TallyMan wrote:
It is also why I feel it is necessary for people to find their own spiritual path. They can learn from various religions and teachers but need to keep their intellect and wits about them and not blindly swallow anything just because it is spoken by a so called expert or authority figure.
Amen. I have objections to the Dalai Lama's authority not just because of the homophobia thing, but because of the Dorje Shugden controversy (google it...acording to some sources, some Tibetan Buddhists have been guilty of some surprisingly uncompassionate behavior on this front). Actually, I have objections to anyone having incontestable authority, by dint of being a divine personage or any other way; the majority of spiritual teachers worth their salt have insisted they, personally, were nobody special, and their followers who thought differently were probably missing the point.
I think Buddhism does, nevertheless, have some valuable insights. Although, LeMesurier has a fair point in that there are elements of Buddhism (and other Eastern traditions) that can be found, if you dig deep enough, in Western spiritual paths; they just tend to have gotten covered up by other stuff over the years. Alan Watts is interesting in this context, in that while a Buddhist, he also trained in Christian theology; one of his books,
Beyond Theology, looks at Christianity from a non-dualist viewpoint. It's quite interesting.
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