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Came around Christianity

So, as some of you may have noticed, I had a slight problem with Christianity. Well, to be honest it was far worse in real life than what has come through here. Realizing I was uhm shoveling gravel on my own road (for lack of a better expression), I decided to lay down my weapons.
First I got myself a bible (on my phone) and then I read a passage in it every evening. The Old Testament I remember well from school, so I focused on The New Testament. I also got myself a brass Bible key-hanger-thingy to make myself look at a it several times a day (it was quite cool in fact - a complete mini-New Testament, readable).
I also studied Christian denominations closely, focusing mostly on Lutheranism since it's the official denomination in my country.
The key-hanger part was the most challenging disposition, since everyone knows what I thought about Christianity (and yes, I was confronted with my Bible!) Most people I know don't like Christianity, so that was also a difficulty in my proceedings.

Yesterday I took off my Bible-key-hanger. I know a lot more about Christianity - now I can even defend it against the views and arguments I had before. More important though: I'm not "antichrist" anymore. It feels like a major step to me. Just felt like sharing..
riverflownenkohaiMaryAnneInvincible_summervinlynStraight_ManlobsterCinorjerSilouanToshsndymornlamaramadingdongVictoriousCittamisterCopeKundocvalue
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Comments

  • howhow Veteran Veteran

    Some how reminds me of a part in the film about Gandhi where a man approaches him anquished with guilt over his participation in recent religious riots.

    Gandhi suggests the man adopt an orphan from these riots and to personally raise him in that same religion that he was feeling so guilty of hating..

    Not an easy road but an admirable solution to hatred.
  • Hey Ficus - there is a BIG difference between the teachings of Jesus Christ and of the Christian churches. Keep reading....

    Yea now I know, so I like the dude a lot more :) Almost read all four gospels now and will of course continue till the end

    John_SpencerKundo
  • So, as some of you may have noticed, I had a slight problem with Christianity. Well, to be honest it was far worse in real life than what has come through here. Realizing I was uhm shoveling gravel on my own road (for lack of a better expression), I decided to lay down my weapons.
    First I got myself a bible (on my phone) and then I read a passage in it every evening. The Old Testament I remember well from school, so I focused on The New Testament. I also got myself a brass Bible key-hanger-thingy to make myself look at a it several times a day (it was quite cool in fact - a complete mini-New Testament, readable).
    I also studied Christian denominations closely, focusing mostly on Lutheranism since it's the official denomination in my country.
    The key-hanger part was the most challenging disposition, since everyone knows what I thought about Christianity (and yes, I was confronted with my Bible!) Most people I know don't like Christianity, so that was also a difficulty in my proceedings.

    Yesterday I took off my Bible-key-hanger. I know a lot more about Christianity - now I can even defend it against the views and arguments I had before. More important though: I'm not "antichrist" anymore. It feels like a major step to me. Just felt like sharing..

    If you have the need to defend Christianity or anything else for that matter probably means that you believe in it. There's nothing wrong unless you start to hurt or patronise others for not believing.
    Kundo
  • footiam said:

    So, as some of you may have noticed, I had a slight problem with Christianity. Well, to be honest it was far worse in real life than what has come through here. Realizing I was uhm shoveling gravel on my own road (for lack of a better expression), I decided to lay down my weapons.
    First I got myself a bible (on my phone) and then I read a passage in it every evening. The Old Testament I remember well from school, so I focused on The New Testament. I also got myself a brass Bible key-hanger-thingy to make myself look at a it several times a day (it was quite cool in fact - a complete mini-New Testament, readable).
    I also studied Christian denominations closely, focusing mostly on Lutheranism since it's the official denomination in my country.
    The key-hanger part was the most challenging disposition, since everyone knows what I thought about Christianity (and yes, I was confronted with my Bible!) Most people I know don't like Christianity, so that was also a difficulty in my proceedings.

