登陆注册
5440100000040

第40章 CHAPTER Religion(5)

Court within court, building after building, isolate the shrine itself from the profane familiarity of the passers-by. But though the material encasings vary in number and in exclusiveness, according to the temperament of the particular race concerned, the mental envelopes exist, and must exist, in both hemispheres alike, so long as society resembles the crust of the earth on which it dwells,--a crust composed of strata that grow denser as one descends. What is clear to those on top seems obscure to those below; what are weighty arguments to the second have no force at all upon the first. There must necessarily be grades of elevation in individual beliefs, suited to the needs and cravings of each individual soul. A creed that fills the shallow with satisfaction leaves but an aching void in the deep. It is not of the slightest consequence how the belief starts; differentiated it is bound to become. The higher minds alone can rest content with abstract imaginings; the lower must have concrete realities on which to pin their faith. With them, inevitably, ideals degenerate into idols.

In all religions this unavoidable debasement has taken place.

The Roman Catholic who prays to a wooden image of Christ is not one whit less idolatrous than the Buddhist who worships a bronze statue of Amida Butzu. All that the common people are capable of seeing is the soul-envelope, for the soul itself they are unable to appreciate. Spiritually they are undiscerning, because imaginatively they are blind.

Now the grosser soul-envelopes of the two great European and Asiatic faiths, though differing in detail, are in general parallel in structure. Each boasts its full complement of saints, whose congruent catalogues are equally wearisome in length. Each tells its circle of beads to help it keep count of similarly endless prayers. For in both, in the popular estimation, quantity is more effective to salvation than quality. In both the believer practically pictures his heaven for himself, while in each his hell, with a vividness that does like credit to its religious imagination, is painted for him by those of the cult who are themselves confident of escaping it. Into the lap of each mother church the pious believer drops his little votive offering with the same affectionate zeal, and in Asia, as in Europe, the mites of the many make the might of the mass.

But behind all this is the religion of the few,--of those to whom sensuous forms cannot suffice to represent super-sensuous cravings; whose god is something more than an anthropomorphic creation; to whom worship means not the cramping of the body, but the expansion of the soul.

The rays of the truth, like the rays of the sun, which universally seems to have been man's first adoration, have two properties equally inherent in their essence, warmth and light. And as for the life of all things on this globe both attributes of sunshine are necessary, so to the development of that something which constitutes the ego both qualities of the truth are vital. We sometimes speak of character as if it were a thing wholly apart from mind; but, in fact, the two things are so interwoven that to perceive the right course is the strongest possible of incentives to pursue it. In the end the two are one. Now, while clearness of head is all-important, kindness of heart is none the less so. The first, perhaps, is more needed in our communings with ourselves, the second in our commerce with others. For, dark and dense bodies that we are, we can radiate affection much more effectively than we can reflect views.

That Christianity is a religion of love needs no mention; that Buddhism is equally such is perhaps not so generally appreciated.

But just as the gospel of the disciple who loved and was loved the most begins its story by telling us of the Light that came into the world, so none the less surely could the Light of Asia but be also its warmth. Half of the teachings of Buddhism are spent in inculcating charity. Not only to men is man enjoined to show kindliness, but to all other animals as well. The people practise what their scriptures preach. The effect indirectly on the condition of the brutes is almost as marked as its more direct effect on the character of mankind. In heart, at least, Buddhism and Christianity are very close.

But here the two paths to a something beyond an earthly life diverge. Up to this point the two religions are alike, but from this point on they are so utterly unlike that the very similarity of all that went before only suffices to make of the second the weird, life-counterfeiting shadow of the first. As in a silhouette, externally the contours are all there, but within is one vast blank.

In relation to one's neighbor the two beliefs are kin, but as regards one's self, as far apart as the West is from the East.

For here, at this idea of self, we are suddenly aware of standing on the brink of a fathomless abyss, gazing giddily down into that great gulf which divides Buddhism from Christianity. We cannot see the bottom. It is a separation more profound than death; it seems to necessitate annihilation. To cross it we must bury in its depths all we know as ourselves.

Christianity is a personal religion; Buddhism, an impersonal one.

In this fundamental difference lies the world-wide opposition of the two beliefs. Christianity tells us to purify ourselves that we may enjoy countless aeons of that bettered self hereafter; Buddhism would have us purify ourselves that we may lose all sense of self for evermore.

