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Buddhism: religion for the non-religious?

BuddhadragonBuddhadragon Ehipassiko & Carpe DiemSamsara Veteran

I was tweeted this very interesting article by Melvin McLeod from "The Lion's Roar."
The article's title is "Are you Spiritual but not Religious? 10 Reasons why Buddhism will enrich your Path."

I think it provides good food for thought, while at the same time it tackles some Buddhist basics which render it more clear for beginners.
It also deals with issues we are constantly discussing, such as God or salvation.

http://www.lionsroar.com/are-you-spiritual-but-not-religious-10-reasons-why-buddhism-will-enrich-your-path-november-2013/

In McLeod's own words:
_"What we find is that Buddhism works. For millennia, Buddhism has been making people more aware, caring, and skillful. All you have to do is meet someone who’s been practicing meditation a lot to know that. In our own time, hundreds of thousands of Americans are reporting that even a modest Buddhist practice has made their life better — they’re calmer, happier, and not as carried away when strong emotions arise. They’re kinder to themselves and others.

But it’s really important not to burden ourselves with unrealistic expectations. Change comes very slowly. You’ll also see that when you meet a Buddhist meditator, even one who’s been at it for a long time. Don’t expect perfection. We’re working with patterns of ignorance, greed, and anger that have developed over a lifetime — if not much longer. Change comes slowly for most of us. But it does come. If you stick with it, that’s guaranteed. Buddhism works.

This is not an attempt to convert anyone to Buddhism. There is no need for that. But those who think of themselves as spiritual but not religious can find a lot in Buddhism to help them on their personal path, however they define it."_

ZenshinDavidpersonBunkslobsterShoshinToraldrismmo

Comments

  • ToraldrisToraldris   -`-,-{@     Zen Nud... Buddhist     @}-,-`-   East Coast, USA Veteran
    edited October 2014

    I didn't even consider myself spiritual pre-Buddhism, and if I use the word now it's tied to my practice. "Spiritual" is one of those vague words that can mean different things to different people.

    BuddhadragonRowan1980
  • BuddhadragonBuddhadragon Ehipassiko & Carpe Diem Samsara Veteran

    I had the opposite experience, @Toraldris: I have always considered myself very spiritual, but since I don't believe in a god, it was believers who thought I wasn't.

    Toraldrislobster
  • ToraldrisToraldris   -`-,-{@     Zen Nud... Buddhist     @}-,-`-   East Coast, USA Veteran
    edited October 2014

    @DhammaDragon said: I have always considered myself very spiritual, but since I don't believe in a god, it was believers who thought I wasn't.

    What really matters then is what you mean by spiritual. ;) That's the reason believers thought you weren't; they mean something else by the word.

    I may in fact be spiritual in a certain sense; I'm definitely a seeker of truth and peace, always in awe of life, the universe, and everything... but like you I don't believe in a god.

  • DavidDavid A human residing in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Ancestral territory of the Erie, Haudenosaunee, Huron-Wendat, Mississauga and Neutral First Nations Veteran
    edited October 2014

    Although I think the meaning of "religious" is lacking here, I was impressed when I first saw this video. I can relate.

    Dang, I don't remember how to post a video. Maybe this will work

    My spirituality as an Atheist

    BuddhadragonbookwormShoshinsamson
  • BuddhadragonBuddhadragon Ehipassiko & Carpe Diem Samsara Veteran

    That was beautiful, @ourself!
    In a very strange way, it reminded me of Carl Sagan's fabulous "Cosmos" series.
    A confessed atheist himself, his series and books bespeak of a man who not only was very spiritual, but also lived in awe of a universe whose creator he did not care to acknowledge.

    The article has other points beyond the atheists vs God debate, though.

    In point #6, McLeod replaces the word "God" by "Mind:"
    "Buddhism definitely asserts there is a reality that is not material. Other religions say that too; the difference is that in Buddhism this spiritual reality is not God. It is mind."

    He even proposes a sort of koan for us to investigate:
    "Where is the boundary of my mind? Is it large or small? Is it inside me looking at the material world outside? Or are my perceptions and my experience of them both mind? (And if so, perhaps it's the material world we should be questioning the reality of."

    Nerima
  • @ourself said:
    Although I think the meaning of "religious" is lacking here, I was impressed when I first saw this video. I can relate.

    Dang, I don't remember how to post a video. Maybe this will work

    My spirituality as an Atheist

    I really liked when this guy said "being grateful to be alive doesn't require a person to be grateful toward." ....What i like about Buddhist philosophy is that we are not expected to bow down in worship to any deity that may or may not exist. Buddhism doesn't require wars, greed, eternities in any "hell", etc. to work for us. In fact, I believe Buddhism takes all of the good points that can usually be found in most any religion and focuses on only those things. It is a fully realistic experience that anyone can benefit from.

    ZenshinToraldris
  • HamsakaHamsaka goosewhisperer Polishing the 'just so' Veteran

    I wonder about the 'directionality' (?) of, for instance, being grateful TO versus being grateful FOR.

    Theism's direction is away from the individual 'self' , and nontheism implies a direction that goes within, passing by the individual 'self' on its way toward . . . um . . . :) .

