But is that what Rilke's granddaughter was saying? It seemed to me that what she was saying is that buddhists (and I would probably include other religions and philosphies in this as well) become frustrated with Christians on Christian discussion boards because they tell them what they believe, instead of asking them and trying to get a good handle of what the person believes and that this can lead to hostile behavior on these boards. Nowhere whas she saying that "Christianity alone is responsible for every bad thing that's ever been done in the name of religion", or even talking about religious persecution. You brought that into the discussion.If you think that is what my post is saying then I don't think you've actually read it through.
No, I'm saying you can't make blanket statements like "So many Buddhists [are] hostile to Christianity on these boards because we're tired of the ignorant telling us what we believe" as though Christianity alone is responsible for every bad thing that's ever been done in the name of religion. Nobody can claim people have not been killed in the name of their religion. Indeed today Christians living outside the Western world are some of the most heavily persecuted.
While her behavior could possibly be more patient, you aren't exactly behaving like a saint either. You are reading quite a lot into what she says as well, after she already pointed out that this is frustrating. Shouldn't that be something for you to listen to?Don't start making this personal - I've only just met you and you're not exactly exemplifying the concept of Right Speech.
But that is exactly what you yourself said.My argument isn't whether you're a "good" Buddhist or a "true" Buddhist;
But she did not say "Buddhists don't believe". She said "stricter buddhists do not believe". Now, it would seem to me that the thing to ask then would be what she means by "stricter buddhists", as some have done. I would be interested in that answer as well. The problem here is that she is talking about her particular beliefs, while you are taking some of the more well-known beliefs of (possibly) a majority of buddhists, and portraying these onto her. She stated she is a Zen Buddhist, which while I would not immediately say it is not a religion, is definitely much closer to a philosphy than many other types of buddhism one can adhere too.my argument is saying things like Buddhists don't believe in an afterlife or anything supernatural is a basic factual error, akin to someone saying that going to church automatically makes them a Christian.
What do you mean when you say "they are automatically exonerated from the same type of thinking they loudly and frequently criticize"? You do not know what her personal beliefs are and which stream of buddhism she adheres to, so you do not know whether she actually holds the same type of thinking she is criticizing. Shouldn't you establish that first?And if you'll forgive me for being snippy, I don't think it's a coincidence that the type of buddhist who complains so bitterly about religion is also the same type of buddist who claims Buddhism itself is not a religion. They are automatically exonerated from the same type of thinking they loudly and frequently criticise. You aren't the first one I've met.
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