For all that it preaches the essential vileness of the natural man, Christianity is a gospel of optimism. While it affirms that at present you are bad, it also affirms that this depravity is no intrinsic part of yourself. It unquestioningly asserts that it is something foreign to your true being. It even believes that in a more or less spiritual manner your very body will survive.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 三世菩莲恋

    三世菩莲恋

    竹浅落本为一株青莲,却因机缘有幸幻为人,并拜入青莲大师门下。林墨染乃堂堂一皇子,却因生降之时天降异像而与青莲大师结缘。为辅佐他,她不惜放弃一切,哪怕生命。“前方如是河我便陪你一起过,是路,我便陪你走。”“我曾说过不悔,那便不会回头。”
  • 糖果公主之恋你失心

    糖果公主之恋你失心

    她,宁泌瑜没有父母,没有身世,在这个世界生活的很富有真是个奇迹!她,爱吃棒棒糖。并且棒棒糖对于她来说,是没有的食物。更奇怪的是,棒棒糖是她的输血产品,是她的能量充足,还是她唯一不可失去的东西!她,对校草不感兴趣,却有着花痴们羡慕的美貌。她贸然的吃了一种棒棒糖,就这样为她的爱情开启了铺垫。她被说是魔法国的使者,要找失散的棒棒糖,完成使命。然而,棒棒糖的魔力带给她爱情的启发,桃花运慢慢的出现在她身上。守护精灵果果,还常常叫她公主!这是怎么一回事?她吃的每个漂亮棒棒糖怎么都让她变得越来越奇怪了?身份的秘密,上一世的记忆,一切的真相!是怎么一回事?
  • 缘起缘灭一场空

    缘起缘灭一场空

    毛毛细雨中站着一个瘦弱的女孩,大大的双眼闪着星辰般的光芒,嘴角带着一抹微笑,一脸幸福的看向天空,双手微微伸到了身前,似乎想接住这些雨丝,邀请它们一同玩耍一般。在教学楼里躲雨的人,都带着怪异、惊奇的目光看着那雨中的女孩,似乎不解女孩的这般行径,却也无人大声喊那女孩进来躲雨。只是人群里传来了窃窃私语的声音,不知在说些什么。不一会儿,雨停了。在人们的注目里,那个浑身有些湿嗒嗒的女孩缓慢的走了进教学楼,只是脸上带着一抹与她那湿嗒嗒的形象不符的微笑,就像一只偷腥吃饱的猫儿一般。。。。。。“你呀!小丫头!真不知你什么时候才能不那么傻呢?什么时候才能长大呢?”“哈哈哈,可快了呀!等我傻完了那就长大了呗!”
  • 傲世元素师:绝宠小王妃

    傲世元素师:绝宠小王妃

    “世界只分我要的,和我不要的。”“男人,你是我不要的!”轩辕夕笑的妖娆,语气桀骜。二十一世纪炫酷无敌吊炸天的金牌杀手轩辕夕,重生傲世大陆第一废材大公主之身。说她废,你见过拥有七系元素的废物?说她丑,不好意思,有美男倾尽金银为她一笑!说她恶毒?关门,放魔兽!他是实力强横,背景神秘的云王。世人说他乃天之娇子,却偏好男风,是暴殄天物。当他万千宠爱全部都给予一个女子的时候,世人纷纷惊呆了。睥睨天地,脚踏洪荒。泱泱大千世界,皆为她手下蝼蚁。
  • 黄帝龙首经

    黄帝龙首经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 背弃全世界也要找回你

    背弃全世界也要找回你

    他在我失忆时强势闯入,却原来,这是我失忆的一部分。在外人面前,他是冷酷面瘫说话笔直刚的大老板,但是谈起恋爱来,南禾才解读到了他的本性。他吃醋时:我吃醋了,需要你哄。他悲伤时:你看我都哭了,你就知道我很难过了。他委屈时:委屈的表情挂在脸上,你哄我都不带搭理你的。某一天纪谦辰惹火了南禾,百般撒娇都不管用,南禾终于忍不住问他一句了。“纪老板,你咋戏这么多呢?”“书上说……烈女怕缠郎。”手指在沙发上画着小圈圈,表情委屈的很到位。
  • 用一辈子,说我爱你

    用一辈子,说我爱你

    甜蜜抒写这一季可口的爱恋!当小太阳遇上大冰山,当呆萌小职员与腹黑BOSS交锋,你争我斗中谁会胜出?在遇到秦明朗之前,朱雨萌只是个单纯的小吃货;在认识秦明朗之后,朱雨萌却转眼化身为集总裁秘书、生活助理以及挡酒神器为一身的女超人!一开始,备受“摧残”的小职员朱雨萌对秦明朗这只腹黑大老虎敢怒不敢言,殊不知,在与其斗智斗勇的过程中,竟让她收获了人生中最甜美的爱情。流言蜚语算什么?阴谋诡计算什么?BOSS在手,天下我有。
  • 新世纪车手

    新世纪车手

    历史上,有许多厉害的车手,方吉奥、斯图尔特、劳达、塞纳、舒马赫、汉密尔顿......2019年,一位华裔的年轻车手在欧洲开始自己的生涯在历史上从来没有一位华裔车手进入到F1赛场中他会不会成为第一位?
  • 金姝

    金姝

    穿越到灰姑娘身上的南宫塘,没想到自己居然是披着灰姑凉外衣的国公府嫡女。她想着,凭借上天开的这个挂,她要好好准备逆袭了。没想到更大的挂却是,谈情说爱的就把江山取了。
  • 体育教学心理学

    体育教学心理学

    本书阐述了体育教学中的感知觉规律、体育教学中的注意、体育教学中的运动记忆规律、体育教学中的学生思维能力的发展、体育教学中学生意志品质的发展等九章内容。