DK Matai - August 14, 2006
The terms Interfaith or Interfaith Dialogue refer to cooperative and positive interaction between people of different religious traditions, (ie "faiths") at both the individual and institutional level leading to tolerance and mutual respect. It is distinct from syncretism
or alternative religion, in that this dialogue often involves promoting understanding between different religions to increase "tolerance" towards others, rather than to synthesize new beliefs. The History of religion shows that conflict has been more the state of affairs than dialogue.
The 1893 Parliament of the World's Religions is seen by some as the birth of formal Interfaith Dialogue. The city of Chicago, USA, hosted the World Columbian Exposition, an early world’s fair, in that year. So many people came to Chicago from all over the world that many smaller conferences, called Congresses and Parliaments, were scheduled to take advantage of this unprecedented gathering. One of these was the Parliament of the World’s Religions. The 1893 Parliament, which ran from September 11 to September 27, marked the first formal gathering of representatives of Eastern and Western spiritual traditions. The eloquence of Swami Vivekananda and his introduction of Asian spiritual thought to the United States are particularly remembered.
In the context of Interfaith Dialogue, I am grateful to share -- post signature -- a seminal think-piece by His Holiness Master Kirpal titled "Unity of Man and Dealing with Conflict: The Essence of Religion at World Fellowship of Religions."
With love
DK
DK Matai
The Philanthropia, ATCA, mi2g.net
This is the Presidential Address, given by His Holiness, in His capacity as President of the World Fellowship of Religions, on February 26, 1965, at the Third World Religions Conference in New Delhi, India.
My own self in the form of ladies and gentlemen:
WE HAVE once again gathered together in the historic town of Delhi. This time the Conference of the World Fellowship of Religions, the third of its kind, is being held at a place known as Ramlila Grounds -- grounds made hallowed, year after year, by the performance of scenes from the life-story of Lord Rama, who in the ancient epic age symbolized in him the highest culture of Aryavarta, the land of the Aryans. He is worshiped even now as ever before as an ideal in the different phases of life -- an ideal son, an ideal brother, an ideal husband and an ideal king, and significantly enough, his life portrays above all the eternal struggle that is going on between virtue and vice, both in the mind of man and in the world around him, leading to ultimate triumph of good over evil.
The idea of World Fellowship of Religions, as you all know, is not a new one. We have had instances of it in the last when enlightened [Indian] kings like Kharwal, Ashoka, Samudra Gupta, Harsha Verdna, Akbar and Jehangir held such conferences, each in his own way, to understand the viewpoint of various religions prevailing at the time, and sited the learned men of the realm to translate the scriptures of various religions in the current language of the people. In the present era, the idea was revived when in 1893 a Parliament of Religions was held at Chicago. The present forum was thought of by Muni Sushil Kumar Ji, who conceived the idea of instituting a World Fellowship of Religions under whose auspices international conferences could be held and sustained work could be undertaken for promoting mutual respect and understanding of various religions. Our first Conference was held in November 1957, in the Diwan-i-Aam, the Hall of Public Audience in the Red Fort. About three years later, in February 1960, Calcutta became the venue for its deliberations I am glad that the Fellowship has, during this interval, grown from strength to strength. It is encouraging to see all the delegates that have assembled from the four corners of the earth, representing countless shades of religious thought and opinion, but united in one common endeavour to find out the essential and basic unity of all religions, the common meeting ground where all faiths are one. In short, we are in search of the Grand Truth of Life, the bedrock of all existence, no matter at what level.
All the religions agree that Life, Light and Love are the three phases of the Supreme Source of all that exists. These essential attributes of the divinity that is ONE, though designated differently by the prophets and peoples of the world, are also wrought in the very pattern of every sentient being. It is in this vast ocean of Love, Light and Life that we live, have our very being and move about and yet, strange as it may seems, like the proverbial fish in water we do not know this truth and much less practice it in our daily life; and hence the endless fear, helplessness and misery that we see around us in the world, in spite of all our laudable efforts and sincere strivings to get rid of them. Love is the only touchstone wherewith we can measure our understanding of the twin principles of Life and Light in us and how far we have travelled on the path of self-knowledge and God-knowledge. God is love; the soul in man is a spark of that love, and love again is the link between God and man on the one hand and man and God's creation on the other. It is therefore said: He that loveth not, knoweth not God; for God is love. Similarly, Guru Gobind Singh says: Verily I say unto thee, that he whose heart is bubbling over with love, he alone shall find God. Love, in a nutshell, is the fulfilment of the Law of Life and Light. All the prophets, all the religions and all the scriptures hang on two commandments: Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and greatest commandment, And the second is like unto it: Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. Questioned as to our attitude toward thy enemies, Christ said: Love thine enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, pray for them that despitefully use you and persecute you, that ye may be the children of your Father in heaven. Be ye therefore perfect even as your Father in heaven is perfect.
