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Buddhism and Christianity
Comments
In my opinion, rather than becoming a monk in any of the 2 religions, it would be more practical to be a lay person, or even have some formal commitment to any of the 2 'Beliefs', and value both personally.
You can follow good things from different philosophies; probably it´s convenient to have one as your main option and guide, and the other as a nice complement.
Also, too many labels and formalism often go against the very good beliefs they are supposedly linked to.
Peace and happiness!!
The class teacher/facilitator put out a comment that has stuck with me, "I don't think Jesus is about the man. I think its about the message."
I think I've rather taken that idea to heart. Because, suddenly, John 3:16 takes on a whole new feel - "whoever believes in the Message gets eternal life."
Take the "dude" out of the equation and it all seems so much clearer to me. The Messages of Buddhism and Christianity are much closer than I think many allow themselves to believe.
People want to keep gays from marrying. They say it is because it is wrong, because God says it is wrong. Well, why should they care? Because in their minds, they have to help save what they view as sinners in order to gain God's good favor to get into heaven. So, instead of loving their neighbor and treating him well and with compassion, they look at his lifestyle through the eyes of fear of their own death.
Ironically those who shout the loudest about faith (meaning 'strong ideological conviction') are actually the weakest in faith in terms of trusting the spiritual path they claim to be walking. It is their fear and insecurity in a world of change and uncertainty that undermines their very claim of faith. The less fearful and insecure, the more faith. This is ultimately what makes two religious individuals, from Fred Phelps to Thomas Merton, so radically different from one another.
Ideological assent should not be confused with faith. Rather, faith is WHAT YOU DO with your belief, how you embody it in your life. Faith cannot be reproduced from one person to the next by rigidly following an ideological system--it is, in that sense, totally up to the individual to embody his or her faith. No one else can do it for you. But that is what makes fundamentalism so appealing--just nod your head, prop up your pre-existing fears and bigotry with religious language and all your life's worries will be solved. Everything is fixed: you are RIGHT, and 'THEY' are wrong.
This is an interpretation. If someone said that to emulate Jesus is the only way to escape from Samsara this would not be controversial. Its just that the words are different and have gathered up all sorts of strange meanings over the years. If someone wants to believe that it is simply a belief in Jesus' existence that gets one to Heaven, as some people do seem to suggest, then, well, there's no accounting for the human propensity to believe what suits them.
Samsara is not a noun..its a verb. Its an activity, not a place.
http://www.seattlefirstbaptist.org/Documents/Sermon/Sermon_061008.pdf