- Dec 27, 2009
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Tariki,Robban,
The idea of self sacrifice - dying to self - is a common theme in many faiths as far as I understand them. The problem is normally reduced to the fact that seeking to do so involves trying to pull yourself up (or perhaps down) by your bootstraps................the self seeking to die to itself!
I would not think that the words of Jesus were seeking to deny any need of sacrifice, given that His own is at the heart of Christianity. Using more "mystical" language, the idea is associated with kenosis, the self emptying of Christ, normally based upon the words in the NT of Phillipians.....
Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be used to his own advantage; rather, he made himself nothing by taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness.
We are asked to become "Christ-like", and in this sense therefore, to empty ourselves. So the sacrifice of ourselves is made possible by the prior sacrifice of Christ - and again in more mystical language, an eternal one.........."in the beginning was the Word".
From my own Buddhist perspective, this is associated with the central teaching of anatta, or "no-self" (sadly - in a somewhat mad attempt to relate it to Christian terms - misunderstood to mean "without a soul") As Suzuki says, a human being is "empty from the beginning".........they have not acquired emptiness or become empty. "No-self" has nothing to do with getting rid of anything, but of SEEING the true nature of the self.
So in Christianity............."If I have no love I am nothing"
In Buddhism........."If 'I' am nothing, I have love"
So my understanding is that the impossible feat of "dying to self" is made possible in both faiths, I suppose in somewhat paradoxical ways. Just how this all works out in our existential lives is another matter. Though the "template" for it is "one" (or perhaps "narrow"!!) the actual reality we each experience is infinite.
My apologies for getting a bit "technical", sometimes it seems like trying to explain a joke. If you "get it" you laugh, if you don't, explanations are beside the point......![]()
For a proud and selfish person to do repentence must be impossible, unless they first sacrifice their pride and selfishness, there is no other way. Therefore a proud and selfish person cannot know or recognize mercy, That,s what I meant. Edit, by pride i,m talking, excessive pride.
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