With the yardstick of love (the very essence of God's character) with us, let us probe our hearts. Is our life an efflorescence of God's love? Are we ready to serve one another with love? Do we keep our hearts open to the healthy influences coming from outside? Are we patient and tolerant toward those who differ from us? Are our minds coextensive with the creation of God and ready to embrace the totality of His being? Do we bleed inwardly at the sight of the downtrodden and the depressed? Do we pray for the sick and suffering humanity? If we do not do any of these things, we are yet far removed from God and from religion, no matter how loud we may be in our talk and pious in our platitudes and pompous in our proclamations. With all our inner craving for peace, we have failed and failed hopelessly to serve the cause of God's peace on earth. Ends and means are interlocked and cannot be separated from each other. We cannot have peace so long as we try to achieve it with warlike means and with the weapons of destruction and extinction With the germs of hatred in our hearts, racial and colour bars rankling within us, thoughts of political domination and economic exploitation surging in our bloodstream, we are working for wrecking the social structure which we have so strenuously built and not for peace, unless it be peace of the grave; but certainly not for a living peace born of mutual love and respect, trust and concord, that may go to ameliorate mankind and transform this earth into a paradise for which we so fervently pray and preach from pulpits and platforms and yet, as we proceed, it recedes away into the distant horizon.
Where then lies the remedy? Is the disease past all cures. No, it is not so. "Life and Light of God" are still there to help and guide us in the wilderness. We see this wilderness around us because we are bewildered in the heart of our hearts and do not see things in their proper perspective. This vast outer world is nothing but a reflex of our own little world within us. The seeds of discord and disharmony in the soil of our mind bear fruit in and around us and do so in abundance. We are what we think and see the world with the smoke-coloured glasses that we choose to put on. It is a proof positive of one thing only: that we have so far not known the "Life and Light of God" and much less realized "God in man." We are off centre in the game of life. We are playing it at the circumference only and never have a dip in the deepest waters of life at the centre. This is why we constantly find ourselves caught in the vortex of the swirling waters on the surface. The life at the circumference of our being is, in fact, not different from the life at the centre of our being. The two are, in fact, not un-identical, yet when one is divorced from the other, they look dissimilar. Hence the strange paradox: the physical life though a manifestation of God is full of toil and turmoil, storm and stress, dissipation and disruption. In our enthusiasm and zest for outer life on the plane of the senses, we have strayed too far away from our centre, nay, we have altogether lost sight of it; and worse still, have cut the very moorings of our barque and no wonder then we find ourselves tossing helplessly on the sea of life. Rudderless and without a compass to guide our course, we are unwittingly a prey to chance winds and waters and cannot see the shoals, the sandbanks and the submerged rocks with which our way is strewn. In this frightful plight, we are drifting along the onrushing current of life—Where? We know not.
This world, after all, is not and cannot be so bad as we take it to be. It is a manifestation of the Life Principle of the Creator and is being sustained by His Light. His Love is at the bottom of all this. The world with its various religions is made for us and we are to benefit from them. One cannot learn swimming on dry land. All that we have to do is to correctly learn and understand the basic live truths as are embodied in our scriptures, and practice them carefully under the guidance of some theocentric saint. These scriptures came into being by God-inspired prophets, and as such, some God-intoxicated person or a God-man can give us a proper interpretation of them, initiate us into their right import by reconciling the seeming discrepancies in thought and finally help us inwardly on the God-path. Without such a practical guidance both without and within we are trapped in the magic spell of forms and minds, and cannot possibly reach at the esoteric truths lying under a mass of verbiage of the bygone ages and now solidified into fossils with the lapse of time into institutionalized forms, formulae and formularies of the ruling class.
Every religion has of necessity a threefold aspect: first, the traditional, comprising myths and legends for the lay brethren; second, the philosophical treatises based on reason to satisfy the hunger of the intellectuals concerned more with the why and wherefore of things than anything else, with great stress on theory of the subject and emphasis on ethical development which is so very necessary for spiritual growth; and third, the esoteric part, the central core in every religion, meant for the chosen few, the genuine seekers after Truth. This last part deals with the mystic personal experiences of the founders of all religions and other advanced souls. It is this part, called mysticism, the core of all religions, that has to be sifted and enshrined in the heart for practice and experience. These inner experiences of all sages and seers from time immemorial are the same, irrespective of the religio-social orders to which they belonged, and deal in the main with the Light and Life of God -- no matter at what level -- and the methods and means for achieving direct results are also similar. "Religious experience," says Plotinus, "lies in the finding of the true home by the exile," meaning the pilgrim soul, to whom the Kingdom of God is at present just a lost province. Similarly, Henri Bergson, another great philosopher, tells us, "The surest way to Truth is by perception, by intuition, by reasoning to a certain point and then taking a mortal leap."
