Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

A Gift of Dharma for 1.8.10

Today’s quote is yet another from our friend and former Naropa University professor Dr. Reginald A. Ray, whom I previously quoted and wrote a little biography for here.  This is it–a quote recently posted on the Dharma Ocean Foundation’s webpage:

“I’m helping others” is an especially seductive thought. It can be an excuse for all kinds of mindlessness and ignorance, and cause us to overlook our own self-serving motivation. It can even become a welcome excuse to abandon our practice. When our minds are filled with the thought, “I’m helping others,” it usually means that we aren’t helping anyone, even ourselves.

Your Obligatory Brit Hume Update

This is where I’d remind you about the Brit Hume saga before giving you the latest updates, but you probably know the drill by now.

First, the Associated Press offered a brief piece yesterday about the upset among Buddhists over Hume’s comments.  The AP interviewed Robert Thurman, Brad Warner, Stephen Prothero, James William Coleman, and Tricycle editor and publisher James Shaheen for the article. 

Predictably, Pat Robertson applauded Hume for what he said this week.

Finally, over at the Religion News Service’s fabulous Religion News Blog, Kevin Eckstrom points us to Christianity Today reporter Sarah Pulliam Bailey’s conversation with Hume, in which she got him to expand on his comments.  Among other things, he said:

Instead of urging that Tiger Woods turn to Christianity, if I had said what he needed to do was to strengthen his Buddhist commitment or turn to Hinduism, I don’t think anybody would have said a word. It’s Christ and Christianity that get people stirred up.

I can’t speak for everyone, but that’s actually not what bothered me.  What gets me is the way Hume turned religion into a “mine-is-better-than-yours” contest.  Odd as it may be for him as a newsman to do, couldn’t Hume talk about the virtues of his chosen religion without explicitly denigrating another?  (And, yes, denigrating is what he did–that’s what it means to belittle or disparage something.)  That’s what irks me.

Richard Gere in Bodh Gaya for His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s Teachings

This via TMZ, courtesy of our friend Kerry Lucinda Brown:

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