Originally Posted by Gary Sheldrake
I wonder how many Christians would care much about Christ if there was no promise of heaven and no threat of hell. If Christ said “love one another, but when you’re dead you’re dead” how crowded would the churches be? To be honest, I think many if not most Christians do their best simply for attainment of rewards and avoidance of punishment, and to be even more honest, a domesticated dog is capable of the same. If anyone is inclined to take exception to that, I would ask that they make sure they are in truth doing better than that before objecting. I just want some honest dialog on this point.
My favorite atheist has said that “I would be an *** to waste this one life doing harm to anyone, and I would only benefit from enhancing the life of others. This world, this Universe, both are overwhelming wonders! I want to preserve its beauty, promote knowledge and understanding of how it works, and improve the lives of all whom I know.” there is no fear of death or extinction in him (he’s tasted death, so I don’t doubt him,) and he needs no reward beyond the satisfaction of doing the best good he can. What’s wrong with that?
I see, for my part, that an understanding of consequence is far more useful than the concepts of future reward or punishment. The law of reciprocity can be understood to cover all of our thoughts, words, and deeds. And speaking of those, somehow we need to account for the myriad random thoughts that come to each one. Are we really dealing solely (ha-ha) with angels and demons and God? A minimum of self examination will reveal how it happens that we grow up not far from the tree we fell from, why we turn often into our parents, and how those jingles and slogans magically take over a portion of our day.
And really, the ordinary civil dictums for taking care of business are sufficient for commandments. What is at question is the governance of desire and the sense of self. And this is where in my experience and opinion Buddhism, Zen, and non dualism excel. When did you last hear of a Buddhist starting a war? Or a cabal of Zen practitioners descending on a village of Muslims or Catholics? And most people haven’t even a clue as to what non dualism is about, because those people absolutely blend in and work pretty much in secret. Heck, they usually don’t even believe there is work to be done, thereby de-fusing all sorts of potential mayhem.
Worship God? What do you do that
isn’t an act of worship? How many have experienced the utter peace and silence of just being present? Hopefully many have. But is that a denominational experience while you are in it? No. It just IS. Your habitual thinking about it later may put it in a category it can’t fit into. If you have had such an experience, was it on your mind to go break a commandment when you came out of it? I would bet that rules, regs, tenets and dogmas were about the last thing in your mind or heart. There was only embracing presence, such as Tigg recommended we have for our brothers ans sisters. Problem? Yes. There was no need to pray for them. They are already perfectly where they need to be to learn what is needed.
The prime thing here is not a matter of denomination and its conceptual delineations of pedigree and paradigm structure. Love is a functional virtue operating in the moment at hand. It really doesn’t give a hoot about your denomination or naming itself as being a particular brand. “Lets do some Muslim Love” “Hey, we’re into Protestant Love” "Wow, did you see that couple save those people from the burning car? They
must be doing Catholic Love! " Attribute it as a mental concept how you like, yet it is just what it is, regardless of any labeling. The labeling tells about your limits, not about Love. And that may be, as well, where people mistake the Christ.
Fact is, if you operate from ego, and limit that ego to being a denominational one, the likelihood of harm is far greater. Ego is fear and restriction. It is the inherent sense of separation which prayer, contemplation, and meditation, ie the interior life, tends to overcome. And that is always a matter of greater inclusion of others as self. If you want to think of that in terms of your religious framework fine. But in fact it isn’t limited to that, and you lose by keeping it there. And how that works might just be explicated a bit by that Buddhist monk!
