steve_bank
Diabetic retinopathy and poor eyesight. Typos ...
DLH avail us of your wisdom derived firm 30n years of biblical study.
Christians now call the bible one of the greatest literary works of all time. I disagree. It 8s a collection of adds and ends form over 2000 years ago.
I used used to have books on Tibetan and Indian restoration.
I remember a few of the stories. A trip down memory lane.
An Indian stpry.
A teacher was lecturing his students. He tells them god is in you, in me and everything.
Feeling the blis of new knowledge a student was walking down a road when an elephant came running towards him bellowing.
He thought to himself god is in me and in the elegant so I have nothing to fear.
The elephant grabbed him with its trunk and tossed him aside.
Bewildered he asked his teacher what went wrong.
The teacher said ‘God in the elephant was speaking to you but god in you was not listening’
From Tibet
A teacher put two students in remote huts. To one he gave a traditionally correct manta and the other one he made up. He told them both to spend few months focusing on the mantras.
When he returned the one with traditionally correct mantra got nothing from it. The one with made up mantra was beaming with joy.
Moral of the story, it is not what you believe it is how you believe it.
A group of monks were walking along a trail came upon a master sitting in front of a wooden image of Buddha. They asked what was one to do to find enlightenment.
The master said ‘Contentment Buddha’s image as I am doing!’
The next day the monks found the master chopping up the wooden Buddha with an axe. Horrified they asked what he was doing.
He said, ‘It is cold and I need firewood.’
Moral of the story, one chops away at one’s preconceptions and attachments.’
In the 60s 70 Japanese Zen became popular. As I remember this one.
A new student meets his teacher and is given a koan, a sort of riddle or puzzle that the student has to answer.
The master says ‘What is the sound of one hand clapping?’.
The student returns and started to recite a logical analytical explanation. The master hits him on the head with his rice bowl and tells him to come back and try again.
The student returns, sits down, and simply waves one hand back and forth. The master smiles.
As to wisdom literature the bible as it is is coarse and inconsistent. From what I read stores like Job were teaching stories used by teachers.
The bible is hopelessly incomplete as to what was taught and written in ancient Jewish culture,.
Which is why there is all the Christian interpretations with all the conflicts. Anyone can read the bible and become a moral authority of god.
If one reads only the bible for 30 years one has no context trom other traditions.
I am not all that well read as some are, but I read enough to see the bible and Christianity in a context
				
			Christians now call the bible one of the greatest literary works of all time. I disagree. It 8s a collection of adds and ends form over 2000 years ago.
I used used to have books on Tibetan and Indian restoration.
I remember a few of the stories. A trip down memory lane.
An Indian stpry.
A teacher was lecturing his students. He tells them god is in you, in me and everything.
Feeling the blis of new knowledge a student was walking down a road when an elephant came running towards him bellowing.
He thought to himself god is in me and in the elegant so I have nothing to fear.
The elephant grabbed him with its trunk and tossed him aside.
Bewildered he asked his teacher what went wrong.
The teacher said ‘God in the elephant was speaking to you but god in you was not listening’
From Tibet
A teacher put two students in remote huts. To one he gave a traditionally correct manta and the other one he made up. He told them both to spend few months focusing on the mantras.
When he returned the one with traditionally correct mantra got nothing from it. The one with made up mantra was beaming with joy.
Moral of the story, it is not what you believe it is how you believe it.
A group of monks were walking along a trail came upon a master sitting in front of a wooden image of Buddha. They asked what was one to do to find enlightenment.
The master said ‘Contentment Buddha’s image as I am doing!’
The next day the monks found the master chopping up the wooden Buddha with an axe. Horrified they asked what he was doing.
He said, ‘It is cold and I need firewood.’
Moral of the story, one chops away at one’s preconceptions and attachments.’
In the 60s 70 Japanese Zen became popular. As I remember this one.
A new student meets his teacher and is given a koan, a sort of riddle or puzzle that the student has to answer.
The master says ‘What is the sound of one hand clapping?’.
The student returns and started to recite a logical analytical explanation. The master hits him on the head with his rice bowl and tells him to come back and try again.
The student returns, sits down, and simply waves one hand back and forth. The master smiles.
As to wisdom literature the bible as it is is coarse and inconsistent. From what I read stores like Job were teaching stories used by teachers.
The bible is hopelessly incomplete as to what was taught and written in ancient Jewish culture,.
Which is why there is all the Christian interpretations with all the conflicts. Anyone can read the bible and become a moral authority of god.
If one reads only the bible for 30 years one has no context trom other traditions.
I am not all that well read as some are, but I read enough to see the bible and Christianity in a context
			
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