- 07 Dec 2015 07:45
#14629548
I was thinking about this earlier and a thought occurred to me. Many people have never even tried to transform themselves through religion or spirituality. That makes me kind of sad. It is also possible for someone to take part in a religion superficially but not do anything sacrificial (and therefore difficult) in order to improve themselves. I think this is what Gandhi meant by being active in a church but not its gospel. There's a wide and interesting world of religious faith out there if people would take the plunge and try it out but it can't really be done if you aren't willing to risk or sacrifice anything.
Religion Without Sacrifice
Without sacrifice we may become active in a church but remain inactive in its gospel. In other words, we go for the social facade of religion and the piety of religious practices. There is no real walking with people or going the second mile or trying to deal with our social problems that may eventually undo our economic system. It takes sacrifice to serve the needs of other people - the sacrifice of our own pride and prejudice, among other things.
If a church or religion is seen as just another hierarchical system, its members won't have a sense of service or inner workship. Instead they will be into outward observances and all the visible accoutrements of religion. But they are neither God-centered nor principle-centered.
The principles of three of the Seven Habits pertain to how we deal with other people, how we serve them, how we sacrifice for them, how we contribute. Habits 4, 5 and 6 - win-win interdependency, empathy, and synergy - require tremendous sacrifice. I've come to believe that they require a broken heart and a contrite spirit - and that, for some, is the ultimate sacrifice. For example, I once observed a marriage where there were frequent arguments. One thought came to me : "These two people must have a broken heart and a contrite spirit toward each other or this union will never last." You can't have a oneness, a unity, without humility. Pride and selfishness will destroy the union between man and god, between man and woman, between man and man, between self and self.
The great servant leaders have that humility, the hallmark of inner religion. I know a few CEOs who are humble servant leaders - who sacrifice their pride and share their power - and I can say that their influence both inside and outside their companies is multiplied because of it. Sadly, many people want "religion," or at least the appearance of it, without any sacrifice. They want more spirituality but would never miss a meal in meaningful fasting or do one act of anonymous service to achieve it.
I was thinking about this earlier and a thought occurred to me. Many people have never even tried to transform themselves through religion or spirituality. That makes me kind of sad. It is also possible for someone to take part in a religion superficially but not do anything sacrificial (and therefore difficult) in order to improve themselves. I think this is what Gandhi meant by being active in a church but not its gospel. There's a wide and interesting world of religious faith out there if people would take the plunge and try it out but it can't really be done if you aren't willing to risk or sacrifice anything.
Orb Team Re-Assemble!