To me, the comparison seems preposterous, pardon me for so saying. Completely different. The 'Day of Reckoning' is apocalyptic and cosmic, 'the end days', the end of the world or of an epoch.
As I said, the Parable of the Raft is much more prosaic, and in my mind, much more believable, on that account. It's saying 'don't get attached to the idea of Buddhism'. Don't make an idol - which is ironic, as it certainly has happened, in my view. It's concerned with liberating insight. Really, there is no direct equivalent for 'liberating insight' in current Western religious culture, although some of the more mystically-inclined have it. There are some analogies for it in Western religious culture, but it's practical advice about unbinding the self from its attachments and projections. It's very down-to-earth, not apocalyptic and visionary. — Wayfarer
A couple of things:
1. I have this suspicion that when the Buddha compared the dhamma to a raft to be gotten rid of after Buddhahood he didn't mean it just as a warning against getting "...[too] attached to the idea of Buddhism" as you say. I guess this/your interpretation is meant to align the Buddha's raft analogy with the Buddhist principle of avoiding attachments of all kinds. However, the way I see it, the Buddha, by advising us to do away with the dhamma (raft), after it's done its job of enlightening us, is actually diminishing or even nullifying the value of the dhamma and everything that goes into it. If this is the correct interpretation what bothers me the most is that morality, a vital element of the dhamma, is too thus diminished or nullified. This is too hard a pill for me to swallow because there's nothing keeping a Buddha from being a morally depraved asshole. If this condition - immorality in a Buddha - is impossible then it must be that the dhamma, especially its moral facet, still lives on in a Buddha. How then can the Buddha get rid of the dhamma, get rid of the raft as it were, after nirvana? In some sense, nirvana is the raft or, if you prefer, the dhamma.
:chin:
2. When I compared the Buddha's raft to the the Apocalypse I meant to draw a comparison between how these religions treat morality - not as an end itself but only as a means; in Buddhism, goodness is the raft, just there to ferry you across samsara and in the Abrahamic triad, goodness is your boarding pass for the scheduled flight to paradise which should be anytime soon going by what some self-proclaimed prophets have been saying. This is what bothers me but I suppose it's a naive way to look at the world. We are, if one really gives it some thought, only concerned about [our] happiness - everything else is simply a tool in the shed, to be used and, according to the Buddha and other religions, once their purpose is served (nirvana attained, heaven reached), to be, without a second thought, flung into the rubbish heap of the no-longer-necessary. If this is incorrect, I'd like some information on what religions have to say about morality in heaven and after nirvana.
It's nothing like that. It's not 'only' anything. The ultimate importance of realising the goal of Nirvāṇa is never deprecated or downplayed in Buddhism, not for a minute. The early Buddhist texts are full of exhortations, of warnings. 'Hasten and strive'. The consequences of not hearing, or not heeding, are dire in the extreme. Buddhist texts have voluminous and excruciating depictions of hell realms. — Wayfarer
What you say doesn't help your cause here. If the dhamma, especially its moral dimension, is about avoiding hell then it is exactly what I said it is - just a means to an end, just a way of getting something done. However, to think of morality, as part of the dhamma, as something else - something of value in and of itself - is, on reflection, a naive point of view. For instance, I find it rather difficult to imagine goodness being sorrowful; that, as of now, seems self-defeating. Yes, there's the ethical entity known as sacrifice in which there's an element of loss/pain but even in this case, without the involvement of happiness, either to an individual or to a group, sacrifice would never in a million years be an act that people would label as good.
Recall that verse I quoted ends 'Understanding the Dhamma as taught compared to a raft, you should let go even of Dhammas, to say nothing of non-Dhammas.' To say nothing of non-Dhammas. So the hindrances - non-dhammas - are to be abandoned and overcome. It's almost like 'it goes without saying' that these have to be abandoned — Wayfarer
Surely if your best friend is going to cause problems for you, nothing need be said of your non-best friends. It makes sense.
That is gravely mistaken - 'instrumentalism' is one of the main attributes of modern materialistic culture, for which everything is a means to an end, but there is no real end! I think Buddhism would agree with the statement of Aristotelian virtue ethics, that virtue is its own reward. In any case, one does not practice compassion and cherish others for any instrumental reason or for another end, or to get somewhere or gain something. That attitude is always the diametrical opposite of the 'way-seeking mind'. One of the first Buddhist books I ever read, Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind, has many exhortations to 'abandon all ideas of gaining something'. That's what makes it a religious or spiritual practice. If it a strategy for getting something, even an imagined Nirvāṇa, then it's 'spiritual materialism'.
And Nirvāṇa is not 'heaven', it's not a domain of ethereal delights. — Wayfarer
You do realize that this is, what I like to call, the Buddhist conundrum - it's impossible to solve to the extent that I'm aware. You can't have/make "...a strategy for getting something [nirvana]..." because that would be self-refuting - desiring nirvana is a sign of attachment a big no-no in Buddhism. How then are we to attain nirvana? By stumbling onto it? By not being a Buddhist for to be a Buddhist is to affirm nirvana as a goal? How? My friend, how? While this is technically a logical paradox, I do sense a childish silliness in insisting this puzzle be solved before we can get anything done in Buddhism. What say you?
'Avidya' (ignorance) is not the same as the Biblical notion of sin. It is a cognitive affliction rather than corruption of the will. There are overlaps and similarities but also crucial differences. It's a subject of study in Comparative Religion. In any case, in Zen, the factor of liberation is 'insight into the true nature'. Yes, there are parallels especially with (e.g.) Meister Eckhardt's sermons, but Eckhardt cannot be taken to typify Christian doctrine (in fact he was charged with heresy). — Wayfarer
I know you're familiar with this but I'll mention it here anyway. I'm particularly fascinated by Nagarjuna's tetralemma which basically denies all possible epistemic stances one can take given any proposition.
So, If I say there's such a thing as nirvana, Nagarjuna would deny it. If I say there's no such thing as nirvana, Nagarjuna would deny that too. If I say there's such a thing as nirvana and there's no such thing as nirvana, again, Nagarjuna would deny it. If I were to then say that neither is there such a thing as nirvana and nor that there's no such thing as nirvana, Nagarjuna would deny this too, vehemently I imagine.
Suppose N = There's such a thing as nirvana and ~N = There's no such thing as nirvana, Nagarjuna's tetralemma duly applied would look like below:
1. N....No! So ~N
2. ~N....No! So ~~N = N
3. N & ~N....No! So ~(N & ~N) = N v ~N
4. ~N & ~~N....No! So ~(~N & ~~N) = N v ~N
As you can see, applying Nagarjuna's technique to a proposition, any proposition, results in the tautology p v ~p [N v ~N above]. p v ~p is also known as the law of the excluded middle but for the purposes of this discussion the takeaway is this - we can't either affirm nor deny any given proposition, whether that proposition is about a fly in a bottle or the Buddha's enlightenment, and that's just another way of saying
I don't know whether it's p or ~p. That, to my knowledge, is the quintessence of what you call
Avidya or
Ignorance. I have a vague feeling that
ignorance is the only valid epistemic stance we can stake a claim to. All claims to knowledge are therefore empty and devoid of substance. Remember Socrates, "I know that I know nothing." and the Delphic Oracle's pronouncement, "Socrates is the wisest of them all".