Mathia Lee ~ Plans and Preoccupations

Tapping from schools of wisdom

Posted in religion, Social Commentary by mathialee on September 26, 2010

If a particular school of wisdom has been passed down through hundreds or thousands of years of humanity, I would be inclined to believe that there must be something about it worth learning. It’s like your youtube number of viewers, right? If 23 million people have viewed a video, there’s likely to be something about it worth watching? So I suppose it must be the same with religions. Religions here being taken as schools of wisdom that has gone viral, has been ‘viewed’ and ‘favourited’ and ‘shared’ through thousands of years. And of course, one hopes that after all this time, the crap has been lost and only the wisdom been distilled and viral-ised.

It’s in this spirit that I’ve recently got together with a few friends to discuss these different schools of religion. With one group of Christian friends, we’ve come together to discuss what Christianity really entails, what’s the parts that are adulterated by culture, politics, economics etc etc. Not your usual Bible-flipping or songs-singing cell group. With another group of friends, these Buddhists, we’ve come together to discuss what various concepts of Buddhism really mean in a tangible fashion, eg ‘does Non-Attachment make one less involved in things that others claim we should be passionate about? How does Non-Attachment work in relationships? What do anything if everything is impermanent?’ It’s all fascinating! With the Singapore Humanism Meetup group, it’s yet another bunch of friends discussing how to live an ethical life, or other topics like education, sexual ethics, death etc from a humanistic, atheistic point of view. In a more organized fashion, I’ve also been involved in interfaith dialogue groups hosted by different faith institutions and facilitated by trained interfaith dialogue facilitators. Last year I had the privilege of undergoing this training, and have since facilitated quite a few dialogues. These dialogues are great opportunities to hear from so many faith perspectives in one single session, on topics such as evil, death, the mundane life, to topics such as politics, violence, sports. Recently a few friends involved in different areas of community work got together to organize a dialogue between faith communities and LGBT communities (http://benjamincheah.wordpress.com/2010/08/01/bridging-worlds/ ) which I’ll blog more on soon.

The beauty – and quality – of such dialogues are only as good as the participants. A lot of critical, questioning dialogues have traditionally been taking place only amongst religions leaders or academics. Amongst the common folk, it’s usually a one-way absorption of the “right” teachings from a leader or book. I think I must have been born with the genes that prevent me from just sitting down and absorbing without questioning. Just can’t do that. These dialogues and conversations I’m involved in are attended by people from all walks of life (ok, almost. It tends to be attended more by professionals than blue-collar). We’ve got journalists, scientists, engineers, educators, bankers, economists, lawyers, doctors and of course your religious leaders too. Each one brings with them to the conversation a whole school of secular wisdom. Everyone’s views are equally authoritative/unauthoritative and valid/invalid as the religious leaders’. The religious leader doesn’t “teach” the religious teaching, but rather, offers his/her own perspective as someone tasked to teach others. What we get is a potluck buffet spread of all the different schools of wisdom, and the accompanying condiments of criticisms to each. You get to taste every one, yet you’re not forced to eat any one. It’s beautiful.

Until very recently, such home-based informal religious groups were not regulated by any authorities. Anyone was free to form such groups and teach/preach at home (tho’ are cell groups an ‘illegal gathering’?? hmmm!)  However, due to the growing concern of extremist teachings, only a MUIS-certified religious teacher can teach/preach, even within informal groups. I’m not sure if similar regulations have been put in place for other religions, but I’ve not heard of them. How does one balance religious freedom, independence from State control, versus public safety from potential terrorist cells? Tricky one, and perhaps a great topic for discussion next! =)

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  1. [...] the universe and everything – Mathia Lee: Tapping from schools of wisdom – Chemical Generation Singapore: Finally, Singapore and G20 – Empty Vessel: It is easier to write [...]


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