D
daler
Guest
Victor,Example: I have grown up in a Buddhist environment…
I have tried very hard to understand the motivations of Atheists…
Hmm I cannot speak for all Buddhists of course maybe there are those that indeed think that Nibbana is the same thing as the Source. The Mahayana bodisattva ideal is probably a lot closer to your viewpoint than my theravada standpoint.
I am actually one of those that view nibbana as a form of personal salvation. My aim in that department is egotistic and not altruistic as the Mahayanans.
But I also have children and that makes me want to leave behind a place that is better for them. Again a selfish motive. But I do not claim sainthood.
For me Nibbana is the opposite of Samsara. Yet for now I am a part of this world and I view it as my duty to work for its betterment to the best of my ability until I can finally rest in the embrace of nibbana. I guess that somewhere along the way I will have to put that aside but not yet I think. That is the distinction I am pointing out. The Path to God is embedded in the Dhamma but it is not the final destination of the Dhamma.
Also as the Love for the beings of this world increases the discrimination of my needs for my sons and for the population in large decreases.
A catholic asked me If it is not so that a Buddhist must give up attachment for his family? I said that it is not because the love for the family decreases but because the love of all the beings in the world increases until there is no distinction any more.
Have you read the sutta of loving kindness?
accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/kn/snp/snp.1.08.piya.html
I think you will like it.
. That is a very good sutta. Much of the essence of Buddhism is contained in it, and why there is such a strong attraction to the teachings of Buddha. I find it interesting that you were raised in a Buddhist environment, which I would deem very healthy. There was a lot of turmoil and stress in my home, but also a lot of good things we did as a family. My grandmother’s presence was very helpful and calming. She was descended from a long line of Quakers, and it was apparent in her.
. Some atheists I’ve known have a good moral compass and I’ve concluded that many of them have arrived at their position as a result of the hypocrisy of the church, such that they’ve thrown the baby out with the bathwater. That is, had “people of faith” truly followed the teachings and lived exemplary lives there would have been no reason to go tangent to it. Also, the absurdity of literal interpretations in a scientific era of religious stories predisposes thinking people to regard much of what “religious” people believe as nonsense, which is sad, because at the base of it we need religion, in whatever form.
. I would think that your vision of Nibbana encompasses right action and living up to your responsibilities both to your family and society as a whole and in that sense, are perhaps inseparable. The Christian concept of “eternal rest” as a reward may in fact be quite similar in the end, although not described as such.
. I would definitely agree that Nibbana and Samsara are like order and chaos, and that the way out of chaos is order, which requires discipline, or a Right Path, as well as detachment being central to achieving a state of eternal happiness. We are born into this world “wanting” everything, and that is the natural order of things for a time, as we actually need the things of this world for a time. At some point, however, this world is receding from us and we must no longer cling to it or we will suffer continuously until we let it go, at which point we enter another higher stage of being. It is like a chick which must give up the shell which housed and protected it for a term.
. It occurred to me last nite to respond to something you said earlier concerning Gautama being merely a human who discovered the path to enlightenment and I wanted to share something from Baha’u’llah which might be parallel.
. " I was but a man like others, asleep upon My couch, when lo, the breezes of the All-Glorious were wafted over Me, and taught Me the knowledge of all that hath been. This thing is not from Me, but from One Who is Almighty and All-Knowing. And He bade Me lift up My voice between earth and heaven, and for this there befell Me what hath caused the tears of every man of understanding to flow. The learning current amongst men I studied not; their schools I entered not. Ask of the city wherein I dwelt, that thou mayest be well assured that I am not of them who speak falsely."
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