These philosophers have said nothing new. They have just repeated in their own way the time-honoured ancient truths regarding Para Vidya, the Knowledge of the Beyond, the references to which in terse and succinct form we find in all the scriptures of the world. For example, in Christian theology we have:
Learn to die so that you may begin to live. And St. Paul significantly adds: I die daily.
He that findeth his life shall lose it, and he that loseth his life shall find it.
The holy prophet of Arabia speaks of Mautu Kibal Ant Mautu, ie, death before actual death. Dadu and other saints likewise say, Learn to die while living, for in the end, of course, everyone has to die.
Thus we have seen that "Life and Light of God" constitute the only common ground at which all religions do meet and if we could take hold of these saving lifelines, we can become live centres of spirituality, no matter to what religion we owe our allegiance for the fulfilment of our social needs and the development of our moral well-being. God made man and man in course of time made religions as so many vehicles for his uplift according to the prevailing conditions of the people. While riding in these vehicles, our prime need is to raise our moral and spiritual stature to such an extent as to come nearer to God and this, it may be noted, is not merely a possibility but as sure a mathematical certainty as two and two make four, with of course proper guidance and help from some adept well versed not only in theory but also in the practice of the Science of Soul. It is not a province of mere philosophers or theologians or the intellectually great. I take just two instances to illustrate my point. God, according to all scriptures, is described as the "Father of lights," Nooran-ala-noor, Swayam jyoti swarup, all of which are nothing but synonymous terms. But ask any religious authority as to the connotation of these words and he would say that these are only figurative terms without any inner significance. Why? Because he has not actually experienced in person His Light, uncreate and immortal, self-effulgent and shadowless, which Moses, Zoroaster, Buddha, Christ, Mohammed, Nanak, Kabir and others of their kind actually witnessed and realized, and taught those who came in contact with them to do likewise.
Again, like the practice of lighting candles (symbolic of the inner light), there is another practice in churches and temples of ringing the bell or bells and giving of Azaan by Mouzan which has a much deeper inner significance than is realized and surprisingly enough is taken to be just a call to the faithful for prayer. Herein lies the great hiatus between learning and wisdom, which are at poles asunder; for this too is symbolic of the music of the soul, the Audible Life Stream, the music of the spheres, the actual life principle pulsating in all the creation.
Without taking any more of your time, I would like to emphasize one thing: that all religions are profoundly good, truly worthy of our love and respect. The object of this Conference is not to found any new religion as we have already enough of them, nor to evaluate the extant religions we have with us. Again, we should shed the idea of drawing up "One World Religion" for all religions, like so many states, are, in spite of their variegated forms and colours, but flowers in the garden of God and smell sweet. The most pressing need of the time, therefore, is to study our religious scriptures thoughtfully and to reclaim our lost heritage. Everyone has in him, says a Saint, a pearl of priceless value, but as he does not know how to unearth it, he is going about with a beggar's bowl. It is a practical subject and even to call it a religion of soul is a misnomer, for soul has no religion whatsoever. We may, if you like, call it the Science of Soul, for it is truly a science, more scientific than all the known sciences of the world, capable of yielding valuable and verifiable results, quite precise and definite. By contacting the Light and Life Principles, the primordial manifestations of God within the laboratory of the man body (which all the scriptures declare to be a veritable temple of God), we can virtually draw upon the "bread and water of life," rise into Cosmic Awareness and gain immortality. This is the be-all and end-all of all religions, and embedded as we all are in the ONE Divinity, we ought to represent the noble truth of the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. It is the living Word of the living God and has a great potential in it. It has been rightly said: Man does not live by bread alone but by the Word of God. And this Word of God is an unwritten law and an unspoken language. He who, by the power of the Word, finds himself can never again lose anything in the world. He who once grasps the human in himself, understands all mankind. It is that knowledge by knowing which everything else becomes known. This is an immutable law of the Unchangeable Permanence and is not designed by any human head. It is the Sruti of the Vedas, the Naad or Udgit of the Upanishads, the Sarosha of the Zend Avesta, the Holy Spirit of the Gospels, the lost Word of the Masons, the Kalma of the Prophet Mohammed, the Saut of the Sufis, the Shabd or Naam of the Sikh scriptures, the Music of the Spheres and of all harmonies of Plato and Pythagoras, and the Voice of the Silence of the Theosophists. It can be contacted, grasped and communed with by every sincere seeker after Truth, for the good not only of himself but of the entire humanity, for it acts as a sure safety valve against all dangers with which mankind is threatened in this atomic age.
