Changing faiths...

Dragonseer,

A couple more questions for you: Are you Catholic? A practicing Catholic? Are you perhaps considering a move away from Catholicism?
 
Well, haven't really "joined up" with any. Though to me fitting into a religion may be a bit like buying clothes off the rack-which I've always done by the way:)- vs. getting them tailored to actually fit your form. Some folks don't comfortably fit into ready-made clothes. But, my views of matters "religious" tend to change with things I encounter. Most all "ready-made" religions don't fit all human experiences 100%. My central approach to religion, though, is psychologically based. That is, have always been interested in how a religion psychologically relates the limited and often illusory self to the undefinable and limitless "Divine" and its methods of working on the self-Divine interaction. In terms of working methods, have largely relied on Buddhist approaches for many years. I make for a bad Buddhist most of the time, though.:p earl
 
Due to my beliefs I have led an isolated life, so friends have been rare and special. We all need friends, but for religious reasons I've given up or lost important friends and squandered many potential friendships.

I always thought a variety of beliefs existed up your way, and so plenty of friends wouldn't mind your personal belief system.
 
I'm curious to know three things:

1) What religious faith(s) have you left?

2) Why did you decide to leave it/them?

3) To what religion/sect did you convert and why?


All the best,

DS
1) Christianity/ Baptist and Nondenominational. Islam/ Sunni and Sufi.

2) I did'nt believe in them anymore.

3) Infinite Possibility is my religion because I believe that the sky's the limit.
 
Ahanu said:
I always thought a variety of beliefs existed up your way, and so plenty of friends wouldn't mind your personal belief system.
I don't know what to say.
 
I was brought up in the Church of England, went tyo Sunday School, joined the choir, was confirmed by David Shepard (which I'm really smug about). Meanwhile my Dad dabbled in Spiritualism, and read people like Blavatsky and Jung. He tried to talk to me about this but I was a teenager and knew everything, so I dismissed it all out of hand.

Later after working in the Middle East I began to feel cramped inside my Christianity, but I continued with it, at one time trying to get ordained (they turned me down) always looking for the bigger picture and reading everyone I could find who was doing the same.

Then a few years ago I picked up "The Final Barrier" by Reshad Feild (sic). This was my intrduction to Sufism. I was struck by how sophisticated the conceptual vocabulary was. For example, in Christian writing you read about the "self", especially diminishing it. In Sufi writing you see the "self" taken apart and analysed, you see the function of each part, and how to gain mastery over it without losing your essential identity. It was as though Christians heard rumours of a lost continent, but Sufis had been there, made the maps, set up resorts and sent the postcards home, and that was seven hundred years ago.

I was initiated into the Sufi way a couple of years ago and have been following it since then. But I don't feel I've left Christianity, I just understand it better now. I'm currently reading some of the Christian and pre-Christian mystics to explore these ideas some more.
 
I have made my way through almost all the Christian Denominations that exist looking for a connection but never really finding any peace that passes all human understanding. I like Buddhist philosophy and have studied the Bahai Faith with some degree of seriousness but in the end, I feel too constricted by the ritualistic and legalistic aspects of most of the major faiths. I am too much of a free spirit and at 58, I really don't care anymore about conforming to any requirements to fit in to a group. I relate to what POO says so eloquently in her post. :)
 
I was initiated into the Sufi way a couple of years ago and have been following it since then. But I don't feel I've left Christianity, I just understand it better now. I'm currently reading some of the Christian and pre-Christian mystics to explore these ideas some more.

I feel the same way in terms of understanding Christianity better by viewing it through a different filter. My filter is primarily Taoism and Hinduism--i.e., the Tao Te Ching, Bhagavad Gita, and the Upanishads, in particular. I'm not actually a practicing Taoist or Hindu, but I greatly respect both faiths.

What really intrigues me is how frequently terms used in the Bible--e.g., the Word, the Lord (of love), etc.--were used long before in other holy scriptures. In short, I view all sacred scriptures as imparting the same lessons being to mankind--until we get it right. Methinks we have a loooong way to go. :(
 
1) What religious faith(s) have you left?

Christianity.

2) Why did you decide to leave it/them?
In my defence when I was christened I wasn’t consulted on the matter. But then as I grew up, any religion founded on creator deities and notions of divinity meant nothing to me.


3) To what religion/sect did you convert and why?

Not entirely sure about the conversion idea, but anyway…

I saw an advert for a short introductory course about Buddhism. I can’t remember or think why it piqued my curiosity but it did. What I discovered was not revelatory nor did I dismiss it out of hand. It simply seemed to be consistent with the “world view” I already had. Whereas Christianity had a basis that I could not accept, the basis of Buddhism is interdependent origination, a truth about the fundamental nature of reality so obvious as to be banal.

That was a long time ago so that’ll do for your 3 questions I think, DS!

s.
 
In my defence when I was christened I wasn’t consulted on the matter. But then as I grew up, any religion founded on creator deities and notions of divinity meant nothing to me.

There's no need to defend your thoughts and feelings to us; you're entitled to them.
 
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