Religion

This is a selection from an article about Alberto Salazar, the famous marathoner from the 80s. He almost died from heart disease, and his religious faith helped him move on.

The pilgrimage transformed Salazar. He sold his restaurant and bar in Eugene and moved to Portland to work for Nike. He attended Mass daily, observed the sacraments, fasted twice a week and repudiated his arrogant ways. He sought to become more patient and generous. To a remarkable degree, Salazar succeeded, but not without cost. When he told acquaintances about the source of his change — apparitions of the Holy Mother, silver chains turning gold — they tended to edge away.

nytimes.com


If you changed "attended Mass daily, observed the sacraments, fasted twice a week and repudiated his arrogant ways. He sought to become more patient and generous. " to "meditated daily, observed awakened states, fasted..., repudiated... He sought to...", it would sound quite similar to the monastic traditions as presented in many Buddhists texts, and perhaps what searching laypersons try to do as well. I think they all have a similar message packaged differently, but the millenia have laden the different religions with man-made social and cultural baggage. I'm decided non-Catholic, but I'm respectful of his faith and the role it has played in keeping him grounded in a chaotic world. We should all strive to find that balance of heart, whether through officially religious or non-religious means.

Peace

p.s. and i find it strange that both the NYTimes and SportsIllustrated have big articles on Salazar this week. go figure.

Comments

amidnightrider said…
I saw a news report from North Korea recently that showed doctors doing cataract surgury on the locals. When they were released they would go to a picture of Kim and give praise to him for curing them.

Many of the religious people laughed at that. I asked if they would laugh if it was a picture of Jesus.

People can't accept that things happen without the intervention of some invisible being living in the sky.
LvilleTex said…
Agreed. I'm not supporting the Great Deity's need to "cure" Salazar. I find it more interesting the effects of internal faith. The mind is a powerful, and sometimes, dangerous thing. Like the analogy though.

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