Surrendering from ourselves.
I’ve never met a person who said, “Today I will conduct
myself in a negative and self-centered way.” On the contrary, the odds are
extremely high that each of us conducts our lives according to certain
ideological criteria, whether implicit or explicit. Everyone thinks they are
right and others who don’t share their perspectives are thus wrong. The
polarity of ideologies has never been more extreme than now and is ensuring our
mutual undoing.
To plumb the depths of this, we need to consider the words of Krishnamurti. Do you align yourself with a particular political party? Nowadays it is hard not to. Or in a different vein, do you think of yourself as a man or a woman? Or how about belonging to one religion or another? Lots of variations on the theme of differences but Krishnamurti has a point worth our consideration:
When we identify ourselves in contrast to others we unknowingly adopt an attitude of unintended opposition and violence. And nobody takes favorably to opposition and will then meet opposition with opposition.
Some time ago I had a friend who had grown up in the Soviet
Union and was thus subjected to unspeakable oppression. He detested every idea
that might align with socialism and defended his positions with conviction and
passion. Many times we engaged in friendly discussions and we both came to the
same conclusion: If each of us had grown up with the experiences and influences
of the other, we both would have very different points of view.
In that case he
would understand my perspective and I would understand his. Neither of us came
into this world with any point of view and when we die our points of view will
die with us, but in between birth and death we remain adamant in our
convictions. Our views were entirely the result of what we had experienced, not who we were.
Is there any way of circumventing this dilemma, of bypassing
such fleeting bias? In our ordinary way of thinking it doesn’t seem possible,
but one of the greatest thinkers in human history had a solution, which is not
routinely understood, due to translation problems. According to Jesus, two
things are required to solve this problem: dying to ourselves and then practicing unconditional love
(the kind without discrimination).
The first supporting scriptural reference comes from the book of
Matthew: “He who finds his life shall lose it: and he who loses his life for my
sake shall find it.” That passage
(as many other translations) doesn’t express well in English. The English word
here for life, in the original Greek,
was psuchē, which has various
meanings, the most prominent of which is soul,
later to be translated as a psychic image of self, in other words, the ego—our idea of who we are separate and
apart from others.
The second reference comes from the book of John: “Greater
love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.”
Again, there is that word life/psuchē. This
is perhaps the most butchered and misconstrued expression in the entire New
Testament. The literal meaning, contrary to popular belief, is surrendering your psyche (ideas) for your
friends constitutes the greatest love.
The question is simply this: what is the prerequisite to
surrendering our ideas in order to express the greatest love? The answer is
obvious: Letting go of our ideas about who we think we are. It’s a two-step process:
once we become clear that we are not an idea (ego) that is hostile to others we can then release ourselves
from the death-knoll of polarized thinking. Only then is it possible to have an open mind and be released from the prison of inflexible dogmas.
In such a case we can conduct
ourselves as the Buddha said at the conclusion of the Kalama Sutra: “… after
thorough investigation and reflection, you find to agree with reason and
experience, as conducive to the good and benefit of one and all and of the
world at large, accept only that as true and shape your life in accordance
with it. Do not accept any doctrine from reverence, but first try it as gold is
tried by fire.”
In the end, spiritual insight has a most positive, practical and
profound impact on personal and world affairs.
Matthew
10:39
John
15:13
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