God’s blessing on your day.
Great question, how indeed can there be no “self” ? Whether put into several parts forming an “illusion” or whatever way the “self” is described as “non existent,” as a Catholic, I would not ponder this too long, as we, as believers in Christ, well know that whatever we call our “selves,” we live our life to worship and glorify God, to keep His commandments and* love others as our “selves.”’ * God loves all, whatever religion, yet I believe some mysteries will be answered in this life, and some in another. :heaven:
Semantics can be interesting, but best to remember that
Christ Himself referred to our denying our “selves,” taking up our cross and following Him
There must, then, truly be a “self” in there somewhere! :angel1:
Peace to all here.
Kathryn Ann
Hi Kathryn Ann: There is a self, however, it is far greater than the instrument of sentience that we call ourselves. It is the core of all beings, and there is only one Self, expressed as many. Hidden behind the veil of sentient experience, the Self is the One Soul throughout all creation. He is the Father and the Son, and He is the saint and the thief.
The Self was never born, nor will It ever die.
Beyond cause and effect, the Self is eternal and immutable.
When the body dies, the Self does not die.
Hidden in the heart of every creature exists the Self, subtler than the subtlest, greater than the greatest.
They go beyond all sorrow who extinguish their self-will and behold the glory of the Self.
The Self cannot be known through study of the scriptures, nor through the intellect, nor through hearing discourses about it.
There is no one but the Self.
He is fire and the sun and the moon and the stars.
He is the air and the sea and the creator.
He is this boy, He is that girl, this man, that woman.
His face is everywhere.
He has no beginning; He has no end. He is the source from whom the worlds evolve.
That non-dual Self, though never stirring, is swifter than the mind. The senses cannot reach It, for It moves ever in front. Though standing still, It overtakes others who are running.
It moves and moves not; It is far and likewise near. It is inside all this and It is outside all this.
**The wise man beholds all beings in the Self and the Self in all beings; for that reason he does not hate anyone.
To the seer, all things have verily become the Self: what delusion, what sorrow, can there be for him who beholds that oneness?
It is He who pervades all.**
H
e who sees everything in relation to the Supreme Lord, who sees all living entities as His living parts and parcels, and who sees the Supreme Lord within everything never hates anything or any being.
He is not someone other than you.
This is why Jesus says to “love God and love your neighbor as yourself.” It is also why He said that “whatsoever you do to the least of my brothers, you have also done to me.”
Your friend
Sufjon