Read the rest of the article.Why Original Sin Is Nonsense
Tue, Dec 22, 2009
Every so often I work with someone who has been dramatically impacted by the tragic teachings of original sin.
After we do some coaching together, we uncover that they believe they are fundamentally bad, wrong, or unlovable.
How did this happen I wonder? Where in the hell did they get this kind of message? For the lucky few that had great parents and teachers, who planted this seed?
One answer—original sin and “the church.”
Reginald A. Ray, the former head of the Religious Studies program at Naropa University and long-time Buddhist teacher told me once that in his 45 years experience teaching thousands of Western students meditation, he believed that original sin is responsible for why so many people have a negative view of themselves.
Of course it’s not the only reason.
When we are little kids, we pretty much believe what the big people tell us. Hence, racisim, sexism, and various forms of fundamentalism and extremism. Parents, coaches, teachers, and organizations have a HUGE power and influence over what kids learn and digest.
Brainwashing a child is pretty easy. Any form of fundamentalism starts by brainwashing children.
If you are a parent, how is it possible to look at your new baby and think that he or she is bad, guilty, wrong, or sinful? As one of my Catholic clients recently said about his son after birth, “he was perfect!”
As a father, I couldn’t agree more. Looking at my own son I was simply blown away at how pure he looked, felt and acted. His pure innocence and splendor. His eyes, face, little toes and hands were simply perfect. I felt deep love.
But if you yourself believe that you are fundamentally worthless, bad, or wrong at your core, it is no surprise that you will pass down that teaching to your children and children you work with.
Even still, how does any smart adult take the teaching of original sin seriously? If you test this and any spiritual or religious teaching against your own experience, what conclusions do you come to?
For example, if as a child you are taught that Hispanic (or fill in the blank) people are bad or less than you, you will simply take the adults word for it as truth. Even if your own experience suggests otherwise. As you get older however, in order to confirm your narrow belief system, you select only those experiences that match what you believe, thus concretizing your view and lodging racism into your psyche even further.
Are you really willing to come to your own conclusions or will you instead trust something even though it is in conflict with your direct experience?
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Revolutionary Man - Why Original Sin Is Nonsense
A good post from Jayson at The Revolutionary Man. I was raised Catholic, with all the original sin nonsense, so this makes sense to me.
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