| Belief and Spirituality General thinking beyond the boundaries of religion and organised belief |
04-27-2005, 09:22 PM
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#61 (permalink)
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?
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Kansas
Posts: 1,325
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Re: Spiritual fascism
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
Namaste all,
from what i've come to understand, the word "sin" means "missing the mark". i've had it explained to me that this means to indicate that we are not aligning our will with Gods will.
needless to say, this entire concept is build upon a theological model that many people do not subscribe to which is why i don't understand phrases like "everyone sins". i just don't grasp the significance of this statement when it could be referring to someone that does not have a belief in the Deity to which this is allegedly affronting.
if someone could explain this to me, i'd be greatful.
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As I understand it, in the Greek editions of the early Bible, the Greek term for "sin" meant to miss the mark. Admittedly, my interpretations of Christianity are actually heavily flavored by my study of Buddhism as i tend to look for the commonalities to both, (that's just my thing  ) But this definition of "sin" seems to me to be rather similar to a definition i had heard for "dukkha," which, not having clear-cut English word equivalents was explained as essentially like the metahpor of a wheel not revolving well around its axle. Take care, Earl
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04-27-2005, 09:24 PM
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#62 (permalink)
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?
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Kansas
Posts: 1,325
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Re: Spiritual fascism
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Originally Posted by earl
As I understand it, in the Greek editions of the early Bible, the Greek term for "sin" meant to miss the mark. Admittedly, my interpretations of Christianity are actually heavily flavored by my study of Buddhism as i tend to look for the commonalities to both, (that's just my thing  ) But this definition of "sin" seems to me to be rather similar to a definition i had heard for "dukkha," which, not having clear-cut English word equivalents was explained as essentially like the metahpor of a wheel not revolving well around its axle. Take care, Earl
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Oops, meant to include that Greek term: "hamartia. Earl
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04-27-2005, 09:44 PM
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#63 (permalink)
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Ferally Decent
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Texas
Posts: 745
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Re: Spiritual fascism
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
interesting. is this due to your own personal searching or due to the adoption of a different religious paradigm?
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I reached that realization in my personal searching before I adopted a different religious paradigm. I guess you could say that a different religious paradigm adopted me.
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
ah.. interesting. isn't that what got Adam and Eve in all that trouble... eating the fruit of knowledge and now being able to discern good and evil?
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Sorta. Believing they could understand good and evil is really the crux of the matter.
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
generally speaking, good and evil are concepts which we don't really use in Buddhism
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And I don't use them in Christianity in the sense of them actually being anything. As with "God" and "sin", they are linguistic placeholders for a concept. Here the concept is a difficult to express notion that our minds can organize the totality of things and discern what things should be as distinguished from what things are.
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
are you familiar with Vedanta? what you have explained above has some commonality. the Buddhist tradition does not teach monism, however we do have the concept of illusion (maya) and the way in which our perceptions are conditioned into a dualistic mode of operation.
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I am somewhat familiar with Vedanta, though I do not profess to be anything other than a very casual scholar of Buddhist tradition. Indeed, I should pause to give you a quick "thank you" for your many enlightening and informative posts on the topic.
I would roughly equate my experience of "God" with Brahman. I was introduced to the similarity through the works of Joseph Campbell and see it in Taoism as well. Although I use the term "Oneness" I don't necessarily consider myself a monist either. I perceive Monism's "oneness", "Tao", "Brahman" and "God" as essentially related expressions of the inexpressible experience of being.
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04-28-2005, 12:15 PM
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#64 (permalink)
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demned elusive
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Limburg, Netherlands
Posts: 191
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Re: Spiritual fascism
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
Namaste Scarlet Pimpernel,
great nick name, by the by 
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Thanks.
In general I agree with what Abogado del Diablo (also a great nickname) has said, but I'd like to respond to your questions personally. Let me first stress that my answers are in the context of the Christian tradition I was raised in and how I understood their teachings at the time. These days I dont follow any Christian tradition.
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Christian theology is not my strong suite, please pardon my misconceptions upfront...
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Not at all a problem, Buddhist theology is definitely not my strong suit either.
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it is usually held within the Christian tradition that "sin" is a mark against you that will need to be atoned for so that one can partake of the afterlife which Jesus secured for you with his sacrifice on the cross. thus, sin is something that one must atone for and, if not, they will be punished for.
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Well, yeah, usually. Granted, I was raised in a pretty liberal tradition (Lutheranism, for the curious out there), but what we learned is that one is not so much externally punished for sin in the sense of getting a detention at school, but that we punish ourselves through our behaviour.
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within the context of Buddhism, there is no idea of a being that rewards or punishes a being for its' unskillful actions. the unskillful action, itself, produces the fruit that the being will harvest.
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Like I said...
[QUOTE]is this due to your traditions belief that God cannot stand the presence of sin or for some other reason?[?QUOTE]
Hmm, interesting question. I think it's not so much that God can't stand it as that it can't exist in His presence - like a campfire can't exist underwater. Also, the Confession and Forgiveness of Sin was not a necessary part of every service - God could accept our worship and we could get close to God just as well without it. So I think the purpose was more that if there was something we felt guilty about it wouldn't be weighing on our chest and distracting us from worship. It was something we needed more than something God needed from us.