    Yesterday I took off my Bible-key-hanger. I know a lot more about Christianity - now I can even defend it against the views and arguments I had before. More important though: I'm not "antichrist" anymore. It feels like a major step to me. Just felt like sharing..

    If you have the need to defend Christianity or anything else for that matter probably means that you believe in it. There's nothing wrong unless you start to hurt or patronise others for not believing.
    I don't feel like I have to, I just know that now I can - should the need arise :)
    Kundo
  • well, maybe I WILL get that bumper sticker that says "Jesus was Buddhist."
    blu3reeKundocvalue
  • ..or Buddha was a Christian?
  • Although I must admit there are some (and more than I thought) similarities, I don't think I'll ever come around to the whole Jesus was a Buddha-thing ;)
  • Ficus, I said that mostly in jest. But, given the time frame, it is, at least, plausible.
  • nenkohai said:

    Ficus, I said that mostly in jest. But, given the time frame, it is, at least, plausible.

    Sorry, I just came to think about all the Buddha Jesus threads we've had.. I did not refer to your (or John_Spencer's) post/s in particular.. Wasn't all clear I know
  • Tosh said:

    ..or Buddha was a Christian?

    Burn the heretic!!!

    Ooops, sorry, wrong religion!!

    Ha!

    Admittedly, one of the dangers of believing in God is that Christians believe God is a Christian, Muslims believe Allah is a Muslim and Jews believe G-d is Jewish.

    The one thing you can say about Buddha is that he wasn't a Buddhist.

    Toshhow
  • vinlynvinlyn Colorado...for now Veteran
    Tosh said:


    The one thing you can say about Buddha is that he wasn't a Buddhist.

    I agree. Another aspect is that there is a train of thought that if the Buddha never existed and was merely a literary device to make the teachings more interesting, it wouldn't change the Dharma one bit. What we've got is a set of teachings with a proven track record of helping people, and that we can test for ourselves.

    Buddhism is a confident religion.
    Except that every section where it tells about what Buddha did would no longer work.

    Yes, the meaning and wisdom would still be there.

    Tosh
  • I admire FR's honesty and if he reads further he might find that for Jesus the real sin was, well you guessed it - ignorance.

    But there are some serious differences between Buddhism and Christianity.

    Christianity is about a relationship with God through Jesus. Thus behind Christianity is a philosophy that there lies an 'essential' person - two 'essential' people - the believer and Jesus. This brings into play a whole range of other aspects not the least of which is that of 'faith' which then leads into speculations about the 'reality' of heaven and hell.

    There is also the matter of 'desire' and 'attachment' which are associated with the religious traditions. It is these aspects that eventually lead to attachment and grasping that is the cause of the world's problems.

    The Buddha, of course, would have none of this. In fact, the Buddha would argue that the mental constructions which we might call 'Christianity', or 'Islam', or 'Judaism' or ... , are an obstacle to the path.

    My own path into Christianity and the study of the more speculative theologians and philosophers has confirmed that none of them actually explain the 'how' - of how it is all suppose to work - except they keep harping on about this thing called faith which, historically, seems not to work at all, but which, instead, leads to a mimetic response to others thereby triggering aggression and anger.

    MaryAnneKundoanataman
  • SilouanSilouan Veteran
    edited April 2013
    @pineblossom

    I don't believe the differences between Buddhism and Christianity are serious, unless we are attempting to justify one path as correct over the other. Each person accepts one over the other because it makes more sense to them, and each tradition has a long history of those that have manifested the essence of their respective teachings, but sadly, there are those who have not to the detriment of others.

