CHRISTIAN Interfaith Dialog with BUDDHISM.

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https://www.amazon.com/Going-Home-Thich-Hanh/dp/1573221457/


CHRISTIAN Interfaith Dialog with BUDDHISM​

By The Reverend Jane Patterson PhD, assistant rector of the Episcopal Church of Reconciliation, San Antonio, Texas​


In 1994, His Holiness Tenzin Gyatso, the XIV Dalai Lama of Tibet, took part in The John Main Seminar by WCCM, the World Community for Christian Meditation, as a commentator on the Christian Gospels. It was not the first time Buddhists and Christians had come together to discuss the relationship between their scriptures and contemplative practice.​

The John Main Seminars were instituted in 1984 to honor the life and work of this Irish Benedictine monk (1926-1982), who was first introduced to meditation by Father Anthony De Mello, an Indian Christian monk in Malaysia, where John Main served in the British Foreign Service.​

John Main entered religious orders and dedicated his life to recalling other Christians to their heritage of contemplative prayer, especially the traditions of the Desert Fathers of the fourth through sixth centuries. The “Good Heart” seminar was in many respects the natural outgrowth of a 1980 meeting between the Dalai Lama of Tibet and John Main at an interfaith event in Montreal. The Dalai Lama shared the speaker’s platform with Father Laurence Freeman OSB, a Benedictine monk and former student, friend, and coworker of John Main, and Dr. Thupten Jinpa, the Dalai Lama’s chief translator since 1968 for the subjects of philosophy, science, and religion.​

Because for Christians, Christ lives on through his words in the Gospels, and because for Tibetan Buddhists, the Dalai Lama is the embodiment of Chenrezig, the Bodhisattva of Compassion, there was a heightened religious intensity to this encounter. The Dalai Lama’s attentive reading, for example, of the story of the encounter between Mary Magdalene and the risen Christ brought many of the participants to tears. “It would be hard to say exactly why,” writes Kiely. “Some said later that it was as if they were hearing the words for the first time, as though their tenderness and mystery and beauty had been taken for granted and were brought to life again, like a gift from an unexpected courier.”

The first-century Mediterranean world in which the writings of the Christian New Testament were composed, and in which they became accepted as sacred scripture, was, like ours, a religiously plural one. The Pax Romana had made travel relatively easy, and the Mediterranean became a crossroads for various religions, philosophies, sects, and cults. It is fitting, then, in our fluid world, to find the Gospels once again as a medium of interreligious communication. The Dalai Lama’s comments on these texts reveal deep connections, as well as discontinuities, with the Christian contemplative tradition. With his remarks on the parables of the Kingdom of God, he broaches the distinction between a theistic religion such as Christianity, and the nontheism of Buddhism, revealing a meaningful point of contact between the two:​

" In the case of Buddhism, one single-pointedly entrusts one’s spiritual well-being to the three objects of refuge, the Three Jewels—Buddha, Dharma and Sangha—as a foundation for practice. In order to have such single-pointed confidence and a sense of entrusting your spiritual well-being, one needs to develop a feeling of closeness and connectedness with those objects of faith. In the case of theistic religions, in which there is a belief that all creatures are created by the same divine force, you have very powerful grounds for developing that sense of connectedness, that sense of intimacy, on which you can ground your single-pointed faith and confidence, that enable you to entrust your spiritual wellbeing to that object."

With this comparison, the Dalai Lama opens up for some disaffected Christians a new way of considering the significance of theism, which may have become for them an outmoded or untenable belief.​

A dialogue between the Dalai Lama of Tibet and Father Laurence Freeman OSB reveals deep resonances between the Buddhist and Christian experiences of the ongoing life of their founders within the present-day community.​

" Buddha Shakyamuni was a historical figure—he existed at a particular time and in a particular space, context, and environment—and his final nirvana at Kushinagar was a historical event. But Buddha’s consciousness and mindstream, like Jesus’, has continued and is ever omnipresent. Buddha, in the emanation form of a human being, may have ceased; but he is still present in the form known as his sambhogakaya, the state of perfect resourcefulness."

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In the Gospel of John (from which the story of Jesus and Mary Magdalene comes), Jesus speaks to his disciples of his continuing presence following his crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension:​

" I will not leave you orphaned; I am coming to you. In a little while the world will no longer see me, but you will see me; because I live, you will also live. I have said these things to you while I am still with you. But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you everything, and remind you of all that I have said to you."

