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SteveVH
Guest
Heresy is would not be the correct term in this case. Heresy is a wrong interpretation and practice of Christian doctrine. It is supernatural happiness that we should be trying to obtain and that can only occur by being in union with God. Our meditation should be a meditation on God, not a means to escape the reality of the human condition. It seems to me that the purpose of Buddhist meditation is to escape suffering the natural world by arriving at a state of “nothingness”. True happiness is not the absence of suffering, but rather the presence of God even in the midst of suffering. So, our focus must always be on God and to change that focus to one of blissful nothingness is not heresy but rather sin because it is a focus upon ourselves rather than God.
- I am not saying that a Catholic should try to use Buddhist meditation to attain Nibbana or even believe in Nibbana. Rather, I am saying that a Catholic may use meditation to enjoy a measure of natural happiness that falls short of Nibbana and that this isn’t heretical. I am not advocating blending the religions together, but answering the question of whether or not a Catholic can practice Buddhist meditation without falling into heresy.