Using he word 'God' can be misleading but that is the most popular word in english for this phenomenon.
Which 'phenomenon'? It's not a phenomenon at all, phenomena can be measured and recorded, investigated and inspected.
That's why most of us use the word 'God' instead of say....Universal Spirit, Common Consciousness or something else. In India we have various words for it and we don't use one word like 'God'.
Our conceptualisation is always limited by our linguistic capacity, it's true.
I know that the word 'God' is loaded and carries with it certain imagery from the Bible which most of you are unable to shake off. But we Hindus (including Sadguru) have no option but to use the word.
The word 'God' is no more loaded than any other word for a vague concept: honour, duty, mercy - all are open to interpretation, all are sometimes viewed highly, sometimes viewed dubiously. In the absence of anything definitive, any conceptual framework is by it's nature subjective.
Coming to evidence. Its all about experience.
The evidence of many experiments is that people's experience is highly questionable.
If you haven't experienced 'love'....any amount of scientific explanations in terms of chemicals will not be sufficient. Its the same with experience of your inner self.
Right. How does the 'experience of the inner self' reveal anything about mystic concepts like 'spirit' or 'soul' or 'gods'. You suggest that 'god' is a loaded term, but so are those that the idea is phrased in. 'Honour' and 'justice' and the like are conceptual descriptions of behaviour, but 'gods' and 'spirits' are allegation of objects, of things, and yet there is no basis for presuming these. 'Things' interact, we can deduce their nature from these interactions, yet gods do not interact with anything, spirits are immune from physicality it appears.
Now...whether the 'experience' is just the rush of come chemicals or something connected to the Consciousness beyond the brain and body is a matter of ones basic premise and assumption.
And, as with all things, the onus is on the claimant to demonstrate their case. The case for brain chemicals is well-established; if you wish to depict 'god' as something more than a mistaken interpretation of otherwise physical activity, it falls upon you to demonstrate that.
If you believe that the human body (and brain) is just a product of chance biological evolution and the mind and consciousness are just chemical and electrical impulses in the brain....then obviously all experiences are just chemical in origin and nothing more. The 'God' experience would also be one such.
It's not about 'belief'. Evolution is a demonstrable fact, we've witnessed it in the laboratory, we've documented it in the wild, we've demonstrated it in the genetic records. The theory of evolution is a superlatively well-supported explanation for that demonstrable phenomenon. If you want to posit something more you need to justify the claim, not dismiss one of the most rigorously supported theories of human history as 'assumption'.
But if the basic assumption is that the biological evolution of our body and brain is guided... and Consciousness forms a fundamental aspect of the universe ....then the mind and consciousness become independent of the brain/body and the brain/body only form the platform for the consciousness to work.
Your false equivalency is shown here; 'guided' evolution is an assumption, because you have no evidence for either a guide or for guidance. You presume, in the absence of support, that our existence has some significance in a grander scheme, and then use that as justification for presuming the grander scheme.
Creation and natural evolution are not two equally valid 'assumptions'. One is a well-supported deduction from the available evidence which has made predictions which have been tested and shown to be accurate, and the other is an assumption.
In this case, moving from an individual consciousness to a more universal consciousness is a profound and life changing event. That is what I (and the Guru) are talking about.
That experience may well be a life-changing one, and having gone through it in no way intrinsically makes you a 'bad person', I just want to make that clear. But that you choose to interpret your experience that way does not in any way signify that I have to accept your understanding is any more accurate than the belief that Christ is real or that aliens steal and probe hillbillies.
O.