The only prerequisite for acquiring this spiritual treasure in one's own soul is self-knowledge This is why sages and seers in all times and in all climes have in unmistakable terms laid emphasis on self-analysis. Their clarion call to humanity has always been: Man—Know Thyself. The Aryan thinkers in the hoary past called it Atam Gian or knowledge of the Atman or soul. The ancient Greeks and Romans in turn gave to it the name of Gnothi Seauton (Greek) and Nosce Te Ipsum (Latin) respectively. The Muslim divines called it Khud-Shanasi, and Guru Nanak, Kabir and others stressed the need for Apo Cheena or self-analysis, and declared that so long as a man did not separate his soul from body and mind, he lived only a superficial life of delusion on the physical plane of existence. True knowledge is undoubtedly an action of the soul and is perfect without the senses. This then is the acme of all investigations carried out by man since the first flicker of self-awakening dawned in him.
This is the one truth I learned in my life, both in theory and practice, from my Master, Baba Sawan Singh Ji Maharaj, and have today placed it before you, as I have already been doing before the peoples in the West and East during my extensive tours all over, and have on experience found it of ready acceptance everywhere as a current coin, for it is the sole panacea for all the ills of the world, as well as ills of the flesh to which man is a natural heir through the working of the inexorable law of action and reaction—ye shall reap, as ye shall sow.
All of our religions are after all an expression of the inner urge felt by man from time to time to find a way out of the discord without into the halcyon calm of the soul within. The light shineth in the darkness and the darkness comprehendeth it not. But we are so constituted by nature that we feel restless until we find a rest in the Causeless Cause. If we live up to our scriptures and realize the Light and Life of God within us, then surely, as day follows the night, Love would reign supreme in the Universe and we will see nothing but the Unseen Hand of God working everywhere.
We must then sit together as members of the One Great Family of Man so that we may understand each other. We are above everything else, ONE—from the level of God as our Father, from the level of Man as His children, and from the level of worshipers of the same Truth or Power of God called by so many names. In this august assembly of the spiritually awakened, we can learn the "Great Truth of Oneness of Life" vibrating in the Universe. If we do this, then surely this world with so many forms and colours will appear a veritable handiwork of God and we shall verily perceive the same life-impulse enlivening all of us. As His own dear children embedded in Him, like so many roses in His rose bed, let us join together in sweet remembrance of God and pray to Him for the well-being of the world in this hour of imminent danger of annihilation that stares us in the face. May God, in His infinite mercy, save us all, whether we deserve it or not.
Before I sit down I heartily welcome you, my brothers and sisters, and thank you warmly for your kindness and sincerity in furthering such a noble mission that has brought us together.
[ENDS]
Born on 6th February 1894 in Sayyad Kasran, British India, His Holiness Master Kirpal Singh was confronted with nationalism, religious intolerance, and bigotry since His early youth. In view of the suffering humanity He deeply thought about the nature of man and sought for a solution to the permanent discord leading to violent conflicts. After a profound study of the basic scriptures of the Christians, Moslems, Buddhists, Sikhs, Hindus, Jews, Zoroastrians etc, He found that they all give out the same basic truth and speak about the birthright of man to attain self-knowledge and God-knowledge. Due to His universal view He could create mutual understanding among the different religions. During fourteen years He was repeatedly elected President of the World Fellowship of Religions which came into being in 1957. He left his physical body on 21st August 1974.
Books written by His Holiness include: The Crown of Life - a comparative study of Yogas and Surat Shabd Yoga; Godman - the mission, nature and need of a spiritual Master; The Jap Ji: The Message of Guru Nanak; Morning Talks - a series of short informal talks giving practical advice on the general subject of spirituality; The Mystery of Death; Naam or Word - an in depth study of the Celestial Sound Current or God into Expression Power called variously: Naam, Word, Music of the Spheres, Shabd, etc; The Night is a Jungle - a collection of 14 public discourses on spirituality; PRAYER: Its Nature and Technique; SPIRITUALITY: What it is - an exploration of the Science of Spirituality; The Way of the Saints: SANT MAT - collected short writings, booklets, circular letters, and seasonal messages; and The Wheel of Life - about Karma, "As you sow, so shall you reap."
On three world tours in 1955, 1963, and 1972 His Holiness visited major cities in the Western world, where He met religious leaders -- including the Pope, politicians, and personalities of the society. Everywhere He conveyed the importance of self-knowledge and God-knowledge and emphasized the need of selfless service. His efforts to create understanding from man to man, for peace in the world and for tolerance among the religions have been recognized by many honours. His efforts reached a summit when He convened the first World Conference on Unity of Man, which took place in New Delhi, India, from 3rd to 6th February 1974. Religious, political, and social leaders from all over India, and delegates from approximately 18 countries participated in the conference. This World Conference was the beginning of the Unity of Man movement. As a result of the conference He was invited by the Indian Government to address Parliament. When He spoke to the members of the Lok Sabha (Lower House) on 1st August 1974, it was the first time that a spiritual leader was given that honour.
