My understanding of the
message from the book is that our attachments to our beliefs get in the way of
our following our own, best path. The more strongly we are attached to a
belief, the less likely we are to challenge it, even if it becomes almost
impossible to make that belief work with what we see around us.
People kill and die because
of their beliefs. That belief may be that only their religion is right, that their country is the best,
or that their physical body’s shape, size, or color is somehow better than
another.
The Dalai Lama, the well-known Tibetan Buddhist teacher, explains the difference between attachment and unconditional love: “Attachment and love are similar in that both of them draw us to the other person. But in fact, these two emotions are quite different. When we’re attached we’re drawn to someone because he or she meets our needs.[…] On the other hand, the love we’re generating on the Dharma path is unconditional. We simply want others to have happiness and the causes of happiness without any strings attached...” He neither accepts nor denies that unconditional love is possible, but he does explain it quite clearly.
The Dalai Lama, the well-known Tibetan Buddhist teacher, explains the difference between attachment and unconditional love: “Attachment and love are similar in that both of them draw us to the other person. But in fact, these two emotions are quite different. When we’re attached we’re drawn to someone because he or she meets our needs.[…] On the other hand, the love we’re generating on the Dharma path is unconditional. We simply want others to have happiness and the causes of happiness without any strings attached...” He neither accepts nor denies that unconditional love is possible, but he does explain it quite clearly.
People harm each other
because of attachments to a belief that there is a limited way to love. I’d bet
on the fact that you know someone who believes it is wrong to love outside of
your race, your religion, or to love someone of the same gender. Those same
people may tell you that God doesn’t want you to love in the ways they believe
are wrong—and they may also tell you that God loves unconditionally.
Perhaps they explain this as a paradox—that God loves unconditionally, but with a few conditions.
A Yoruba priest, Kalila Borhgini says, “God’s love is unconditional, but God also has expectations and requirements.” She accepts this and, a little later, calls it a paradox.
Baptist Rev. John Piper writes, “There is such a thing as unconditional love in God, but it’s not [...] for everybody. Else everybody would be saved, since they would not have to meet any conditions, not even faith.” What I get from this is that God loves us unconditionally, only if we have faith—which is of course, a condition.
Perhaps they explain this as a paradox—that God loves unconditionally, but with a few conditions.
A Yoruba priest, Kalila Borhgini says, “God’s love is unconditional, but God also has expectations and requirements.” She accepts this and, a little later, calls it a paradox.
Baptist Rev. John Piper writes, “There is such a thing as unconditional love in God, but it’s not [...] for everybody. Else everybody would be saved, since they would not have to meet any conditions, not even faith.” What I get from this is that God loves us unconditionally, only if we have faith—which is of course, a condition.
I don’t believe in paradox. My feeling is
that when we see something as paradox, it’s because we are seeing part of the
equation incorrectly.
2+3 will never equal 4. No matter how attached I am to the number three, as long as I hold it in that part of the equation, I am going to come up with a paradox because the only thing that logically fits, is another two.
2+3 will never equal 4. No matter how attached I am to the number three, as long as I hold it in that part of the equation, I am going to come up with a paradox because the only thing that logically fits, is another two.
Consider this statement: God is everywhere.
At first, I took that to mean that God was here with us, all the time—that God was always present, right along with everything else. In time, I considered the possibility that God was neither another dimension superimposed over what we see and feel, nor a presence far away that was somehow aware of everything else.
At first, I took that to mean that God was here with us, all the time—that God was always present, right along with everything else. In time, I considered the possibility that God was neither another dimension superimposed over what we see and feel, nor a presence far away that was somehow aware of everything else.
Maybe God isn't here WITH everything, but AS
everything. Maybe God’s presence “everywhere” really means that everything and
everyone is God.
Einstein and other physicists tell us that all matter is actually energy. Slow down energy's vibration and you get what we call matter. This means everything we see, feel, know or imagine is energy. Our thoughts and feelings, our movement through space, and even our bodies.
Everything is energy. God is everything. Therefore God is energy. This equation makes sense to me.
Perhaps God slowed down bits of that energy in order to experience what we think of as the physical realm.
Everything is energy. God is everything. Therefore God is energy. This equation makes sense to me.
Perhaps God slowed down bits of that energy in order to experience what we think of as the physical realm.
In the Law of Attraction
teachings (also called the teachings of Abraham) it says, “Unconditional love
is staying in the vibration of Source regardless of the condition.” To me, this
says that we can only love unconditionally if we are in alignment
with the vibration of the Universe (God). In a way, this is saying the same
thing as the Baptist Reverend--that faith(or alignment with God) is a condition of unconditional love.
One could look at it to mean that only God can love unconditionally, but if we did accept the premise that God is all, then God is us, and we are God and therefore, we should be able to achieve unconditional love.
I will make mistakes and you will make mistakes, yet God is
perfect. If we are God, then mistakes do not take away from our perfection.
How can that be?