    One who did manifest the essence of his tradition and has shown us how through the example of his life is St Macarius. His Homily 49 addresses your key points about desire, attachment, and belief:

    1. If anyone should leave his family and renounce this world and possessions and father and mother for the sake of the Lord, and if he has crucified himself and has become a wanderer and poor and needy, but does not find in himself the divine satisfaction instead of the satisfaction of the world, nor feel in his soul, instead of the temporal pleasure, the pleasure of the Spirit and has not been clothed, instead of with perishable clothing, with the clothing of the light of the Godhead, and if he does not know with assurance the satisfaction of the communion with the heavenly Bridegroom in his soul, instead of the temporal and carnal communion, and does not know the joy of the Spirit interiorly, instead of the sensible joy of this world, and does not receive the heavenly consolation of grace and a divine filling in the soul in appearance to him of the glory of the Lord, as it is written (Ps 17:15), and in a word, instead of this ephemeral enjoyment, does not even now possess in his soul the imperishable enjoyment that is greatly to be desired-this person has become salt without savor. This one is pitiful beyond all. This one even here has been deprived of things and has not enjoyed the divine gifts. He does not know divine mysteries by means of the workings of the Spirit in his inner man.

    2. For this is the reason why one becomes a stranger to the world so that his soul may pass in mind to the other world and to eternity, according to the Apostle. He says, “Our conversation is in Heaven” (Phil 3:20). And again, “Walking on earth, we do not war after the flesh” (2 Cor 10:3). Therefore, it is necessary that he who puts away this world must deeply believe that it is necessary to pass in mind even now through the Spirit into another age and there to have conversation and take pleasure and enjoyment in spiritual good things, and for the inner man to be born of the Spirit, as the Lord said: “He, who believes in me, has passed from death to life” (Jn 5:24). Indeed, there is another death than the physical one and another life other than the visible one. For Scripture says, “She who lives in pleasure is dead” (1 Tm 5:6), and , “Let the dead bury their dead” (Lk 9:60), because “the dead shall not praise you, Lord, but we who live” (Ps 115:17-18)
    lobsterJohn_Spencer


  • Christianity is about a relationship with God through Jesus. Thus behind Christianity is a philosophy that there lies an 'essential' person - two 'essential' people - the believer and Jesus. This brings into play a whole range of other aspects not the least of which is that of 'faith' which then leads into speculations about the 'reality' of heaven and hell.

    But @pineblossom, faith, heaven and hell are all concepts important in Buddhism too...

  • blu3reeblu3ree Veteran
    edited April 2013

    Although I must admit there are some (and more than I thought) similarities, I don't think I'll ever come around to the whole Jesus was a Buddha-thing ;)

    Maybe not a buddha, but a bodhisattva?
    After all didn't one end up becoming the Holy Spirit?
  • DakiniDakini Veteran

    The Old Testament I remember well from school,

    What school was that? They teach the Old Testament in school in your country? Was that a public school or a private one, or a religious school?

  • blu3ree said:

    Although I must admit there are some (and more than I thought) similarities, I don't think I'll ever come around to the whole Jesus was a Buddha-thing ;)

    Maybe not a buddha, but a bodhisattva?
    After all didn't one end up becoming the Holy Spirit?
    Depends on how you interpret it :) I reckon he ended up joining his Father in Heaven, and that he was born both god and man. Some believe he attained nibbana, some believe Gotama Buddha joined God like Jesus did later.
    Personally I just believe in the Buddha Dharma :)
    Dakini said:

    The Old Testament I remember well from school,

    What school was that? They teach the Old Testament in school in your country? Was that a public school or a private one, or a religious school?
    Just a normal, public school (publicly funded). Christianity is a class if the school so chooses. It can be called "Religion" if the school wants. When I went to school, we had Christianity to begin with (1. - 3. grade - both Biblical stories and ethics. Later it was changed to religion, and we were taught about other religions. The classes were seriously flawed, I later learned. The material which public school teachers use is often shallow and prejudiced, not above passing on old myths. Children are also supposed to go to church during school time on church holidays, although their parents can object to it.
    New liberal, liberal democratic and socialist parties often criticize the classes and teaching, however the actual ruling politicians are always social democrats or liberals, and they both support the current state of things.