[ENDS]
Digg this entry
Add to Del.icio.us
Share on Facebook
Subscribe
Posted by DK Matai at August 14, 2006 02:26 PM
Dear DK,
How I love your posts, and the depth and warmth of conveyance - to the beauty and realization, of Oneness, as a way to celebrate and get along, with our brothers and sisters.
Too long now, the turn of emotions and beliefs takes us far away from centered beingness. Foremost in our humanness, is connectedness, caring, closeness, and the ability to love deeply and meaningfully.
Why - not now. Each to decide, and allow for unique diversity, without harsh judgment, or need to destroy. Surely, NOW - it's time for peace to have a long, shelf LIFE.
DK, dearest - I walk with you,
~ Kate
Dear Keith
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. A lot depends on the resonance of the heart and love.
Please accept apologies for any errors, omissions or any words, which could have been expressed in a way, that points to the universal connectivity without being hurtful to a particular way of thinking or affection.
There are two very elegant poems by The Great Saint and Poet Hafiz, which come to mind in regard to being in the company of "the true friend". As per Hafiz of Shiraz:
1. The Thousand-Stringed Instrument
The heart is
The thousand-stringed instrument.
Our sadness and fear come from being
Out of tune with love.
All day long God coaxes my lips
To speak,
So that your tears will not stain
His fresh dress.
It is not that the Friend is vain,
It is just your life we care about.
Sometimes the Beloved
Takes my pen in hand,
For Hafiz is just a simple man.
The other day the Old One
Wrote on the Tavern wall:
"The heart is
The thousand-stringed instrument
That can only be tuned with
Love."
2. What is pleasant?
The garden’s courtyard gives joy and friends' company is pleasant;
rose’s time is pleasant, so drinkers of intoxicant’s festivity is pleasant.
By morning breeze our soul is pleasantly perfumed each moment;
yes, perfume of the spirit having true desire, truthfully is pleasant.
See, the rose with the veil not lifted, gets ready for the departure:
Nightingale, moan, for heartsick lovers’ sorrowful plea is pleasant.
To the bird that sings at night comes good news that to the Friend,
to be in Love’s path, awake nightly, crying constantly is pleasant.
From tongue of the free lily to my ear came these special words:
‘In closed world of ours, a work of those burden-free, is pleasant.’
There is no contentment for the heart in the market of the world;
if there is, the way of drunkenness and of vagrancy is pleasant.
Hafiz, path of a contented heart is in renouncement of the world,
if you don’t keep thinking a world-possessor’s security is pleasant
[--oOX--XOo--]
As His Holiness wrote: Man is the prototype of the whole creation! The macrocosm is in the microcosm. Whatever exists in the physical plane, in the astral plane or in the causal plane, and above in the conscious planes, that exists in the human body. Whatever God has created exists in the manbody and can be experienced within. Whatever is written in the holy scriptures exists in the manbody, but whatever exists in the manbody does not exist in all the holy scriptures of the world.
With love manifest in all beings
DK
DK Matai
The Philanthropia, ATCA, mi2g.net
By way of background, The Great Saint and Poet Hafiz was born in Shiraz in south-western Persia (modern Iran) in approximately 1320 AD. He was named Shams-ud-din, which means ‘Sun of Faith’. Later when he began to write poetry he selected Hafiz for his pen-name or takhallus. ‘Hafiz’ is the title given to one who has learnt the whole of the Holy Scriptures by heart and Hafiz is said to have done this in fourteen different ways and progressed deeply within.
Dear Kate
Your posting is valuable. Thank you and you may enjoy Max Ehrmann's Desiderata, which echoes your resonance:
Go placidly amid the noise and haste,
and remember what peace there may be in silence.
As far as possible without surrender
be on good terms with all persons.
Speak your truth quietly and clearly;
and listen to others,
even the dull and the ignorant;
they too have their story.
Avoid loud and aggressive persons,
they are vexations to the spirit.
If you compare yourself with others,
you may become vain and bitter;
for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself.
Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans.
Keep interested in your own career, however humble;
it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.
Exercise caution in your business affairs;
for the world is full of trickery.
But let this not blind you to what virtue there is;
many persons strive for high ideals;
and everywhere life is full of heroism.
Be yourself.
Especially, do not feign affection.
Neither be cynical about love;
for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment
it is as perennial as the grass.
Take kindly the counsel of the years,
gracefully surrendering the things of youth.
Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune.
But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings.
Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.
Beyond a wholesome discipline,
be gentle with yourself.
You are a child of the universe,
no less than the trees and the stars;
you have a right to be here.
And whether or not it is clear to you,
no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.
Therefore be at peace with God,
whatever you conceive Him to be,
and whatever your labours and aspirations,
in the noisy confusion of life keep peace with your soul.
With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams,
it is still a beautiful world.
Be cheerful.
Strive to be happy.
