No it doesn't. It may be very beneficial, but impossible to communicate through words — Agustino
Because it's meaningless to answer questions of existence with regards to an X that people don't understand the meaning of. — Agustino
Because they thought conveying that God exists would be a better way to motivate people to seek God. Buddha thought that being silent would be a better way to get people to seek God, as it would pique their curiosity.What then of Christianity, Judaism and Islam - their core assertion is ''God exists''. Why didn't they remain silent, as the Buddha did, if God is inexpressible?
Clearly, the discussion is diverting towards other religions but to keep it on track...
If Abrahamic religions didn't see any problems in asserting God's existence, the Buddha too shouldn't have remained silent on the matter. The contraposition of the above isn't a compliment for Abrahamic religions. — TheMadFool
Nope, Christianity is not like that. And yes, rational analysis is not very helpful when it comes to God. The oldest version of Christianity - Eastern Orthodoxy - is a mystical religion. You have very superficial knowledge of religion, a large share of it mediated by the popular culture of today, and what other people are saying, rather than your own knowledge based on intimate acquaintance with the religion or your own studying of its theology and/or historical roots.What do you mean? God is undefinable? What use is that for rational analysis? We should discard all rationality, and with it religions like Christianity, Judaism and Islam and dive headlong into mysticism. — TheMadFool
Lies.He was asked what he gained, and he replied "nothing", and explained that he had only lost things. — Wosret
Quote the Tao Te Ching please, which is almost the Old Testament of Asia prefiguring Jesus Christ -Lao-tzu similarly said that those that seek learning gain, those that seek the way lose. — Wosret
Why does everyone like the Tao so much at first?
Isn't it because you find what you seek and are forgiven when you sin?
Therefore this is the greatest treasure of the universe. — Tao Te Ching Chapter 62
Ok then, can you please cite me the sutra where it is? And what does Buddha being poisoned have to do with translation of the sutras?It's in the sutras, his objection is that it doesn't sound right, and probably isn't translated right because Buddha was poisoned (which isn't extractly clear itself...). — Wosret
No, he didn't think it's better to LET people. He thought it's better to encourage people to do so.If Buddha thought that the better way to seek Nd find God is to be quiet about him and let People find out for themselves — Beebert
That's false, and I don't see how you're going to support this assertion.Buddha was 100 percent correct and the Abrahamic religions wrong. — Beebert
:s How?On that, history speaks for itself. — Beebert
:-}It is amusing and curious btw that Tao, and Baghavad Gita, etc. seems to have been far better at talking about the Christian mysteries than christianity itself has. — Beebert
If Abrahamic religions didn't see any problems in asserting God's existence, the Buddha too shouldn't have remained silent on the matter — TheMadFool
Did Buddha find God? No, he didn't find anything at all. — Wosret
And no - "God exists" isn't the core assertion of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam — Agustino
And yes, rational analysis is not very helpful when it comes to God — Agustino
Because they thought conveying that God exists would be a better way to motivate people to seek God. Buddha thought that being silent would be a better way to get people to seek God, as it would pique their curiosity — Agustino
"God" is a word. If you remove a word, what remains is the reality underlying that word.If I remove God from these religions, what remains? Nothing! — TheMadFool
Because if he gave an answer, people would be satisfied, and stop seeking for themselves.This could be a reason why the Buddha was silent. But...he could've said that. There's more to Buddha's silence than the reasons you profer because in each instance he could've just said so e.g that god is ineffable. He didn't. Why? — TheMadFool
I did. You're wrong.Please read above — TheMadFool
It's in the sutras, his objection is that it doesn't sound right, and probably isn't translated right because Buddha was poisoned (which isn't extractly clear itself...) — Wosret
How have you gotten about since your car was stolen. Have you adapted to public transport? Or do you just walk? — Wayfarer
He was,however, founder of one of the major world religions, which would be unlikely had he found 'nothing at all'. — Wayfarer
"God" is a word. If you remove a word, what remains is the reality underlying that word. — Agustino
These words aren't found in the Bible - they are philosophical in origin, and they indeed are attributes of God that emerge from the Biblical narrative, but they're not found there. Also you have no idea what God being a "being" means, since God isn't a being the way you and me are beings. So by what means would you have an idea? "being" is not a determinate concept, the way "triangle" is. Anything you can think of is a "being". So that's not going to be helpful at all.An omniscient, omnibenevolent, omnipotent being — TheMadFool
I answered that question. Because then people wouldn't be curious to find out anymore, they'd have a clear answer given.Yet, Buddha didn't. Why? — TheMadFool
Not like he went out of his way to deny the divine — Wosret
I answered that question. Because then people wouldn't be curious to find out anymore, they'd have a clear answer given. — Agustino
Yes, and if he said that, would they not lose the will to discover the truth? Of course they would!Even this is expressible in words and the Buddha could've said so. ''If I tell you anything about God then you will lose the will to discover the truth'' - see? Easy. — TheMadFool
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