Re: Faith and Reliability
Posted: Thu Oct 08, 2020 10:41 am
A Buddhist discussion forum on the Dhamma of Theravāda Buddhism
https://www.dhammawheel.com/
You are actually asking: "What if one cannot enter the path of Theravada?" which is off the theme of this forum section.
There are expressions of veneration of the Buddha as teacher of dhamma in the suttas. That appears to be more appropriate for faith than a definition.
PS Karl is one of the gentlest souls I find on Buddhist chat groups. Not that there is a soul, it is merelyWhen I started rock climbing, I inferred that I could trust the rope–it’s physics, right?
Yet I had doubts. Eventually I got so frustrated with my doubts that I went to Yosemite, walked into the tunnel and out onto a cliff. I tied the rope to the balcony rail, said goodbye to my life and then I jumped off with hundreds of feet of air beneath me.
After that I directly trusted the rope. I also discovered that I could
ascend the rope back up to the railing.No matter how much we infer the validity of the Buddha, the Teaching and the Sangha, we still have to take that leap of faith.
- Faith in the Buddha, the Teaching and the Sangha is exactly like that.
There's just one catch: a climbing rope is not a bungee rope. Once a climbing rope is used in a fall, it becomes extended and is not safe for use anymore. If he were to use that climbing rope again for such a jump, or relied on it in a fall, it would possibly break.Pulsar wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 11:27 am Regarding faith a comment found elsewhere, like lightening it struck me.
A comment from sutta central made by Karl Lew.When I started rock climbing, I inferred that I could trust the rope–it’s physics, right?
Yet I had doubts. Eventually I got so frustrated with my doubts that I went to Yosemite, walked into the tunnel and out onto a cliff. I tied the rope to the balcony rail, said goodbye to my life and then I jumped off with hundreds of feet of air beneath me.
After that I directly trusted the rope. I also discovered that I could
ascend the rope back up to the railing.No matter how much we infer the validity of the Buddha, the Teaching and the Sangha, we still have to take that leap of faith.
- Faith in the Buddha, the Teaching and the Sangha is exactly like that.
Truthfully Dhamma worked for me like that, now I am a never returner to the old modes of thinking, like there is no rebirth, there is no karma, that things arise without causes, that we suffer due to others' stupidity, that life is a case of damn luck etc.I know you won't let me down.
But that's not the order in which those things happened for you, is it?Pulsar wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 3:38 pm Hi dear One! Binocular: so Karl's trick did not work for you, but it managed to show me how he understood the idea of faith. It is a bit like I trust you so much, I will take a huge risk for you Buddha!Truthfully Dhamma worked for me like that, now I am a never returner to the old modes of thinking, like there is no rebirth, there is no karma, that things arise without causes, that we suffer due to others' stupidity, that life is a case of damn luck etc.I know you won't let me down.
Fortunately I did not think of it like you did of Karl's jumping. I was not clever like you, and that stupidity of mine paid off in the long run.
I just jumped, and here I am, still in one piece.
Let me try another trick with you clever gal!
What do you think of It? pl tell me. Do I fail this time too?
Excerpt from MN 60 Incontrovertible teaching: wager argument, or safe bet:
'As for those who hold the doctrine and view —
"There is no Nibbana"— I haven't seen that.
As for those others who hold this doctrine, and view —
"There is nibbaba— I haven't known that"
If I, not knowing, not seeing, were to take one side and declare, "Only this is true, anything else is worthless," that would not be fitting for me.
As for those good recluses & brahmans who hold the doctrine, and view —
"There is no nibbana": If their statement is true, there's the safe-bet possibility that I might reappear among the perception-made devas of no form.
As for the ones who hold this doctrine, and view —As for those who hold this doctrine, and view —
- "There is nibbana": If their statement is true, it is possible that I might here and now attain Nibbana.
- "There is no nibbana": This view of theirs borders on passion, borders on fettering, borders on relishing, borders on grasping, borders on clinging.
Reflecting thus, she practices for disenchantment toward becomings, for dispassion toward becomings, and for the cessation of becomings.
- As for those good recluses & brahmans who hold this doctrine, and view — "There is nibbana": This view of theirs borders on non-passion, borders on non-fettering, borders on non-relishing, borders on non-grasping, borders on non-clinging.'
With love
Oh, the sting!Fortunately I did not think of it like you did of Karl's jumping. I was not clever like you, and that stupidity of mine paid off in the long run.
It sorta did, in that order.But that's not the order in which those things happened for you, is it?
Meeting you, it is bit like meeting a person from a movie. Does the narrative sound nice? if so you made it possible, you are a nice person.You're telling it this way in retrospect. Perhaps in that time in the past when you were considering the leap, you even imagined this future where you would tell your narrative of your religious conversion this way. Because that would make it sound really nice.
sting?, not the first time that someone said "I sting" A friend that i lost wrote on her FB page 'Being playful, reminds me of Pulsar.. where is Pulsar? I miss his/her icy stings" did she think i would read it?Oh the sting!
How you underestimate yourself, i know you've got it in you, to take that leap of faith, over and over again. We all do it, over and over again. A miracle does not happen at the first leap.A person appears to have a limited number of leaps to faith available to them. One can do it once, but if that one doesn't work out, one won't take the second one.
Clearly, you jest, sir.Dhammanando wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 4:55 pmTry telling that to Mrs. Marmaduke Moore. Or the Vicar of Bray. Or any of these guys.
If you would actually believe that, you would have no objection to what I'm saying.