The equivalent to “suck it up” in my generation was “life is
tough, and then you die.” That appears to be the theme of “Death” by Shelly
Kagan, reviewed in this morning’s WSJ. In the review, Andrew Stark summarizes
the Buddhist view and the existentialist take nicely.
Summarizing a summary is
a good writing exercise, so here goes:
A practicing Buddhist works at letting go of self focus.
When he dies, there is nothing to lose. For the existentialist, self is all
there is. The end of self (death) gives value to a life well lived. In the
philosophical sense, nothing is important to the Buddhist and making good
choices about how to spend the time you have is important to the existentialist.
Two paths: not doing and doing. There is much to admire in these views,
humility and courage among them.
This clarity helps me better understand my own path. For
those who practice the Christian faith, death is not the end. Self focus requires
a modification to love God and your neighbor as you love yourself. One day after death you will stand before your God and explain yourself.
To the existentialist point, many scriptures guide us in the area of choices. The difference to the Christian is that it is God who sets the agenda and not we ourselves.
To the existentialist point, many scriptures guide us in the area of choices. The difference to the Christian is that it is God who sets the agenda and not we ourselves.
For the Christian, how we live our lives determines what
kind of an experience we will have after death. I would so rather hear my King
say, “well done good and faithful servant” than hear fading applause or nothing
at all.
1 comment:
Yes, to be a sheep on His right, not a goat on His left. To hear those long awaited words " well done"
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