  • blu3reeblu3ree Veteran
    edited April 2013
    @ficus_religiosa well what i think is important is Jesus was 13 then disappeared from the middle east till around 30ish and started his ministry which he performed "miracles".

    so what did he do during those 17 years?
    Where did he go?
    Why did he come back?

    Any self realized mindful sentient being knows buddha Dhamma whether they reguard it as Dhamma or as helping its still the same.
  • DakiniDakini Veteran


    Just a normal, public school (publicly funded). Christianity is a class if the school so chooses. It can be called "Religion" if the school wants. When I went to school, we had Christianity to begin with (1. - 3. grade - both Biblical stories and ethics. Later it was changed to religion, and we were taught about other religions. The classes were seriously flawed, I later learned. The material which public school teachers use is often shallow and prejudiced, not above passing on old myths. Children are also supposed to go to church during school time on church holidays, although their parents can object to it.
    New liberal, liberal democratic and socialist parties often criticize the classes and teaching, however the actual ruling politicians are always social democrats or liberals, and they both support the current state of things.

    From an American perspective, this is very strange. And a waste of school time. As a child, I wouldn't have tolerated this type of class.

    "Children are supposed to go to church during school time on church holidays"? REALLY?? I thought Europe was more secular than that. On other forums, Europeans have said north and central Europe isn't particularly religious. What you say sounds like something from the early 20th Century, lol! Sorry, but it's hard to believe this is going on now.

  • Dakini said:


    Just a normal, public school (publicly funded). Christianity is a class if the school so chooses. It can be called "Religion" if the school wants. When I went to school, we had Christianity to begin with (1. - 3. grade - both Biblical stories and ethics. Later it was changed to religion, and we were taught about other religions. The classes were seriously flawed, I later learned. The material which public school teachers use is often shallow and prejudiced, not above passing on old myths. Children are also supposed to go to church during school time on church holidays, although their parents can object to it.
    New liberal, liberal democratic and socialist parties often criticize the classes and teaching, however the actual ruling politicians are always social democrats or liberals, and they both support the current state of things.

    From an American perspective, this is very strange. And a waste of school time. As a child, I wouldn't have tolerated this type of class.

    "Children are supposed to go to church during school time on church holidays"? REALLY?? I thought Europe was more secular than that. On other forums, Europeans have said north and central Europe isn't particularly religious. What you say sounds like something from the early 20th Century, lol! Sorry, but it's hard to believe this is going on now.

    I think people (including Europeans) think that because people in general are somewhat liberal, while conservatives are relatively rare. Birth control, abortion, same-sex marriages and the like are still hot topics, though the classic, American "thunder-priests" are few in number. Europe is regrettably not as liberal, as most think.
    I remember being told not to kiss my girlfriend on a boat in Croatia, because "this is a Christian boat" - we were 16! In many countries, girls must cover their shoulders as not to faux pas, men should have short hair. All kinds of ridiculous, religiously-based cultural norms flourish all over this place. Especially in southern Europe, but as you see also in the north. The reason children are sent to church? "To learn about "our" culture", to "preserve "our" culture" - the usual stuff.

    Dakini
  • DakiniDakini Veteran
    edited April 2013
    Wow, thanks, Ficus! This has been eye-opening. I had no idea.

    Yeah, my mom made us go to Sunday church school with the "culture" excuse. She said religious themes appear in literature, so we should know that stuff. But I didn't allow any of that information to enter my mind. I distracted myself during each class, so I wouldn't hear any of it. Except for the 4th grade class, when we had a university student who taught us about World Religions, including Buddhism and Taoism. I got hooked on Buddhism as a result of that class. The following years, I would drop out mentally. It's a good thing that material wasn't forced on us in school, I would have flunked the course every year.

