot that costs $2200 and maybe antecedents can afford to go for ice cream after the eulogy rather than bury a predecessor at the "Taj Mahal!"
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