Thursday, September 25, 2008

ON FAITH

'Weave in Faith; God will provide the thread' --
so says an ancient Indian proverb about the art of weaving the cloth of life.

Read on further to find out what others have to say on the subject of Faith:

Faith is a state of openness or trust.
To have faith is like when you trust yourself to the water.
You don't grab hold of the water when you swim, because if you do,
you will become stiff and tight in the water, and sink.
You have to relax, and the attitude of faith is
the very opposite of clinging, and holding on.
In other words, a person who is fanatic in matters of religion,
and clings to certain ideas about the nature of God and the universe
becomes a person who has no faith at all. Instead they are holding tight.
But the attitude of faith is to let go,
and become open to truth, whatever it might turn out to be. -- Alan Watts

All that thought suggests to me, I can do.
All that thought reveals in me, I can become.
This should be the unshakable faith in my Self,
Because God dwells in me. ~Sri Aurobindo

No one can call upon God without knowing Him.
St.Augustine wonders:
"May it be that a man must implore You before he can know You?"
The only things to count on are longing and the occult directives of desire.
Does this mean that prayer must come before faith?
Perhaps, 'not knowing' is the first condition of prayer. Can that be?
Augustine finds his working answer in Scripture:
"How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed?
They shall praise the Lord that seek him."
Longing is the only sure knowledge, that core of human instinct
which unfurls its song of praise. ~Saint Augustine

Shraddha:
The nearest English equivalent (to this Sanskrit term)
is Faith, but it means much more.
It is the set of values, axioms, prejudices, and pre-possessions
that colours our perceptions, governs our thinking, dictates our responses,
and shapes our lives, generally without our even being aware of its presence and power.
Shraddha is not an intellectual abstraction; it is our very substance.
The Gita says (17:3) --
"A person is what his Shraddha is."
The Bible using similar words, says:
"As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he."

There is nothing passive about Shraddha. It is full of potency.
For it prompts action, conditions behavior,
and determines how we see and therefore, respond to the world around us.
The power to heal or harm is inherent in our ideas of ourselves.

Yet Shraddha is not brute determination or wishful thinking.
Our lives are an eloquent expression of our beliefs:
what we deem worth having, doing, attaining, being.
What we strive for shows what we value.
We back our Shraddha with our time, our energy, our very lives.
Thus Shraddha determines destiny.

As the Buddha put it:
"All that we are is the result of what we thought.
We are made of our thoughts,
we are moulded by our thoughts."
As we think, so we become. ~Eknath Easwaran

At points in our life, everything we believe in collapses into a deep, dark hole,
and we feel that all of our previous efforts to live an honest, principled life have been in vain. There is a crisis of faith—a place void of spirit and dominated by utter hopelessness.
There are no guides, no hints at where to go next.
There is no life in front of you and no one to talk to.
This emptiness seems barren.
But a new kind of faith arises directly
out of our depressive thoughts and emotions,
and we no longer crave comfort from anyone else. ~Thomas Moore

When all your efforts end in failure,
it means that you are being taught the lesson
that, not your own efforts,
but God's Grace alone can bring success.
And you should seek His Grace.

When you come to the edge of all the light you have, and
you must take a step into the darkness of the unknown,
believe that one of two things will happen to you:
Either there will be something solid for you to stand on, or
You will be taught how to fly. ~ Patrick Overton

The Guru tells the disciple:
"This is the truth that I have experienced."
and explains and instructs.
The disciple, with deep faith in the Guru,
travels the path, and ultimately exclaims:
"I too have now experienced the truth that my Guru spoke of."
There is no such thing as 'blind' faith!
_________________________

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