    :p
  • Well, I think that just like in the US, rural places are most (mono)religious while urban environments make space for diversity. In the city you can be alone while walking among thousands of people - an odd thought.
    And just like in the US, in the EU there's a powerful, Christian lobbying going on. I think it was a ban of pornography which was up (in the EU) not long ago - pornography! It fell, but still...
    Same-sex marriages in church was a major debate in my country just a few years ago. The law passed, but not easily. As was singles' right to adopt and same sex couples right to adopt.
    Same sex, registered partnerships were recognized in 1989 but did not give the same legal status as marriage. In all laws where the words "husband" and "wife" were used instead of "spouse", same-sex couples weren't counted in unless it would be openly meaningless to count them out. Seven years ago, the largest Christian missionary organization "Indremission" was given money from public funds to make a website about sexual relationships targeted at teens, while they also stopped the distribution of educational material to schools because it described sexual minorities and the most common sexual fetishes/games, like bondage. It was a CD-rom called "SexStars".
    There are so many examples...
  • blu3ree said:

    @ficus_religiosa well what i think is important is Jesus was 13 then disappeared from the middle east till around 30ish and started his ministry which he performed "miracles".

    so what did he do during those 17 years?
    Where did he go?
    Why did he come back?

    Any self realized mindful sentient being knows buddha Dhamma whether they reguard it as Dhamma or as helping its still the same.

    Well I don't know what he was up to in those years :P

    But yes, the Buddha Dhamma will be forgotten then re-found by a new Buddha once in a (long) while. I'm not sure Jesus is the one (Buddhism having survived perfectly fine in countries untouched by Christ), though the modern way to interpret the Bible and his actions makes him look like a real good person, and someone who would be a good Buddhist too :)
    nenkohai
  • DakiniDakini Veteran
    edited April 2013



    Europe is regrettably not as liberal, as most think.
    I remember being told not to kiss my girlfriend on a boat in Croatia, because "this is a Christian boat" - we were 16! In many countries, girls must cover their shoulders as not to faux pas, men should have short hair.

    These are the most surprising examples. And you say birth control is still controversial? Outside of Catholic countries? Even in Scandinavia??

    Single people were allowed to adopt in your country only a few years ago? In the US they've been allowed since at least the 1960's. A social worker would examine the case to make sure the individual was suitable, but I think that's the case with couples adoptions, too.

    "Thunder-priests" aren't the norm, here, btw. There are plenty of denominations that have just normal, quiet sermons. Fundamentalist sects are rare in some parts of the country, and, generally-speaking, are more popular in southern states. Along with snake handlers, people who speak in tongues, all kinds of exotic things. :D

  • vinlynvinlyn Colorado...for now Veteran
    Dakini said:


    Just a normal, public school (publicly funded). Christianity is a class if the school so chooses. It can be called "Religion" if the school wants. When I went to school, we had Christianity to begin with (1. - 3. grade - both Biblical stories and ethics. Later it was changed to religion, and we were taught about other religions. The classes were seriously flawed, I later learned. The material which public school teachers use is often shallow and prejudiced, not above passing on old myths. Children are also supposed to go to church during school time on church holidays, although their parents can object to it.
    New liberal, liberal democratic and socialist parties often criticize the classes and teaching, however the actual ruling politicians are always social democrats or liberals, and they both support the current state of things.

    From an American perspective, this is very strange. And a waste of school time. As a child, I wouldn't have tolerated this type of class.

    "Children are supposed to go to church during school time on church holidays"? REALLY?? I thought Europe was more secular than that. On other forums, Europeans have said north and central Europe isn't particularly religious. What you say sounds like something from the early 20th Century, lol! Sorry, but it's hard to believe this is going on now.

    Well, just depends on what era you were a child. In the 1950s and early 1960s, pm Wednesdays we were allowed to get out of school 1 hour early on Wednesdays to go to religious instruction at the church of our parents' choice.

