I knew next to nothing about pureland Buddhism before coming across this site and others like it. As I had begun reading “The Other Buddhism” by Caroline Brazier I decided to join to explore more. I am not used to posting on forums much about my own experiences feeling they were not likely to be of interest to anyone else but this seems a friendly forum that encourages contributions from anyone so I thought I’d have a go.
Coming from a Christian perspective I was struck by the similarities between Honen’s discovery of the near-impossibility of self-perfection and that of St Paul as he describes it in his New Testament letters. Of course there are differences but the essential discovery of one’s powerlessness to pull oneself up by one’s bootstraps seems the same. It is an experience I relate to. So I began to think in my daily life about Amida. I have not yet heard chanting Namo Amida Bu and have not found it easy to chant, or even think this phrase with any sense of meaning or of being in contact with any being. I have found, though, that Amida would come to mind on those frequent occasions when I was dissatisfied with myself in some way. Amida’s first lesson seems to have been to make me very aware of how much I nag and condemn myself for all kinds of failings. I had some awareness of this before and have tried to stop it, but now it’s more a matter of just thinking of Amida as a being who is not judging me but accepting me as I am -- including those faults plus the additional fault of self-condemnation. To remember Amida instantly changes the mood and allows a self-acceptance to follow.
Today I also remembered Amida in the middle of bout of mental criticisms against someone else. Previously I’ve found those moods have a certain momentum and even telling myself to stop it is often not effective. This time it was different. Remembering Amida was enough to blow away those negative thoughts; I just relaxed and let it go. It’s as if I have a new friend who is always there to help me and make easy those changes I’d found hard before. Of course, this is still just skimming the surface of pureland Buddhism; there is a great deal I still don’t know. Also I can feel quite scared at times about letting go of Christianity -- not the religion as such, but a feeling of disloyalty to the person of Christ, for whom I still have a deep regard and a feeling of gratitude. But at 56 it is not surprising that I might find the possibility of changing my religion a bit more difficult than changing my socks. So I still regard myself as an explorer rather than a committed Buddhist.
I would welcome any comments on this post.
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