F
frankbeenaround
Guest
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In 1999 I came back to the Church after an absence of 35 years. During much of the “time away” I investigated Buddhism – first Zen, then Theravada, then the Vajrayana of the Tibetans. So, a lot of traveling in abroad.
In returning to Catholicism I brought certain elements of the Dharma with me: most important, the truth of impermanence, and of “sunyata”, or emptiness. That is, emptiness of any fixed, permanent selfhood. Recently I came across this quote from a work by Thomas Merton. It seems to frame the sunyata concept in Christian terms, and beautifully so. The quote in below.
Peace, All
~ Frank
In 1999 I came back to the Church after an absence of 35 years. During much of the “time away” I investigated Buddhism – first Zen, then Theravada, then the Vajrayana of the Tibetans. So, a lot of traveling in abroad.
In returning to Catholicism I brought certain elements of the Dharma with me: most important, the truth of impermanence, and of “sunyata”, or emptiness. That is, emptiness of any fixed, permanent selfhood. Recently I came across this quote from a work by Thomas Merton. It seems to frame the sunyata concept in Christian terms, and beautifully so. The quote in below.
Peace, All
~ Frank