  • When I was in elementary school we had the option of going to some kind of religioius class thing at the neighboring church. Myself and several other students always opted out. I haven't really thought about it until now, but that was really strange considering it was a public school. This would've been back in the mid to late 1980's. Granted the town I lived in was fairly conservative with very little cultural diversity (that's been changing since then).
  • vinlynvinlyn Colorado...for now Veteran
    black_tea said:

    When I was in elementary school we had the option of going to some kind of religioius class thing at the neighboring church. Myself and several other students always opted out. I haven't really thought about it until now, but that was really strange considering it was a public school. This would've been back in the mid to late 1980's. Granted the town I lived in was fairly conservative with very little cultural diversity (that's been changing since then).

    I am surprised that was happening as late as the late-1980s, but that was exactly what was happening in my town in the 1950s.

  • Dakini said:



    Europe is regrettably not as liberal, as most think.
    I remember being told not to kiss my girlfriend on a boat in Croatia, because "this is a Christian boat" - we were 16! In many countries, girls must cover their shoulders as not to faux pas, men should have short hair.

    These are the most surprising examples. And you say birth control is still controversial? Outside of Catholic countries? Even in Scandinavia??

    Single people were allowed to adopt in your country only a few years ago? In the US they've been allowed since at least the 1960's. A social worker would examine the case to make sure the individual was suitable, but I think that's the case with couples adoptions, too.

    "Thunder-priests" aren't the norm, here, btw. There are plenty of denominations that have just normal, quiet sermons. Fundamentalist sects are rare in some parts of the country, and, generally-speaking, are more popular in southern states. Along with snake handlers, people who speak in tongues, all kinds of exotic things. :D

    Not in Northern Europe, I have to admit that. There are conservative forces in Europe working against it though.

    Singles could not adopt a few years ago, but now they can. The debate is the interesting part - how suddenly conservative forces showed up everywhere.

    I know that fundamentalists are few in number, but they are - maybe due to prejudice - considered an American phenomenon. Fundamentalists in Europe hide, in the US they have TV-channels if you catch my drift :)

  • I'm not sure being against single-sex marriage and single-sex adoption makes one a fundamentalist Christian or even a conservative.

  • Florian said:

    I'm not sure being against single-sex marriage and single-sex adoption makes one a fundamentalist Christian or even a conservative.

    No one said so either. But those are views often held by people who, for some reason, feel they have some kind of right to make decisions in other people's personal lives and for example decide which kinds of relationships are OK and which are not
  • vinlynvinlyn Colorado...for now Veteran
    Florian said:

    I'm not sure being against single-sex marriage and single-sex adoption makes one a fundamentalist Christian or even a conservative.

    I agree, Florian.

    I think there is a tendency for people to get on their "high horse" and want to put down people that have views different from their own, or whose views they feel are not "enlightened" (and I mean that primarily in a non-Buddhist sense).

    As we see on this site every day, people have different moral viewpoints. And I know, for example, fundamentalist Christians who still think homosexual activities are immoral, but from a legal standpoint feel that gay people deserve all the rights that straight people have. It's very much like my personal stand on abortion...I don't personally think abortion is "right action" in most cases, but I do not believe that my personal moral view should be forced on others in a legal sense. It's sort of related to the separation of church and state.

    Ficus_religiosanenkohai
  • DakiniDakini Veteran
    vinlyn said:


    Well, just depends on what era you were a child. In the 1950s and early 1960s, pm Wednesdays we were allowed to get out of school 1 hour early on Wednesdays to go to religious instruction at the church of our parents' choice.

    Where did you live? I can guarantee you, that wasn't happening on the West Coast.

  • DakiniDakini Veteran

    I know that fundamentalists are few in number, but they are - maybe due to prejudice - considered an American phenomenon. Fundamentalists in Europe hide, in the US they have TV-channels if you catch my drift :)

    Yes, true. And George W. Bush gave them a platform, once he realized they were a potential voting bloc to be tapped. He encouraged them. Before he came along, they were a fringe phenomenon. They were considered to be extremists, even if they had their own TV program or channel.

  • FlorianFlorian Veteran
    edited April 2013

    Florian said:

    I'm not sure being against single-sex marriage and single-sex adoption makes one a fundamentalist Christian or even a conservative.

