Random
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

A Buddhist smorgasbord

A few here are keen to propagate their own brand of what could be called "religion" so I am emboldened to begin a thread on the Dharma, AKA Buddhism.

Made up of bits and pieces drawn from my own long journey through the "way of the Buddha". One guy, seeing the Buddha hold up a flower, "got it" straight away (whatever "it" is) but others like me need more time.

Anyway, whatever, a few brief words from one modern Dharma teacher:-

[i] The Buddha did not teach Buddhism. He taught the Dharma, the law. He did not teach a set of beliefs or dogmas, or systems that have arbitrarily to be accepted. Through his own experience of enlightenment, he pointed the way for each of us to experience the truth within ourselves. During the forty years of his teaching, he used many different words and concepts to point to the truth. The words or concepts are not the truth itself; they are merely a pointing to a certain kind of experience. In the Buddha's time, because of the force of his wisdom and skill, generally people did not confuse the words for the experience. They heard what the Buddha had to say, looked within, and experienced the truth in their own minds and bodies.

As time went on and people started to practice less, they began to mistake the words for the experience. Different schools arose, arguing over concepts. It is as if in attempting to explain the light on a full moon night one points up at the moon. To look at the finger, rather than the moon, is to misunderstand the pointing. We should not confuse the finger for the moon, nor confuse the words pointing to the truth for the experience itself.

[/i]

That is enough for now. No posts will be deleted, however negative.

Thank you
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
It has been a long day. Grandad duties and much else. Waiting now for my daughter to arrive home from her latest shift,then a taxi home.

The zen buddhist Thich Nhat Hanh died recently, aged 95. A good man. A quick google can tell you about his life if you are at all interested.

Here he is reciting his poem "Please Call Me By My True Names":-

[youtube=https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=JADWkoUpXbQ]
Carazaa · F
@Tariki They are blessed grandchildren to have grandpa spend time with them! God bless you, it is sometimes tiring to spend all day with small children. Go home and take a long nap maybe and take good care of yourself 🙂
@Carazaa Thank you. Yes, a long couple of days for various reasons, yet every second with the little ones is precious and a blessing. At the moment I lead them, but perhaps one day........

Please understand that in no way do I challenge your own "salvation". I only challenge the parameters set by your own interpretations of your own particular Holy Book. You see them as totally definitive and absolutely pre-eminent as far as God's dealings/communication with humanity is concerned. I do not. For various reasons.

One is the sad debris I encounter on another Forum, virtual spiritual refugees, who have come to see through much that they have always held dear. All ex-fundamentalists who have stories of rejection and threats from former brethren when they simply began to question. Their suffering is palpable.

On other Forums, when simply speaking of, or seeking to speak of, a more Universal Christ than some will ever acknowledge, I have been called hypocrite, liar and once the Anti-christ himself. I am a vulnerable person whatever impression I give. I have my own mental health issues, yet it is in Pure Land Buddhism that I have found a home.

Again and again in dialogue with those who share your own version of the Christian Faith I have met the claim that while all other religions are religions of "works", only their own is the religion of grace.

This is simply not true. Grace is universal. God has no favorites. And it is GIVEN. It is not an offer that has to be "accepted".


"By God's grace alone is God to be grasped. All else is false, all else is vanity." (Guru Nanak of the Sikh Faith)

"They who have known God have known also this one certainty; that it was God's grace that led them to it, and framed them in readiness for it, and prepared their heart and mind for it; and it was God alone who lifted them to that embrace." (Swami Abhayananda of the Hindu faith)

To insist that it is our "acceptance" that counts is to turn that acceptance into the [b]causal basis[/b] of salvation. The [b]causal basis[/b] can only ever be grace itself.

I will leave it there.

Yes, thank you, I had a good nights rest.