If I am God
and you are God, then the concept of ‘loving thy neighbor as thyself’ has a
different flavor. Thy neighbor IS thyself and both of us are God. We are meant
to love ourselves and others and God constantly and equally, because they are
one and the same and Divine—and therefore perfect. It’s like saying God has
unconditional love for us because we are Divine
and perfect aspects of God. That equation seems to ring as true as 2+2=4. Both sides are equal and the same.
Catholic Fr. Vincent Serpa writes, “God does love us
unconditionally in that he loves us even in our sins. But he cannot love our
sins.” This is the “love the person not their actions” version of
“unconditional” love. It represents an attachment to the “good and evil” concept.
But maybe the way we choose to manipulate the energy around us
(the way we choose to live our lives) is not good or bad. Maybe that judgment
is irrelevant to God. Maybe God does not have any expectation of how we will use
our time in this physical realm, but instead, has a knowledge that all aspects
of God will always be aspects of God regardless of how we shift that energy—that
no matter what we do, we are still perfect.
We would not
put the three in the 2+3=5 equation unless we had a really good reason to
believe that the three belonged there. If we were to accept that this paradox of expectations and
unconditional love is a faulty equation, what attachment would have caused us to
create it?
I think it’s an attachment to conditional love that moves me—and others—create the paradoxical equation.
In my most
rational moments, I don't actually believe God loves one person more than
another. I accept that everyone and everything is an aspect of God, and that God
loves all aspects of the Universe equally. Therefore, what I do here has
nothing to do with how much God loves me.
The first time I considered that idea, I was surprised by a wave of fear. Why would that
be a scary thought?
As a small child, I wanted to be loved unconditionally but I learned that love
was conditional. I believed my parents were not capable of giving me unconditional love because I was not capable of being "good enough". If I believed unconditional love was possible, I also had to accept that my parents chose not to give it to me. This is harder to accept
than to believe there’s an unknowable paradox—which would allow me to never
have to look at the situation too closely.
In order to imagine this need for unconditional love being fulfilled, I personified God. I gave God the quality of requiring a condition for love, a quality that actually belonged to my parents. Like many (as my examples above display) I developed an attachment to the belief that "unconditional" love would be given to me if I followed a certain set of rules.
An attachment to this belief has several benefits.
In order to imagine this need for unconditional love being fulfilled, I personified God. I gave God the quality of requiring a condition for love, a quality that actually belonged to my parents. Like many (as my examples above display) I developed an attachment to the belief that "unconditional" love would be given to me if I followed a certain set of rules.
An attachment to this belief has several benefits.
For one thing, I can solve the greatest dilemma of my childhood.
With God, I can finally be "good enough" to receive “unconditional” love.
But also, by believing that God’s unconditional love actually
has some conditions, it gives me an illusion of power. If I do “God’s will” then
surely God will love me more. I will become one of the chosen, the beloved, the
saved—whatever name you’d like—by fulfilling the conditions imposed by my
belief system.
If I give up the attachment to the concept that I gain God’s
love by following certain rules, does that mean I have to believe I can’t gain
God’s love?
Yes. That's true. I can’t gain God’s love because I already have it. We can't ever lose it.
If we have to follow rules in order not to lose God’s love, we live fear-driven lives. There is constantly the possibility that I might lose the love I need, so my actions are driven by the set of imposed rules in my belief-system.
If we have to follow rules in order not to lose God’s love, we live fear-driven lives. There is constantly the possibility that I might lose the love I need, so my actions are driven by the set of imposed rules in my belief-system.
If I truly accept that God's love is unconditional, then I am no
longer driven by fear of losing that love. It is that fear that seems to hold
us to the rules of society—the things our society has decided are "moral”
or “right”. Without that fear-driven base, It seems I would no longer be governed by the laws of man. I
would be free to act exactly as I'm called to act. The moral "dilemma" would not exist.
Our attachment to the concept of "good and evil" may be the hardest one to release. How many paradoxes would be wiped out of existence if we saw that this is really a societal concept, not an actual law of the universe? We would not have to hold ourselves (mankind) to a different standard as the rest of nature, for one. We would not have to judge ourselves or others harshly for "making mistakes", for another. We all know we are going to "make mistakes" yet we live in resentment, shame and guilt.
If we were going to release our attachment to societal
morals. We would have to raise our children in an entirely different way. When
a toddler first experienced rage and struck out to show it, we would not tell
him what he was doing was wrong. Instead, we would teach him that everything
and everyone IS God, just as he is, and that when he strikes out against the
world, he is striking out against himself.
Of course he would not understand this as a toddler, but neither does a toddler understand “wrong”. We drive that into children until they believe it and then expect them to accept the "paradox" that God loves unconditionally—with some conditions.
Of course he would not understand this as a toddler, but neither does a toddler understand “wrong”. We drive that into children until they believe it and then expect them to accept the "paradox" that God loves unconditionally—with some conditions.