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so, in your tradition, sin is simply the lack of love for ones neighbor and lack of love for God?
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That, and the resulting separation from God.
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correct... no creator deity in Buddhism... though, some individual buddhists may have particular beings with which they resonate more strongly.
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I personally agree with what Abogado del Diablo said about "God" being a linguistic placeholder for the idea of the Absolute, but I think that is an idea I came to after moving away from Christianity, rather than an idea intrinsic to the Christianity I was taught.
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your idea of sin is still, however, tied to the notion of a being that will sit in judgement of our actions at some point during the afterlife. this is simply a foreign concept to Buddhism and as such, finds no analog in our tradition.
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Well, no. Technically God doesn't judge us in the afterlife, but we are judged for our sins the moment we commit them. But we bring about our own punishment. Hell is defined as "the state of separation from God," and that can certainly exist in this lifetime. But that separation is not because God pushes us away because we are dirty. Like I said, it isn't the "getting detention" idea but more the "fire-can't-exist-underwater" idea (and please, any marine geologists out there, don't point out underwater volcanoes - you know what I'm trying to get at  ). The emphasis is laid on God's mercy and not on His judgement - He doesn't want our separation and would do anything to remove it.
Again, I am only speaking from the perspective of the Christian tradition in which I was raised. I'm not even speaking from the perspective of my current beliefs. Based on my (limited) understanding of other Christian traditions, I think there are some whose idea of sin is closer to what you have posited.
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04-28-2005, 02:39 PM
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#65 (permalink)
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Ferally Decent
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Texas
Posts: 745
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Re: Spiritual fascism
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Originally Posted by Scarlet Pimpernel
Well, no. Technically God doesn't judge us in the afterlife, but we are judged for our sins the moment we commit them. But we bring about our own punishment. Hell is defined as "the state of separation from God," and that can certainly exist in this lifetime. But that separation is not because God pushes us away because we are dirty.
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Well said. This is similar to how I view it. When this idea of "sin" is combined with the notion that this self-imposed judgment and punishment separates us from our own selves, then you can begin to see the connections between Tao and Christianity. This excerpt from the Tao te Ching has always been one of my favorite expressions of the elementary idea. It provides a beautiful expression of the paradoxical relationship between the perception of the exisitence of duty and reason we perceive a need for the existence of duty. It also ties into what I was saying earlier about the relationship between knowledge, morality and the Way and the path leading inwards toward rediscovery of one's Self:
When the Way is forgotten
Duty and justice appear;
Then knowledge and wisdom are born
Along with hypocrisy.
When harmonious relationships dissolve
Then respect and devotion arise;
When a nation falls to chaos
Then loyalty and patriotism are born.
If we could abolish knowledge and wisdom
Then people would profit a hundredfold;
If we could abolish duty and justice
Then harmonious relationships would form;
If we could abolish artifice and profit
Then waste and theft would disappear.
Yet such remedies treat only symptoms
And so they are inadequate.
People need personal remedies:
Reveal your naked self and embrace your original nature;
Bind your self-interest and control your ambition;
Forget your habits and simplify your affairs.
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04-28-2005, 02:50 PM
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#66 (permalink)
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Episcopalian
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Wild, Wild West
Posts: 3,847
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Re: Spiritual fascism
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Originally Posted by Abogado del Diablo
Well said. This is similar to how I view it. When this idea of "sin" is combined with the notion that this self-imposed judgment and punishment separates us from our own selves, then you can begin to see the connections between Tao and Christianity. This excerpt from the Tao te Ching has always been one of my favorite expressions of the elementary idea. It provides a beautiful expression of the paradoxical relationship between the perception of the exisitence of duty and reason we perceive a need for the existence of duty. It also ties into what I was saying earlier about the relationship between knowledge, morality and the Way and the path leading inwards toward rediscovery of one's Self:
When the Way is forgotten
Duty and justice appear;
Then knowledge and wisdom are born
Along with hypocrisy.
When harmonious relationships dissolve
Then respect and devotion arise;
When a nation falls to chaos
Then loyalty and patriotism are born.
If we could abolish knowledge and wisdom
Then people would profit a hundredfold;
If we could abolish duty and justice
Then harmonious relationships would form;
If we could abolish artifice and profit
Then waste and theft would disappear.
Yet such remedies treat only symptoms
And so they are inadequate.
People need personal remedies:
Reveal your naked self and embrace your original nature;
Bind your self-interest and control your ambition;
Forget your habits and simplify your affairs.
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Brilliant!
Regards, Scarlet Pimpernel--I agree with your take on judgement, heaven, and hell too.
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04-28-2005, 06:55 PM
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#67 (permalink)
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: In the jungles of Maryland being trained as a Ninja by Christopher Walken
Posts: 3,100
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Re: Spiritual fascism
thanks for your replies, folks... some interesting views, to be sure
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05-14-2005, 09:52 PM
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#68 (permalink)
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New Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 1
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Re: Spiritual fascism
I don't think anyone on this site knows what fascism is.