    No one said so either. But those are views often held by people who, for some reason, feel they have some kind of right to make decisions in other people's personal lives and for example decide which kinds of relationships are OK and which are not
    Yes. Our government is clearly convinced they have the right to make such decisions. Ridiculous. Okay, okay. I know this isn't what you meant, but ...

  • CittaCitta Veteran

    Dakini said:



    Europe is regrettably not as liberal, as most think.
    I remember being told not to kiss my girlfriend on a boat in Croatia, because "this is a Christian boat" - we were 16! In many countries, girls must cover their shoulders as not to faux pas, men should have short hair.

    These are the most surprising examples. And you say birth control is still controversial? Outside of Catholic countries? Even in Scandinavia??

    Single people were allowed to adopt in your country only a few years ago? In the US they've been allowed since at least the 1960's. A social worker would examine the case to make sure the individual was suitable, but I think that's the case with couples adoptions, too.

    "Thunder-priests" aren't the norm, here, btw. There are plenty of denominations that have just normal, quiet sermons. Fundamentalist sects are rare in some parts of the country, and, generally-speaking, are more popular in southern states. Along with snake handlers, people who speak in tongues, all kinds of exotic things. :D

    Not in Northern Europe, I have to admit that. There are conservative forces in Europe working against it though.

    Singles could not adopt a few years ago, but now they can. The debate is the interesting part - how suddenly conservative forces showed up everywhere.

    I know that fundamentalists are few in number, but they are - maybe due to prejudice - considered an American phenomenon. Fundamentalists in Europe hide, in the US they have TV-channels if you catch my drift :)

    Its not so much that they hide...in northern Europe and the UK Christian Fundamentalists truly are a small minority. Check out the figures. In The UK which still regards itself as nominally Christian the proportion of Evangelicals is tiny ..its in the tens of thousands from a population of 60 -plus million.
    An English televangelist would have no audience.
  • I agree it's not so much they "hide".... the relatively few fundies there are in western European countries seem to be much less tolerated than in the USA. They get no support, really- like @citta said, they've got no 'audience'.

    In the USA money talks and some of the most well funded and generously corrupting forces are the groups and extremists who have been planning and working on "Christianizing America" since the mid-late 1980's.
    So it's our very own conservative and right-wing politicians (and certain media outlets) who support these fringe groups... all because of the $$ they give and the FEAR they generate amongst the lesser educated and worldly-wise public.
  • CittaCitta Veteran
    Fundamentalist Christianity is just not mainstream in Europe..for example here in the UK it would be as politically damaging to anyone who sought high office to be identified as a Creationist as it would be for an American presidential candidate to be outed as gay...
    I am not comparing the two in any way of course..
    Just saying that there are differences in what are seen as mainstream in the US and Europe.
  • I actually said, that fundamentalists are few in number, but Christian ethics* still have a major - and damaging imo - influence in all of Europe. Hence why danish children are sent to church on church holidays, even though Denmark is considered very liberal and secular. Our constitution places Christianity over other religions and the monarch has to be member of the Lutheran church "Folkekirken" (though he/she does not have to believe in God, since it would be impossible to ensure anyway).
    Apart from Danish pupils I gave a few examples of what I've experienced when traveling Europe and what legislation is being proposed in the EU.
    Christianity is not in our faces, but under our skin.

    *that is, unnecessary, petty rules of "proper morale" derived from "Christianity", which have very little to do with the message and more to do with norms from the patriarchal society of old
  • Just wanted to add, that over the last few months I've warmed more up to Christianity... Which is weird to me, but not totally unexpected given the existential crisis my "quest to come around" started..
    Now I also understand how a lot of people can mix Christianity and Buddhism.. These are interesting times - in my mind at least :)
    riverflow
  • In the past few months I've come to a similar conclusion. Both traditions approach things differently, but they can also equally shed light on one another that can mutually enhance the practice of both (cf. Thomas Merton "Zen and the Birds of Appetite" and Thich Nhat Hanh's "Living Buddha, Living Christ").

