Hi Path,
I like reading your posts; your open-mindedness and inclusiveness shines through. I echo your point about all our posts being essentially implicitly preceded by “in my opinion” without always clunkily stating it. Each of us can only posit our own understanding from our own unique viewpoint and knowledge base, whether we feel we follow no path, several or one very specific one. None has perfect and complete knowledge and understanding (IMO!). Not that it really matters but I agree with much of what you say (so take that as read!). (Speaking not as a paid up Buddhist) one or two thoughts occur to me here…
Thanks.
I try to be as open-minded and inclusive as possible. After all, I'm just one of humanity trying to wade through a lot of complicated questions! I figure I can learn a lot from others as they work on their paths too.
I like the term nontheistic!
I think that is more apt a description. Some Buddhists don't believe in gods at all, while others just think if they exist, they have their own liberation to work out and have not much to do with one's own journey.
The “concern” is with reality and our perception / delusional status. The earth / universe is simply as it is; how we perceive it is another matter. “Perfect” / imperfect are merely subjective opinions (concepts) that people may or may not hold, but this has nothing to do with how the earth really is (i.e. reality)
Thanks- I think this is a very good explanation to add. Incidentally, this is how I see the earth/universe as well. But then, I am an odd sort of Christian. I don't buy into original sin, or that the earth is in a "fallen" state, and these sorts of things. I do believe people sin (make mistakes, err, act unethically) and this has consequences, and hope that people and other sentient beings will journey to become perfected beings (i.e., without blemish, mistakes, unethical behavior). But I don't believe the earth or nature as a whole is anything but what it is, and we can choose to look at it in any number of ways. I choose to see nature as leading to life, and evidence of God's Divine Plan which leads inevitably toward Creation. Even destruction leads to new life, dyamism and change. And these things are good and beautiful. I believe sentient beings should work toward being aligned and harmonious with the Divine/God's will, so that rather than cause more suffering, we are focused on renewing life and love in each other and the earth.
This could seem nihilistic and a call to suicide, which I’m sure you don’t mean. In “source” Buddhism (Theravadan) I would think you mean end the cycle of rebirth by breaking the 12 link chain (loop) of co-dependent arising.
Yes, this is why I say "end existence" rather than "end life." Of course, ending one's life doesn't end one's existence. On the contrary, I think it probably just delays one's progress and mucks things up by piling on more emotional and spiritual baggage.
There are many similarities between my own beliefs and Buddhism, but this is a break in those similarities. I don't believe the answer is in ending one's existence, necessarily. Because I believe in God (as All, beyond All), I think our journey is to reunite with God and all other sentient beings, to become perfected in our love and to end suffering in that way. The answer, for me, is that when all beings are reunited with God, then everyone will see the universe as it is, and suffering will not exist because we will all see our own role in creating ever more light and love in unison with God. We will each of us fulfill our God-given unique purpose, which is to love in our own unique way the rest of what is really God's own body. It is to give our being wholeheartedly to Being itself.
Love in a detached way sounds a bit cold to me! Compassionate action, yet knowing that ultimately all is empty of self-existence and so cannot be clung to might be a bit less cold? But probably more confusing!
I couldn't find a warm way to express what I was saying- detachment combined with loving compassion. Incidentally, here is another parallel to my own beliefs. I believe we ought to end attachment as well, but not because beings are empty of self-existence. I believe beings are created as a unique thought/art-form of God, and each carries within it the spark of Light that is from God Itself. So, far from empty, beings are actually full of Light and Love and indeed... God (at least in my opinion LOL
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The reason we must end attachment, for me, is not simply to end our suffering (though it helps) and it doesn't mean we can't love personally and passionately. It is that we must give up all that binds ourselves to a self-centered place. Give up our desires- our desires for an afterlife that is a certain way, or a here-and-now life that is a certain way, for material things, for even spiritual experiences and feelings. I believe the goal is to die to self, so that one might become more filled with God. It doesn't mean one should become a drone; each of us is unique in how God fills us. But we should let go of our own ideas as permanent, real spiritual things- open to God's insight. We should let go of our desires for heaven, our fears of hell, of all ideas of any particular afterlife at all, trusting that God will put us exactly where we ought to be in order to bring us ever closer to It/Him/Her. We should let go of the idea that we own anything in this life, even our own life and time. For really, this is God's, and the best thing we can do (and what will end our suffering) is to give it back to God for safe-keeping and use, harboring a willingness to go where ever S/He/It bids us and to have what God gives us.
The more we remove our attachments from our lives (perhaps especially to who we think we are, defined by the things of this world), the more we become "not of this world," "the light of the world." We become filled with love and light, and not a temporary love that is emotional but rather a deeply passionate spiritual love that shows us the beauty and potential in all beings, indeed- that shows us the constant presence of God in All, and connects us to the mystery of God beyond All (the unfathomable, unknowable God that can only be experienced).
Of course, this is a work in progress for myself. I catch glimpses of it. Some days I am better and some days worse. Some days I worry, even though I know I shouldn't. But I have had a few brief moments of perfect bliss, of knowing what it feels like to be wholly reunited with God... and nothing else compares to this. It is worth any temporary feeling of sacrifice, which is really just my ego trying to clutch things that don't belong to it (including its own illusion of selfhood, when in fact I am really something/someone quite different).
Why is it like this? Why does God create all of us to go through this process? I have no idea. And I am not supposed to be attached to finding an answer.
I'm not sure I explained any of that adequately (almost certainly not) and I've probably just made a lot of Christians feel once more that I'm not Christian, but so be it. My path is what it is. To forsake what has been given to me and the moments I've experienced God would be to turn my back on the only truth I have known, which was evidenced by incredible peace, joy and love. I simply find it impossible to deny it.
Maybe I need more coffee! Personally I would say yes we are not about to be saved by any external agent, but this need not mean God disappears. It can simply mean a different idea of what the concept “God” refers to.
I can't have coffee (allergies), but I do need some breakfast! LOL
I do and do not agree about salvation. I believe I have been saved by Christ, but that statement means something quite different to me than it does for many Christians. I believe God is the foundation upon which all beings derive their being-hood. God is the Being behind being itself.
I believe I am saved by grace (that God alone is responsible for my salvation), but I must choose to accept this gift and let it change me radically. Our salvation is evidenced by profound change in ourselves- becoming more like Christ- which is to say that we become more loving, more merciful, gentle, kind, humble, self-controlled... As we nurture the light of Christ within, which was always there but that we had not chosen to recognize previously, we fan this light into a fire that consumes us. And we die to self, to be born in Self (Christ). We find our true nature, which is in accord with God's will and is selfless and deeply, compassionately loving. This takes time and commitment. We are not saved by works, but if our salvation is to perfect us, we much commit ourselves to God. Indeed, we are committing ourselves to Christ within, to the light of God within. This takes some action on our part, some effort, and yet... even turning to this inner light is turning to God. No matter how much we think "we" are saving ourselves, we are only able in so far as we are embracing what God has already given us- namely, Itself- in us, around us, beyond us.
As a final aside, I believe people in many religions, from all over the world, are saved by Christ whether they realize it or not, and whether they believe in diety or not, and whether they believe in Christ or not. In fact, I suspect all are saved eventually. The evidence is in their transformation. If a being is becoming more like Christ, that being has been saved by Christ and is being guided by God along the path back to Him/Her/It. The being does not have to intellectually recognize this or practice the same religion. All it takes is willingness to let go of self and work toward love. Love, unconditional Love(which is love without attachment), is God. The narrow path is the path of Love, the path of finding Christ within. It isn't about religious affiliation or any group we create in human society. It is simply about letting go of self and learning to really love.