What sort of religion can it be without compassion? You need to show compassion to all living beings. Compassion is the root of all religious faiths.
Basavanna Vachana
Compassion Is The Root
Topic: Interfaith Pathways
“What sort of religion can it be without compassion? You need to show compassion to all living beings. Compassion is the root of all religious faiths.”
Hinduism
Basavanna Vachana
Wilson, Andrew, editor. World Scripture - a Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts. Paragon House, 1991, p. 684 [Basavanna, Vachana 247].
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Basavanna, Vachana 247
“What sort of religion can it be without compassion? You need to show compassion to all living beings. Compassion is the root of all religious faiths.”
The Charter for Compassion by Karen Armstrong
So if religion is not about believing things, what is it about? What I’ve found, across the board, is that religion is about behaving differently. Instead of deciding whether or not you believe in God, first you do something. You behave in a committed way, and then you begin to understand the truths of religion. And religious doctrines are meant to be summons to action; you only understand them when you put them into practice.
Now, pride of place in this practice is given to compassion. And it is an arresting fact that right across the board, in every single one of the major world faiths, compassion — the ability to feel with the other in the way we’ve been thinking about this evening — is not only the test of any true religiosity, it is also what will bring us into the presence of what Jews, Christians and Muslims call “God” or the “Divine.” It is compassion, says the Buddha, which brings you to Nirvana. Why? Because in compassion, when we feel with the other, we dethrone ourselves from the center of our world and we put another person there. And once we get rid of ego, then we’re ready to see the Divine.
And in particular, every single one of the major world traditions has highlighted — has said — and put at the core of their tradition what’s become known as the Golden Rule. First propounded by Confucius five centuries before Christ: “Do not do to others what you would not like them to do to you.” That, he said, was the central thread which ran through all his teaching and that his disciples should put into practice all day and every day. And it was — the Golden Rule would bring them to the transcendent value that he called “ren,” human-heartedness, which was a transcendent experience in itself.
–Karen Armstrong [My wish: The Charter for Compassion].