    I've found it very liberating.
    Ficus_religiosaKundo
  • TheEccentricTheEccentric Hampshire, UK Veteran
    I don't understand what is to like about it, it. Is just any ridiculous explanation to how the world was created that distracts and pulls away others from following the path to liberation and keeps us in samsara.
    blu3ree said:

    Although I must admit there are some (and more than I thought) similarities, I don't think I'll ever come around to the whole Jesus was a Buddha-thing ;)

    Maybe not a buddha, but a bodhisattva?
    After all didn't one end up becoming the Holy Spirit?
    He was not any type of Buddhist, he did not teach the four noble truths also his belief in a creator God, holy spirit and soul contradicts dependent origination and emptiness.

    The ideaof the compatibility of Buddhism and Christianity and of Jesus being a Buddhist is just what some people want to believe.
  • Buddhism and Christianity represent two different paths, but they both have the capacity to awaken compassion.

    An aspiring concert pianist focuses on practicing the piano, but she may learn much by observing other instruments which may enhance her own skills with the piano.

    We need less dotted lines, not more. It opens the lines of communication so different spiritual practices can mutually grow together rather than merely shaking fists at one another. It belies a lack of spiritual maturity and courage. Getting attached to methods of non-attachment becomes yet another samsaric attachment.

    The first of the fourteen mindfulness trainings of Thich Nhat Hanh states:

    "Aware of the suffering created by fanaticism and intolerance, we are determined not to be idolatrous about or bound to any doctrine, theory, or ideology, even Buddhist ones. We are committed to seeing the Buddhist teachings as guiding means that help us learn to look deeply and develop our understanding and compassion. They are not doctrines to fight, kill, or die for. We understand that fanaticism in its many forms is the result of perceiving things in a dualistic and discriminative manner. We will train ourselves to look at everything with openness and the insight of interbeing in order to transform dogmatism and violence in ourselves and in the world."

    What good does it do to cling to exclusivity just as other fundamentalists do?

    vinlynJeffreyKundo
  • I don't understand what is to like about it, it. Is just any ridiculous explanation to how the world was created that distracts and pulls away others from following the path to liberation and keeps us in samsara.

    blu3ree said:

    Although I must admit there are some (and more than I thought) similarities, I don't think I'll ever come around to the whole Jesus was a Buddha-thing ;)

    Maybe not a buddha, but a bodhisattva?
    After all didn't one end up becoming the Holy Spirit?
    He was not any type of Buddhist, he did not teach the four noble truths also his belief in a creator God, holy spirit and soul contradicts dependent origination and emptiness.

    The ideaof the compatibility of Buddhism and Christianity and of Jesus being a Buddhist is just what some people want to believe.
    I totally see what you mean. I also agree that the cosmology of the religions are incompatible and the goals are different. In Lutheranism - the branch I was born into, later rejected, now finding was too harsh in the rejection - the goal is to believe and be saved from death and sin by God through Jesus. In Buddhism it's stopping samsara through The Noble Eightfold Path. To Buddhism, Christianity is just something which is not inherently true and which will not lead to Nibbana. I get this.
    What I have learned is, that while Christians can be bad people, Christianity is not in itself bad and certainly has it's merits (my new discovery is the merits part).

    On the whole I think I cannot be said to be either Christian nor Buddhist. It doesn't matter to me. My goal in life is to grow as a human being, becoming ever more gentle and wiser. And part of that is making up with my age-old enemy, Christianity along with a bunch of other things I need to learn. And I think I'm slowly progressing, thank God ;)
    riverflowvinlynKundo
  • @Ficus_religiosa - speaking of Lutheranism, I've found Paul Tillich's writings very insightful. Not exactly your run of the mill Lutheran! The first volume of his Systematic Theology blew my mind!
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