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More of the richness and diversity of non-belief...
Michael Shermer: Why people believe strange things
Michael Shermer: Why people believe strange things
I'm afraid you are being nit-picky. Think of how wide a scope Christians occupy, how many different sects, rituals and interpretations exist.
Now think about how narrowly you're attempting to define atheism. I find it unfair and myopic. I think you are intentionally ignoring the richness and diversity that exists in non-belief.
More of the richness and diversity of non-belief...
Michael Shermer: Why people believe strange things
This question is really important. All Jewish, Christians, and Muslim brothers and sisters have to think about that...
If we believe in the same God (I dont know it this is true with others), then the thought of God's sending prophets of different religions is really confusing....
I think an interesting question is how much consistency indicates they are both from God.
You have to allow for some difference stemming from cultural, historical, and linguistic difference.
On the other hand, nearly every religion and major spiritual teacher in the world has taught the same basics- love each other, live in peace, give to the poor, etc.
So it seems like a subjective judgment on the part of each individual to figure out how similar two prophets have to be to indicate both are from God.
It's not as subjective as you might think. For example, Jesus taught that we should love one another, while Buddha taught that desire (and subsequently love) is suffering.
It's not as subjective as you might think. For example, Jesus taught that we should love one another, while Buddha taught that desire (and subsequently love) is suffering.
Jesus taught that we can be born again once, while Buddha taught that we will be born again indefinitely until we reach Nirvana.
Jesus taught that people go to Heaven because of God's forgiveness, while Buddha taught that people go to Nirvana because of their own enlightenment.
Overall, the messages don't really seem consistent to me. The question as to which one is really from God.... that's entirely up to each one of us to figure out.
Peace/Salaam/Shalom -- I think that in the Holy Qur'an it is mentioned that all of the prophets pbut (125,000 of them in total) have preached the same faith: submission and belief to One and Only God Almighty.
this is icongruent with my understanding.What the preaches of the LOA want us to believe is that we 'can command' God Almighty to do our bidding
That is not what the Buddha taught. Attachment leads to suffering. The Buddha teaches unconditional love- the kind that Jesus taught (agape)- love without attachment to outcome. Desire is an entirely different thing than love. Additionally, some Buddhist teachers would equate desire with craving as a better translation. Which is entirely aligned with Jesus' teaching, I think. You know, the whole thing about not being too tied to the things of this world.
Jesus was talking about spiritual rebirth. The Buddha was talking about literal birth- that is, incarnation. But there are certainly differences in the concept of heaven/hell and one lifetime as opposed to reincarnation and nirvana. At the same time, both Judaism and early Christianity had a diversity of thought on the afterlife. It is only later that you find an increasing amount of doctrinal agreement in Christianity, in part because of centralization of authority.
We go to heaven, according to Christ's teachings, through the grace of God. However, most Christians believed that in order to be forgiven under this grace, there must be a "second birth" that involves the person realizing God's grace. Is this not a form of enlightenment and change in perspective?
Furthermore, the concept of both nirvana and enlightenment is much more complex than this would suggest. Nirvana isn't a place one goes to but more like a state of being that develops out of enlightenment.
For Christians that posit that heaven is an actual place, nirvana is nothing like that. For Christians that posit that heaven is a state of being in the presence of God, it begins to look a lot like nirvana in terms of how it works.
In Christianity, if heaven is a state of being in the presence of God then...
realization of Christ and being "born again" --> heaven
In Buddhism, nirvana is a state of being. So...
enlightenment --> nirvana
Agreed- up to the individual. But there are far more similarities in experience and practice, especially when one studies the diversity within both Buddhism and Christianity for a while, then there may at first appear. I thought Thich Nhat Hanh's "Living Buddha, Living Christ" was a fairly good read on the matter, though it misses many of the subtle differences and diversities that a more thorough study of both provides.
Part of the issue is how much each of these spiritual teachers' works were changed, misinterpreted, mistranslated, and so forth over the years by others and how much would have been shaped by the very different dominant cultural-religious traditions at the time- Judaism on the one hand and Hinduism on the other.
Yet at the end of the day, many Buddhists "bear good fruit" and exhibit the "fruits of the spirit," so what then to make of the Buddha's teachings as a valid path to God?
Sorry fellas, but my knowledge of Buddhism is limited to what I learned about it in school. It's sort of a catch 21: on the one hand, the proposition requires a comparison of religion, and on the other hand one's comparison is not valid if you don't actually practice both religions.
The LOA movement is a creature which has sprung from the reworking of previous authors such as Napolean Hill (for one).
The basic premises of the LOA are sound and practical rules of reality and are a great study in human psychology.
We are co-creators in reality.
But the movement around "the secret" is not much different than the other "get rich quick" and snakeoil types of scams.
I also see it this way. I don't think the LOA is a spiritual law, but rather an energetic/material one. Generally, we find what we seek and expect to find. If we are out to make money, we are driven to do so, and more likely to make some. If we are out there to help others, we are driven to do so, and more likely to help.
I don't know if that's a vibration per se, but basically the concept that life is 10% what happens to us and 90% attitude.
Peace/Salaam-- Every Jew, Christian, Muslim or any believer in God Almighty knows that the Message was simple: believe in God, pray to him only and you will see your rewards. Relying on Him is the key here because God Almighty commands everything. Sometimes, His answer is 'no' too. What the preachers of the LOA want us to believe is that we 'can command' God Almighty to do our bidding. But true monotheism teaches us that is not true.