Do you mind me asking but What kind of church did you belong to because I'm from Ireland which when I was a child in the 60's was a very conservative Catholic country, but I don't remember my parents commanding me to obey them even though they were practicing Catholics. I was given full freedom to think for myself by them and my teachers. Of course 90% of people at that time attended mass. Religion was everywhere. But I think the Irish, although it was a conservative Catholic country, are by their nature quite a liberal minded, freedom loving , irreverent and progressive people's and just ignored the Church,s pronouncements or attempts to control our minds and hearts. I remember the wild parties full of casual sex and almost orgies, even back in the 70,s in so called Catholic Ireland. One Irish Professer on tv said "we Irish were straight-laced by day and hedonistic by night" — Ross
the teachers had us believing that all our religious practices at least were ‘normal’ — Possibility
"Metta" isn't 'love', and "loving-kindness" is an awkward translation.Loving kindness (metta) in Buddhism includes love for all living things. — Ross
The ideal catholic community is one in which there is an acceptance that pretty much ‘everyone does this — Possibility
"Socioeconomic success is wisdom"? (transl: Greed is good :roll:) ... — 180 Proof
You may be right. As Kafka wrote: "There is an infinite amount of hope in the universe ... but not for us." Still, the teachings of e.g. the Buddha, Laozi, Epicurus-Lucretius, Seneca-Epictetus, ... Spinoza ... Zapffe-Camus, Buber ... Gandhi-King ... Nussbaum-Sen ... are wise insofar as they provide reminders for unlearning habits (vices) by which we tend to make ourselves, and therefore others, more miserable than less. This 'unlearning misery' is completely in one's control whereas "socioeconomic success" is always dependent on – at the mercy of the volatile cycles of – (rigged!) market forces and exogenous events (e.g. pandemic effects on local, regional, even national economies).I am afraid, sincerely afraid, that there is no such wisdom, and that socioeconomic success is as good as life gets. — baker
Compared to (early) Buddhist practices, Christianity has always been a mug's game.Whatever you find hateful (harmful), do not do to anyone. That is the meaning of the Torah, all the rest is commentary. Go study it. — Hillel the Elder, standing on one foot
Metta" isn't 'love', and "loving-kindness" is an awkward translation. — baker
would very much like to believe that there is a wisdom that is beyond and above socioeconomic success, a wisdom that is worth more than socioeconomic success, a wisdom that trumps socioeconomic success. But I am afraid, sincerely afraid, that there is no such wisdom, and that socioeconomic success is as good as life gets. — baker
What do you mean by normal in this sense — Ross
I think it's more a question of political authorities using and abusing religion for their own ends rather than the fault of the Church itself. A classic case in my country is Northern Ireland during the conflict there in the 70,s and 80,s where people were murdered simply because they were a Catholic or Protestant. It had nothing to do with religion, the motives were political. — Ross
The Church is far from faultless, even in the case of Northern Ireland. The idea that religion is ‘used and abused’ or a tool to be wielded is the same argument the gun lobby employs. — Possibility
It is debatable how to best apply this in practice, though. For example, when coming across a tiger in the forest. I think the idea is that when practiced properly, the object of your metta, in this case the tiger, will be moved to respond in kind and be nice to you instead of having you for breakfast or lunch. But I don't know how many Buddhists have developed their metta to the degree that it would work out as intended. — Apollodorus
So in my opinion Buddhist philosophy not only contains the value of thousands of years of accumulated wisdom drawn from observing REAL people in REAL life situations but it makes practical sense for someone in pursuit of happiness. — Ross
I think the Buddhists meant only human beings in relation to Metta — Ross
although Metta is meant to apply to all living things that obviously is not going to impact the behavior of Tiger you mentioned in your example. But the value of the Buddhist teaching here lies in the fact that it changes our attitude towards the whole of creation. — Ross
Correct. However, the concept of ethical conduct as conducive to happiness both in the individual and in society, was already central to Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, and subsequently passed into the Christian tradition along with other elements of Hellenistic philosophy.
So, it does not seem to be exclusively a feature of Buddhism. — Apollodorus
. I don't see this as being connected with any particular philosophical or religious system. — Apollodorus
But unfortunately with the coming of Christianity all that ancient wisdom came to an end as Ancient Philosophical schools were closed by the Church in the 5th century AD. What survived of western philosophy was a Christianized Aristotle and Plato. Not until the 18th century did you get a revival of much ancient wisdom and then western colonial attitudes coupled with ignorance of Eastern thought continued until the 19th or even 20th centuries. It's all there explained much better than I can in Baginnis book. — Ross
I would very much like to believe that there is a wisdom that is beyond and above socioeconomic success, a wisdom that is worth more than socioeconomic success, a wisdom that trumps socioeconomic success. But I am afraid, sincerely afraid, that there is no such wisdom, and that socioeconomic success is as good as life gets. — baker
What the Church prohibited was not philosophy itself but the teaching of it as a non-Christian tradition (or as an alternative to Christianity). Philosophy in Greece has been taught without interruption from Plato and Aristotle down to the present! — Apollodorus
My point as I made previously, is that only during the 18th century Enlightenment and beyond when Church control of learning disappeared that much of ancient philosophy, such as Epicureanism, which was an atheistic , materialistic philosophy revived. — Ross
“Ask and it shall be given, seek and ye shall find, knock and it shall be opened unto you. For everyone that asketh receiveth, and he that seeketh findeth, and to him that knocketh, it shall be opened.”
Gasan remarked: “That is excellent. Whoever said that is not far from Buddhahood [is a bodhisattva].” — Wikipedia
Unfortunatly the more she explained the deeper the puzzeled expression grew on the poor fellows face. — praxis
Which is wiser (i.e. less foolish (self-immiserating))? :chin:
Christian: "For Heaven's sake, save your soul from Hell!" (Suffer as Christ suffered.)
Buddhist: "Reduce suffering here and now." (What soul?) — 180 Proof
Unfortunatly the more she explained the deeper the puzzeled expression grew on the poor fellows face.
— praxis
I would say that's a good outcome for both the interlocutors, buddhist and christian. It's the WTF? moment every buddhist aspires to and wishes to elicit from would-be converts — TheMadFool
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