With love
DK
DK Matai
The Philanthropia, ATCA, mi2g.net
By way of background, Max Ehrmann was born in Indiana in 1872 to Maximilian and Margaret Ehrmann, both of whom emigrated to the United States in the late 1840s from Bavaria, Germany. Ehrmann received his early education at the German Methodist Church. Between 1890-94 he attended De Pauw University in Indiana. Upon graduation, Ehrmann studied law and philosophy at Harvard and edited The Rainbow, a national college fraternity magazine. While at Harvard, he also published his first book, A Farrago, in 1898. At the age of 40, Ehrmann left the family business and returned to writing full-time. Throughout his career, he wrote more than 20 books and pamphlets and many essays and poems that were published separately in newspapers and magazines. His most acclaimed work is "Desiderata" originally published in 1927.
D.K. and Kate,
What a wonderful way to start the day.
I find myself in complete agreement with
all that has been said by the Masters of the spiritual life.
Renunciation sounds too much like a negative word.
Retirement has lost it's appeal.
Sometimes I wish Doctor Seuss would have given us
a whole new language, even if the limit is vowels
and constant consonents...
Fun and meaningful gibberish!
We'll call them scriptures with pictures that
take us beyond the tired, well-worn words.
Isn't that what Zen brings to the table?
Like the sound of one hand clapping...
Big toe "high fives" the little toe...
Oneness singing the wedding march to Dynamic Dualism.
So many circles trying to encompass triangles.
It's an eye and earful when we watch and listen.
I will be looking for you two, today!
Peace and luvs, Keith
That was super,DK.One thing puzzles me though.Why doesn't "love education" appear as a curiculum subject at any school the world over.Is it really so difficult to teach inner strength and beauty?I think unless we start such a thing formally,this strife torn world will move further into depths of terror and mayhem.
Dear Ved, dear Keith
"Love Education" has been underway for a long time, we just call it Shakespeare in England!
Here are the two Sonnets of Shakespeare which prove the point and I present them for both of you to acknowledge your illuminating posts:
Sonnet 116
Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove:
O no! it is an ever-fixed mark
That looks on tempests and is never shaken;
It is the star to every wandering bark,
Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.
Love's not Time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks
Within his bending sickle's compass come:
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,
But bears it out even to the edge of doom.
If this be error and upon me proved,
I never writ, nor no man ever loved.
Sonnet 29
When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes,
I all alone beweep my outcast state,
And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries,
And look upon myself, and curse my fate,
Wishing me like to one more rich in hope,
Featured like him, like him with friends possessed,
Desiring this man's art and that man's scope,
With what I most enjoy contented least;
Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising,
Haply I think on thee—and then my state,
Like to the lark at break of day arising
From sullen earth, sings hymns at heaven's gate;
For thy sweet love rememb'red such wealth brings
That then I scorn to change my state with kings.
Yours ever
DK
DK Matai
The Philanthropia, ATCA, mi2g.net
D.K.,
It's been awhile since I've seen such lovely sonnets.
I know the feeling of #29, but I await the depth
of #116. I'll keep the faith and swim in hope!
I know she's out there...
Even now, I can see her name!
I'd rather hold her hand.
Wish me luck, D.K.
Cheerio! Keith
Dear DK,
Love as expressed by the bard - is captured in words like no other!
Thank you for the sonnets and the poem by Max Ehrmann.
Dear Keith,
The loom to weave - has been hidden away in my mother's closet for some time now. Passed on from a generation before.
Now, I long to see it become vibrant again with activity and tapestry. Are my hands up to the task? :)
I cannot renounce the call to Life. Every tear and challenge, every smile and caress - reminds me of the beauty of what the human experience IS.
With love,
~ Kate
I posted this piece on my blog(w/permission), after having read it at Jasjit's blog below...with her article, is a beautiful paining by fellow contributor there, Anusheh Hussain
Osho Piece by: Jasjit Purewal (Piece Title: Knowing the Unknowable)
http://www.isitaboutsexblog.com/
OSHO
None have plumbed the depths of the human psyche and torched its peaks, as the inimitable Osho in his multitude of discourses. All that we know as our ‘mind’ has been his pet subject, peeling way for the modern mind the many subtle and unsubtle layers that trap us in cycles of chaos and pain. Demystifying this very mind, speaking to us in simple intelligible terms and touching us where our ‘spark’ lies buried, makes him truly the rarest of rare mystics.
Here are a few invaluable words:
“Think Less, Feel More- thinking takes us further and further away from the truth of who we are. The heart is much closer and an easier path to the experience of our being.
Get out of your Head and into your Heart. Don’t be too much attached to your thoughts; get deeper into sensations. If you want to be aware, you have to be sensitive. You have to allow all your senses to become aflame. Then the lotus of the heart opens and there is never any confusion.
