D
daler
Guest
Victor,Yes something like that!
Desire and aversion are the driving force of becoming and finally birth, aging, decay and death.
The dependent origination of the self of which desire is one part is based on greed , hatred and ignorance of the Way.
Buddhism is the tool to let go of the attachment to worldly things, which in buddhist vocabulary also means letting go of attachment to God and Heaven. So for a buddhist the above citation is not actually accurate.
But it is pretty good all the same.
/Victor
. The best I can relate to your references here to detachment even from God and Heaven, from the Bahai perspective comes to me from Selections from the Writings of the Bab:
. "Worship thou God in such wise that if thy worship lead thee to the fire, no alteration in thine adoration would be produced, and so likewise if thy recompense should be paradise. Thus and thus alone should be the worship which befitteth the one True God. Shouldst thou worship Him because of fear, this would be unseemly in the sanctified Court of His presence, and could not be regarded as an act by thee dedicated to the Oneness of His Being. Or if thy gaze should be on paradise, and thou shouldst worship Him while cherishing such a hope, thou wouldst make God’s creation a partner with Him, notwithstanding the fact that paradise is desired by men.
Fire and paradise both bow down and prostrate themselves before God. That which is worthy of His Essence is to worship Him for His sake, without fear of fire, or hope of paradise.
Although when true worship is offered, the worshipper is delivered from the fire, and entereth the paradise of God’s good-pleasure, yet such should not be the motive of his act. However, God’s favour and grace ever flow in accordance with the exigencies of His inscrutable wisdom."
Does this in any way connect or resonate with you from the standpoint of your understanding of the Buddha’s teachings?
Thank you so much for your continued dialogue with me. I am relearning much which I had not looked at for some thirty years or more, except on occasion. It is reviving to restudy these concepts as it returns me to that time in my life, late teens, early twenties, when Buddha was my Jesus, when I had given up on Jesus because of the hypocrisy in the Church at the time, what with all the racism, materialism, Viet Nam war, etc, etc. It took me a few years to come back to accepting Christ again, realizing that the sins of those who called themselves by His name were not caused by Him.
. I still see them now as two wells from which the same underground stream of crystal pure water of life flows for those who are thirsty. The incredible wisdom and beauty of the words of both Buddha and Jesus astound me.
Thank you, brother
Namaste