    I can say this here without instigating the villagers with pitchforks, but I wonder if theism is a matter of simple psychological projection. The more primitive psychology 'projects' it's contents outward and away from the individual self. A more mature psychology does not project its contents, it 'owns' them. This is just plain old well known psychology. Projection is a kind of defense mechanism that is hopefully outgrown. It is a developmental state on the continuum of taking personal responsibility for your 'self' in the world. Projection is appropriate for young children, but in an adult it is disturbing. We've all met persons who project their negativity onto something outside themselves, its the way racism and the other -isms operate. Simple us versus them. It bypasses any personal responsibility FOR the projected qualities. It is a source of suffering we 'do' to ourselves. It is a kind of sankhara dukkha.

    IOW, theism creates a kind of sankhara dukkha, the suffering of attachment to conditions. Its the fear in my Christian friend to imagine there is no God out there caring about her, listening to her and loving her. Theism cannot 'be' unaccompanied by fear.

    ZenshinToraldrislobster
  • Interesting points guys,

    I find Tao is a concept I relate to. In Qabbalah the Ain Soph Aur is well above any concepts of existence or knowability and in Sufism and some Christian higher stages of knowing, we can not describe Presence in terms of being. The Buddhist realisation often begins from this absence.

    So as an atheist it is quite easy for me to engage a speculative quack Quantum Mysticism that transcends binary 'either or' Being.

    As a mystic Buddhist which hopefully is a heretical concept for the secular dharmaists, I am not too worried by labels of spirituality, Buddhist, misfit or mystic. Just label/attachments.

    The important aspects of dharma are pragmatic and can be practiced devoid of religion. The same is more difficult for other regions of religious belief.
    http://www.dharmaseed.org/retreats/1494

    Toraldris
  • HamsakaHamsaka goosewhisperer Polishing the 'just so' Veteran

    The important aspects of dharma are pragmatic and can be practiced devoid of religion.

    That's my understanding too. It's still true that what we experience as 'pragmatic' are also quantum phenomena. Our brains operate on the edge where we can still do math and where chaos takes over. Teensy little firings become big mental bangs by a quantum effect. Quantum mysticism seems a natural response, but egos are just too tempted. SHINY!!! Mine! Me!

    What's a good or 'your favorite' reference to the Tao? Like a Tao for dummies?

  • ^^^ Probably the Tao Te Ching, Tao influenced Chan\Zen
    http://m.wikihow.com/Become-a-Taoist

  • ToraldrisToraldris   -`-,-{@     Zen Nud... Buddhist     @}-,-`-   East Coast, USA Veteran
    edited November 2014

    I was finally able to read the article in full... great stuff! When I was last speaking with a long-distance Christian friend, they tried to direct me to a page/video with a Christian apologist explaining the shortcomings of Buddhism from a Christian perspective. I consider that akin to a horror-enthusiast calling romance movies terrible just because they don't have enough blood & gore in them.

    This article, though, isn't attacking other religions -- it's just explaining an overview of Buddhism, mostly as practiced here in the West. I didn't find myself saying "now that's not right!" at any point while reading it, and came away from the experience thinking it's completely appropriate to share with my friends and family (such as on Facebook). Not simply appropriate, but potentially very helpful in revealing Buddhism to them in a non-confrontational way!

  • BuddhadragonBuddhadragon Ehipassiko & Carpe Diem Samsara Veteran

    The article basically aims to explain why Buddhism has become -or could - become the perfect alternative for those people who feel a longing for spirituality but don't feel represented by most major religions.

  • @DhammaDragon said:
    The article basically aims to explain why Buddhism has become -or could - become the perfect alternative for those people who feel a longing for spirituality but don't feel represented by most major religions.

    Indeed.

    It almost seems like a religion designed with the modern western mind in mind, if you know what I mean.

    However, I am constantly amazed at the parallels and similarities between Buddhism and most other religions. What I am learning about Buddhism has made me a lot more understanding of everyone else's religious beliefs.

    Buddhadragonvinlyn
  • ChazChaz The Remarkable Chaz Anywhere, Everywhere & Nowhere Veteran

    @Yorkshireman said:
    However, I am constantly amazed at the parallels and similarities between Buddhism and most other religions. What I am learning about Buddhism has made me a lot more understanding of everyone else's religious beliefs.

    There is a great deal of similarity there.

    Joseph Campbell saw this, too and wrote a number of books on cross-cultural mythology. He identified a core of common mythological archtypes he called monomyth.

    People I think are equally similar. Even people who would consider themselves non-religious can quickly become religious given the right set of circumstances. It can even be very subtle - so much so that the person may not realize what's happening. One example would be the non-religious person flirting with Buddhism and over time being drawn more deeply into the traditions, rituals and so on as they gain meaning to the individual.

    That's kinda what happened to me.

    anataman
  • > One example would be the non-religious person flirting with Buddhism and over time being drawn more deeply into the traditions, rituals and so on as they gain meaning to the individual.

    > That's kinda what happened to me.

    Yes. I've found that happening to me too. Initially, I was slightly bemused by the traditional side of things, but now I see the importance of a lot of it - not all I might add, but a lot.
  • I have found that, for myself, Buddhism helps me focus on the here and now.

    Awesome. Well said.

    Personal, skilful means. Nothing beats it (so to speak). <3
    It ain't easy. It ain't perfect but it sure helps.

    Dharma Confirmed.

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