Nothing can be more important than this dive from the head to the heart. It is not through thinking that one arrives home, it is through feeling.
Anger and fear are the same. Fear is the feminine form of anger, anger is the male form of fear; these are the two alternatives. If you can be angry you will be, if you cannot you will be afraid. Impotent anger becomes fear- they are both the same.
This time do one thing: remain with them. It will be a little arduous, but let it be this time. When they go they go. If they don’t go you have to remain with them. If one can learn the knack of remaining with states then sooner or later they will disappear on their own. That’s why sometimes you feel a melting. That is bound to happen, because no one can remain in fear for long. It is such a negative state it becomes too much, one needs a holiday from it- a tea break.
Fear is only the absence of love. And the problem of absence is that you cannot do anything directly about it.
Fear is like darkness and you cannot do anything about darkness directly. You cannot drop it, you cannot throw it out, you cannot bring it in. The way to darkness goes via light. If you want darkness turn the light off, if you don’t want it put the light on. But you will have to do something with light, not with darkness.
The same is true about love and fear: love is light, fear is darkness.
The person who becomes obsessed with fear will never be able to resolve the problem. It is like wrestling with darkness -you are bound to be defeated.
Never fight with the non-existential. That’s where all the ancient religions lost. Once you start with the non-existential you are doomed.
Your small river of consciousness will be lost in the non-existential desert -and it is infinite.
Hence the first thing to remember is don’t make a problem out of fear. Love is the question. Something can be done about love immediately. Start loving! And it’s a natural gift from existence.
Remember love is born with you; it's your intrinsic quality. All that is needed is to make a passage for it, to let it flow, to allow it to happen. We are all blocking it, holding it back. We are miserly about love, for the simple reason that we have been taught a certain economics: the more you give, the less you have; the less you give the more you have. The economics may be perfectly right for the outside world but not true for the inner world. If you don’t give at all you will lose your natural qualities.
Once you have known the higher mathematics of giving and gaining, you will find that just by giving you gain. Then love starts spreading, radiating. And one day you will be surprised: where is the fear? Even if you want to find it you will not be able to. It is not a question of dropping fear; nobody has ever been able to drop it. It is only a question of fear of sharing your love and the fear is dropped on its own accord.
In controlling you repress, in transformation you express. Anger is a very small thing. If you can just wait and watch that will be enough! Just watch it and it will go slowly. It will just enter from one side and go out the other. You just have to keep a little patience not to ride on it.
Anger jealousy, envy, greed, competitiveness…all our problems are very small but our ego magnifies them, makes them as big as it can. The ego cannot do otherwise, its anger also has to be great.
Next time you feel angry go and run around the house seven times and after that sit under a tree and watch where the anger has gone. You have not repressed it, you have not controlled it nor have you thrown it on somebody else.
If you throw it on another, a chain is created because the other is as foolish as you, as unconscious as you. If you throw it on another and the other is enlightened, then it's no problem; he will help you release it and go through a catharsis.
So there is no need to throw your anger on anybody. Something inside needs fast activity so that it is released. Just do a little jogging or beat a pillow, fight with it, bite it until your hands and teeth are relaxed. Within a five-minute catharsis you will feel unburdened. - and once you know this you will never throw it on anybody because that is absolutely foolish.
So the first thing in transformation is to express anger but not on anybody-because if you express it on somebody you cannot express it totally. You may like to kill or bite but that is not possible. But that can be done to a pillow. A pillow is enlightened, a Buddha. The pillow will not react, not go to court or bring enmity against you; the pillow will do nothing. The pillow will be happy, the pillow will laugh at you.”
Excerpted from ‘And The Flowers Showered.’
Lastly, another favorite!! Clarissa's Bluebeard
nice piece on the feminine self-empowerment.
BlueBeard-Commentary by Clarissa Pinkola Est
QUOTE: Clarissa's Commentary On The Story Of Bluebeard
[…] "That is why the women lie as skeletons and cadavers in Bluebeard’s cellar. They learnt of the trap, but too late. Consciousness is the way out of the box, the way out of the torture. It is the path away from the dark man. And women are entitled to fight tooth and nail to have it and keep it.
In the Bluebeard story we see how a woman who falls under the spell of the predator rouses herself and escapes him, wiser for the next time. The story is about the transformation of four shadowy introjects which are in particular contention for women: have no vision, have no insight, have no voice, have no action.
In order to banish the predator, we must do the opposite. We must unlock or pry things open to see what is inside. We must use our insight and our ability to stand what we see. We must speak our truth in a clear voice. And we must be able to use our wits to do what needs be about what we see.
When a woman is strong in her instinctual nature, she intuitively recognizes the innate predator by scent, sight, and hearing . . . anticipates its presence, hears it approaching, and takes steps to
turn it away.