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05-14-2005, 10:42 PM
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#69 (permalink)
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a mod in "Alternative"
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Oakville ON Canada
Posts: 487
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Re: Spiritual fascism
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Originally Posted by Wong Fei Hung
I don't think anyone on this site knows what fascism is.
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It would help with the discussion more if you'd share with us how you define it.
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05-15-2005, 07:14 PM
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#70 (permalink)
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Peace, Love and Unity
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Scotland
Posts: 5,413
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Re: Spiritual fascism
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Originally Posted by Wong Fei Hung
I don't think anyone on this site knows what fascism is.
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Certainly when removed directly from its core political definitions, then "spiritual fascism" is a disloyal application of the term - however, as a metaphor (or which spiritual issues often have to relate), then there is perhaps an argument to be made for the use of phrase.
And welcome to CR, Wong Fei Hung.
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05-16-2005, 10:04 AM
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#71 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 97
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Re: Spiritual fascism
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
Namaste all,
Deepak Chopra has a great book called Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism that deals exactly with this and talks about how to prevent it from happening.
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In case, you haven't noticed the slip just yet, the author you refer to is actually Chogyam Trungpa.
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05-22-2005, 11:45 AM
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#72 (permalink)
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Interfaith Forums
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 13
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Re: Spiritual fascism
DIVINE DISCOURSE BY DATTA SWAMI
Q) In the Bible Jesus told “ First will be last and last will be first”. Please explain this?
A) The people who are treated as great devotees and scholars by their sacrifice of words and feelings and by their dramatic dress of devotion, in the eyes of world stand in the first position but such people are pushed to the last position by the Lord. The people who do not express their love in words and mind and do not expose themselves with dramatic dress of devotion and those who sacrifice practically stand in the last position in the eyes of the world. But the Lord will push such people to the first position. A gravel stone covered by a glittering paper and a diamond covered by the dust are given first and last positions by the world. But the Lord reverses these positions.
ANIL ANTONY
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06-05-2005, 07:43 PM
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#73 (permalink)
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New Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 3
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Re: Spiritual fascism
Hello, new member here. All I can say about this forum subject is WOW... because a lot of you have touched on the very thing that turned me away from Christianity in the first place. With all due respect to Christian people out there, there IS a definite superiority complex within the Christian community. In fact, it is so strong and rampant that it exists even between the different sects of Christianity! I can only speak from my experience here in America, of course, and when I have more time, I hope to read through this forum in its entirety and really get a feel for what everyone is saying. Anyway, my point is that yes, spiritual fanaticism exists and it is very prevalent in Christianity. Is it as prevalent in other religions as well?
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06-14-2005, 08:04 PM
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#74 (permalink)
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New Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 1
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Re: Spiritual fascism
It's just an extension of imperialism in general, and it's no coincidence that those within any given religious community who claim religious superiority are also interested in imposing their culture on other cultures, usually through violent coercion. 'God' doesn't choose people, people choose 'God'.
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06-16-2005, 06:32 AM
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#75 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 76
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Re: Spiritual fascism
Hare Krishna
I would like to mention here the vision of the Vedic wisdom about this topic. But first of all because we see that spiritual fascism exists that doesn't mean that spiritual life is not good when practiced with proper mentality
* Practicing spiritual life is the unique opportunity only of human life.
But anyway, in all religions those who practice spiritual life go through three different stages.
** KANISHTHA - this is a neophyte devotee with insufficient spiritual understanding
* he is quite materialistic or has material desires
* he don't know how to properly behave toward other devotees nor how to properly behave to other people in general
* he easily becomes angry on others, he is envious and think himself to be very great devotee, the most important one of all
* when little bit advanced he is very fanatical in his preaching
* this we could say is the spiritual fascism
** MADHYAMA - is a devotee on intermediate stage of spiritual advancement
* he has quite good understanding of the scriptures
* he makes friendship with other devotees; is merciful to the innocent people who don't understand spiritual life
* He also avoids those who are aggressive, angry and antagonistic to God and spiritual life
* he is a devotee in good standing; nothing can shake him to deviate from the spiritual path
* when he is preaching about God and spirituality He is not forcing others to accept religious practice but rather he is trying to inspire other to take up spiritual life
* he is a person who appreciate others religious practice because he sees that they also cultivate God-consciousness endeavoring to attain love of God
* therefor his behavior has nothing to do with spiritual fascism
** UTTAMA - is a devotee who has attained pure love of God
* He has full understanding of the essence of all scriptures
* He has full faith in God
* His vision of others is that everybody is perfect
NOTE: this vision is difficult to understand but that's sure that the seed of spiritual perfection is there in everybody; it have to be just awakened till it is fully blossomed.
* anyway, the qualities of UTTAMA are many but just as the MADHYAM has nothing to do with spiritual fascism the same is obvious for UTTAMA devotee.
In this way we can see that although some people are behaving not so nice still spiritual practice is good and can ultimately bear the fruit of perfection.
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