Abraham J. Heschel's Holiness The XIV Dalai Lama

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One of the most controversial topics in our world today is the idea of God. I will write my paper on how His Holiness the XIV Dalai Lama and rabbi Abraham J. Heschel address the issue of a transcendent. People struggle with the continuous issue of whether or not God is real. They also struggle with the thought that if God is real, what is the purpose or what are you supposed to do with God in your life? Do you believe you were created by a supreme being with a specific purpose on how to live your life? Do you believe that there is a transcendent reality without a God? Or do you believe you were simply created by chance and the world just has a scientific reason for everything? “Christianity is a religion seeing a metaphysics while Buddhism …show more content…
He says, “Religions that have the concept of such a God prohibit their followers from questioning “the word of God” or even rejecting it- even if it should contradict their critical common sense…. For us the focus is not on God but on enlightenment” (Grimm 140). Unlike the Dalai Lama, Heschel uses his Jewish beliefs to emphasize that there is one transcendent he refers to as God. He says, “God is not a hypothesis derived from logical assumptions, but an immediate insight, self-evident as light.” (Heschel, I asked for wonder 25) Their beliefs on the transcendent as a single God or a state of mind are both quite different for obvious …show more content…
Heschel. I found many things interesting while I was researching for this topic. Most of all I found a love for both of their strong passions for their beliefs. I love how Heschel explains God as ineffable. I have honestly never heard this word before I was in this class reading this book. I also enjoy his holiness’s peace about everything. “Of the many problems we face today, some are natural calamities and must be accepted and faced with equanimity. Others, however, are of our own making, created by misunderstanding, and can be corrected.” (That no matter how bad a situation is he teaches that our reactions could cause suffering and that we must think of the greater

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