A
ahimsaman72
Guest
cont…
quoted from StubbleSpark
I have been on a long, arduous journey for some time now to find the spiritual path I’m destined to be on. In the end, I have to make that choice, whether it is Christianity, Buddhism or something else. I expect others to do the same. To do otherwise is to be dishonest with one’s own conscience.
And, there is no room for downplaying traits of Buddhism. I am not ashamed of Buddhism or the teachings and would never downplay certain traits because it is politically correct to do so or seems erroneous at first glance. Again, to do otherwise would be dishonest and slandering the Buddha and his teachings. I do not have full understanding of the faith, only a limited one. I am not free from error in my own understanding.
Peace…
quoted from StubbleSpark
I never said that fundamental “truths” change and depend entirely on place and time. I’m simply saying that some practices (extrinsic) are mostly cultural. All schools believe in the Buddha and the four noble truths and the eightfold path and that morality, meditation and wisdom lead to nirvana. How one practices these can vary depending on the culture. All roads lead to nirvana however.Also, in my above comparison regarding the universality of Catholicism versus the limited nature of Buddhism, I was not trying to compare apples and oranges. It is just that, as Catholics, we are taught that Truth has his own nature – we recognize it when we see it. So we can also recognize when a given belief system has a little truth, some truth, or in the case of Catholicism the fullness of the truth.
So the argument that Buddhism remains inconstant – changing fundamental “truths” depending on the place and time, that its full practice is limited to a given extrinsic cultural mindset, that certain personality types cannot as easily access those truths … all these arguments are indeed condemning for the Catholic mind. They are big red flags that say: seek elsewhere.
I personally don’t want to win Catholic converts. I don’t believe in trying to get others over to “my way of thinking”. Buddhism doesn’t want to “win” converts either which is obvious since as I stated before that Buddhism hasn’t forced people to believe as they do which doesn’t work anyway. People have to be convinced of themselves that a path is right or wrong for them. I hope to don’t misunderstand my intentions here on the forum.All I am saying, is that if you want to win Catholic converts to Buddhism, you would want to downplay those traits.
I have been on a long, arduous journey for some time now to find the spiritual path I’m destined to be on. In the end, I have to make that choice, whether it is Christianity, Buddhism or something else. I expect others to do the same. To do otherwise is to be dishonest with one’s own conscience.
And, there is no room for downplaying traits of Buddhism. I am not ashamed of Buddhism or the teachings and would never downplay certain traits because it is politically correct to do so or seems erroneous at first glance. Again, to do otherwise would be dishonest and slandering the Buddha and his teachings. I do not have full understanding of the faith, only a limited one. I am not free from error in my own understanding.
Peace…