Christianity And Doubt Research Paper

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In Catholicism, one of the many temptations that can be wrought in the mind that is not prayerful is the temptation to doubt the faith and its tenets. The Catholic Church differentiates between doubt and legitimate questioning. Doubt, it says, is that emotional state in which we call into question that which has already been sufficiently proven or shown. This emotional state is contrary to reason and since God’s nature is reasonable, consenting to such a state of irrational doubt is an act against the very nature of God. Additionally, freely consenting to the sin of doubt can have disastrous consequences such as abandoning the Catholic faith without sufficient cause or disobeying the commands of God’s law. Legitimate questioning, on the other …show more content…

Just as in Catholicism, Buddhists are encouraged to ask questions about what the Buddhist tradition holds, what the Buddha taught and did, and why things are the way that they are. These questions, it is hoped, will enlighten the path of the individual so that he or she can maneuver through his or her life in such a way as to eventually obtain a state of perfect equanimity. This is parallel to the Catholic teaching on questioning as it states that questioning, in its legitimate and reasonable form, has the potential to lead an individual into greater holiness, piety, and conformity with God’s will. Here again, the disparity in belief between the Buddhist and Catholic beliefs is vast while there is almost no disparity in …show more content…

The very similar (although admittedly not identical) practices of Christian prayer and Buddhist meditation. Buddhist meditation does not center around divinity, but rather around sensation and around mindful experience of sensation. In the practicing of meditation, the Buddhist focuses his or her mind and attempts to maintain focus throughout meditation. He or she may enter into another mental state, one of controlled joy, if the meditation is successful (depending, of course, on the type of meditation being employed and what the Buddhist is focusing on). The long term goal of meditation is to fundamentally change the way that the Buddhist operates in the world and the way that the Buddhist thinks about the world. The change that should be wrought by meditation is for the Buddhist to grown in wisdom so as to progress toward

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