The passages discussed by the Dalai Lama include some of the pivotal portions of the Gospels, such as Jesus’ teaching on loving one’s enemies, the Beatitudes, the Transfiguration, the Resurrection and the appearance of Christ to Mary Magdalene.​

Another issue for readers is the designation of Father Laurence’s remarks on the Gospel passages as the Christian context. He tends to psychologize certain passages with references to the “ego” or human “defenses,” and downplays the inscrutability or multi-valency of some of the texts, such as in his description of the “pure in heart.” Dr. Thupten Jinpa on the other hand, wisely focuses his “Buddhist context” on a description of the Dalai Lama’s own spiritual world, the world of Tibetan Buddhism.”​

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The Good Heart not only describes what was said at the conference, but also conveys the context of shared meditation, common meals, and fellowship that made up the experience of the seminar. In this way, it models the elements of a meaningful interfaith dialogue, one that might fulfill the vision shared by the Dalai Lama and John Main at their first meeting. As the Dalai Lama said at the opening of the seminar:​

" I believe the purpose of all the major religious traditions is not to construct big temples on the outside, but to create temples of goodness and compassion inside, in our hearts….The greater our awareness is regarding the value and effectiveness of other traditions, then the deeper will be our respect and reverence for other religions."

The Good Heart establishes a foundation for just such temples of compassion.​

The Reverend Jane Patterson, Ph.D., San Antonio, Texas​

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Reggie Belafonte

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https://www.amazon.com/Going-Home-Thich-Hanh/dp/1573221457/


CHRISTIAN Interfaith Dialog with BUDDHISM​

By The Reverend Jane Patterson PhD, assistant rector of the Episcopal Church of Reconciliation, San Antonio, Texas​


In 1994, His Holiness Tenzin Gyatso, the XIV Dalai Lama of Tibet, took part in The John Main Seminar by WCCM, the World Community for Christian Meditation, as a commentator on the Christian Gospels. It was not the first time Buddhists and Christians had come together to discuss the relationship between their scriptures and contemplative practice.​

The John Main Seminars were instituted in 1984 to honor the life and work of this Irish Benedictine monk (1926-1982), who was first introduced to meditation by Father Anthony De Mello, an Indian Christian monk in Malaysia, where John Main served in the British Foreign Service.​


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The Dalai Lama is not a Christian in fact ! His teachings are not Christian and Buddhism that he peddles is not even worthy of true Buddhism.
Just like Christianity is not worthy of Christ Jesus nowadays as well, for they have been undermined by this world.

Buddhism has some truths within their teaching that can be seen as valid in regards to life regarding their ways ? We Christians can see some worth in some of it that is worthy of understanding human nature, i was just pointing out last night to one about a point regarding such things that can happen in society that are regarded as worthy for thought that can or could open ones mind to a concept that was at hand. So we see in the 1979 Show Monkey Magic a Town is taken over by Vampires ? and then another show where Phantoms are involved ? Such goes to show what can happen to the people for not being awake to such forces ? that lead the people astray in fact ! Much like the Artwork of Joe Biden's Party do in fact, can be seen, creating Delusions and Deceptions played out, is an art work ! and them two shows point such workings out !
Now you will never see that show on TV any more, for it exposes many things, it works so as enlighten's one to the way of Buddhism ? but one has to be truly awake to pickup on what is being put forward ? It's a show where one must be on the ball regarding the story line ! now most people do not have such an ability to be astute regarding what they are watching, but this show demands full attention, for you will get some wisdom from a show like this !

Look at any Movie or TV Show of the last 20 years that has any true value or one could stop to ponder what the Show was truly all about ? or did you learn anything at all form such ?

Movies nowadays are all about nothing but ego rubbish and explosions killing people and depravity anything that is pure nonsense peddled for simplistic morons to fill their minds with nothing but Trash !
Sure i have seen new versions of Monkey Magic but they all are an abomination in fact, only a spastic could peddle that brain dead trash !

Even the old show Kung Fu with David Carradine goes some way along the same lines. Such is not worthless babble that the West now peddles with brain dead morons who have lost their way totally, maybe it's because they only look to others ? and for they are only a husk within themselves ? maybe it's the love affair with simple movies and TV that they need to fill a void ? I have seen this with mates i have known for years, that only look to the majority to claim their resolve, outside of that they are shallow nothings poor simpletons tools that can be manipulated by such shallow trash. for in their job they do not have to seek past the comfort of their Union gods. For they can not see past what their unions are playing about with truly in fact. Too much for the old brain box to deal with sadly so they become enslaved by such criminal trash and can not see such, for they do not have eyes to see.

The Dalai Lama is in bed with Communism in fact ! I pointed this out to a staunch Anti-Christ Mate and he went off his rocker to me !