In the instinct-injured woman, the predator is upon her before she registers its presence, for her
listening, her knowing, and her apprehension are impaired - mainly by introjects which exhort her to be nice, to behave, and especially to be blind to being misused.
Psychically, it is difficult at first glance to tell the difference between the uninitiated, who are as yet young and therefore naive, and women who are injured in instinct. Neither knows much about the dark predator, and both are therefore still credulous.
But fortunately for us, when the predatory element of a woman’s psyche is on the move, it leaves behind unmistakable tracks in her dreams. These tracks eventually lead to its discovery,
capture, and containment.
The cure for both the naive woman and the instinct-injured woman is the same:
Practice listening to your intuition, your inner voice; ask questions; be curious; see what you see; hear what you hear; and then act upon what you know to be true. These intuitive powers were given to your soul at birth. They have been covered over, Perhaps by years and years of ashes and excrement.
This is not the end of the world, for these always wash off. With some chipping and scraping and practice, your perceptive powers can be brought back to their pristine state again. By retrieving these powers from the shadows of our psyches, we shall not be simple victims of internal or external circumstances.
No matter how culture, personality, psyche, or other might demand women be dressed and behaved, no matter how they may all wish to keep all females in a gaggle with ten dozing dueñas, chaperones, nearby, no matter what pressures attempt to compress a woman’s soulful life, they cannot change the fact that a woman is what she is and that this is dictated by the wild
unconscious, and that it is good.
It is crucial for us to remember that when we have dark man dreams there is always an opposing power poised and waiting to help us. When we initiate wildish energy in order to balance the predator, guess who immediately shows up?
Wild Woman comes diving over whatever fences, walls, or obstructions the predator has erected. She is not an icon, to be hung on the wall like a retablo, religious painting. She is a
living being who comes to us anywhere, under any conditions. She and the predator have known each other a long, long time. She tracks him through dreams, through stories, through tales, and through women's entire lives. Wherever he is, she is, for she is the one who balances his predations.
Wild Woman teaches women when not to act “nice” about protecting their soulful lives. The wildish nature knows that being “sweet” in these instances only makes the predator smile.
When the soulful life is being threatened, it is not only acceptable to draw the line and mean it, it is required. When a woman does this, her life cannot be interfered with for long, for she knows immediately what is wrong and can push the predator back where it belongs. She is no longer naive. She is no longer a mark or a target. And this is the medicine that causes the key, finally, to cease its bleeding.”
North
Those were real jewels North!
Absence of love leads to fear...
The giving and gaining mathematics...
share your love and fear is dropped by its own accord...
no matter what pressures attempt to compress a woman’s soulful life, they cannot change the fact that a woman is what she is ...
Wild Woman teaches women when not to act “nice” about protecting their soulful lives...
The two sonnets of Shakepeare were beautiful DK.But what I had in mind was that we are not making love an everyman's subject just as we are making science,economics etc.Like your write up also says that we need a good teacher who can bring this about.But sadly,we have not been able to produce such teachers on as large a scale as we have teachers for other subjects.And that has been our failure.If adults are not able to show the light(refer to north's post) then you can't blame the young generation for having gone astray(terrorism,scant respect for eachother,lack of understanding of the two sexes...).We need to make an immediate beginning!
In agreement Ved.. we DO need teachers.. to teach love. It would seem, parental lacking in that department reflects in our societal un-wholesomeness...when this occurs; should love not be taught as a "subject of matter" in the classroom?
IF children are not taught to be compassionate and understanding.. how can we expect them to learn it in adulthood, without walking many miles encircling themselves, until love is revealed haphazardly?
North
Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)
(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)
(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)In agreement Ved.. we DO need teachers.. to tea
Those were real jewels North!
Absence of
Lastly, another favorite!! Clarissa's Bluebeard
I posted this piece on my blog(w/permission), a
Dear DK,
Love as expressed by the bard -
D.K. Matai,
Hello! Thanks for the reminders.
The Perennial Philosophy is old news.
Evolution moves and grows painfully slow.
Do you believe our species, Holy Sapientas,
will ever claim their natural birthrights?
How do we propose to promote it any differently
than we have for the last 10,000 years?
Do we now have hard evldence to show the world
proof of the existence of the "soul"?
Fundamentalists believe they have one.
Most people agree that "they" are the culprits
of the current political stuggles world-wide.
.
So what is going on?
90% of those surveyed say they believe in a God.
"As a man believes, so does he act".
Such a discrepency is involved, it seeems like
The Great Cosmic Joke! The Trickster, Mercury...
The Serpent eating his own tail.
How long, D.K., do you think it will take?
Are you at all optimistic about our chances?
I hope you come back, even if no one else replies
to such a long post.
I'd like to hear your take on it, personally.
Myself? Aye...larva...creeping and crawling between
earth and sky, looking for a loom.
Peace, Keith