Hi Ken,
I read somewhere (William Jamaes' 'Varieties of Religious Ecperience'?) that there exists a dichotomy among Christians too. There are those who are constantly struggling to find God, to know God, to measure up to His expectations (yet, perhaps, never quite meeting the mark). The are filled with such doubt and feelings of sin that it must be washed clean in a great struggle and final "born-again" breakthrough.
Then there are those who simply see God in every window pane, insect's humm, blade of grass. No need to look or measure.
Perhaps it is the same variety of human types, this time found among Buddhists?
Gassho, J
** I can only find the first page of this book review, but it applies William James ideas, above, to Zen. I think it makes the distinction clear.
https://<br /> <a href="http://http...CO%3B2-Q<br />
I read somewhere (William Jamaes' 'Varieties of Religious Ecperience'?) that there exists a dichotomy among Christians too. There are those who are constantly struggling to find God, to know God, to measure up to His expectations (yet, perhaps, never quite meeting the mark). The are filled with such doubt and feelings of sin that it must be washed clean in a great struggle and final "born-again" breakthrough.
Then there are those who simply see God in every window pane, insect's humm, blade of grass. No need to look or measure.
Perhaps it is the same variety of human types, this time found among Buddhists?
Gassho, J
** I can only find the first page of this book review, but it applies William James ideas, above, to Zen. I think it makes the distinction clear.
https://<br /> <a href="http://http...CO%3B2-Q<br />
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