• SEPARATION FROM FAMILY

    From Jim Singleton@RICKSBBS to All on Wed May 27 06:21:55 2026
    SEPARATION FROM FAMILY


    While the family which is imbued with God's love can realize one of
    the great purposes of life, and it is indeed a joy to be a member of such
    a family, oftentimes the person who is called to follow a spiritual call-
    ing finds attachment to family and relations a hindrance on the path. The members of his family may not understand his passion for the spiritual
    life. They may not respect his lack of concern for material wealth and
    worldly success--which they take as the all-important values--as he
    pursues what he regards as a higher purpose. Hence they may come to
    oppose him and seek to tempt him away from the religious life.

    The passages given below describe this most painful struggle be-
    tween the aspirant and the possessive and ignorant members of his family.
    He is commanded to love God and his religious teacher more than his father
    and mother and brothers and sisters. He is warned to beware of other
    family members who would betray his trust and tempt him into sin. Entry
    into the religious life may even require the aspirant to leave his family, divorce his wife, and abandon his children and property. Some scriptures describe family ties as attachments, which partake of illusion and which
    are to be overcome in order to achieve tranquillity, enlightenment, and
    union with God.

    To reject one's family is an extreme position, and several more
    moderate courses are suggested in the last group of texts. Believers may constitute new families which are devoted to God. Or they may find a way
    to live within families yet maintain a detached perspective, "in the world
    yet not of the world." This latter position will be treated further in
    the next section.


    Do not think that I have come to bring peace on earth; I have come not to
    bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his
    father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against
    her mother-in-law; and a man's foes will be those of his own household.
    He who loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; and he who loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me.

    Christianity. Matthew 10.34-37


    O believers, take not your fathers and brothers to be your friends, if
    they prefer unbelief to belief; whosoever of you takes them for friends, those--they are the evildoers.

    Say, "If your fathers, your sons, your brothers, your wives, your clan,
    your possessions that you have gained, commerce you fear may slacken,
    dwellings you love--if these are dearer to you than God and His Messenger,
    and to struggle in His way, then wait till God brings His command: God
    guides not the people of the ungodly."

    Islam. Qur'an 9.23-24


    You who believe! Among your wives and your children there are enemies for
    you; therefore beware of them.... Your wealth and your children are only
    a temptation, whereas God, with Him is an immense reward.

    Islam. Qur'an 64.14-15


    Put no trust in a neighbor,
    have no confidence in a friend;
    guard the doors of your mouth
    from her who lies in your bosom;
    for the son treats the father with contempt,
    the daughter rises up against her mother,
    the daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law;
    a man's enemies are the men of his own house.
    But as for me, I will look to the Lord,
    I will wait for the God of my salvation;
    my God will hear me.

    Judaism and Christianity. Micah 7.5-7


    The thin skin that covers the stomach
    Does not allow us to see the interior of a treacherous person.
    Keep your secret to yourself; never share it with any man.
    There's no honest man nowadays,
    All people are now deceitful.
    The person we asked to help us rub our back with a sponge,
    Added thorns to the sponge in his hand.
    The person we asked to help us blow dust from our eyes,
    First put some pepper in his mouth.
    The man on whose generosity we rested assured
    To obtain and enjoy sweet oranges,
    Gave us sour oranges to suck.
    The man we wished to confide in,

    Turned out to be a garrulous person.
    When people make themselves your close associates,
    Be cautious; confide only in yourself.
    Only in yourself.

    African Traditional Religions. Yoruba Song (Nigeria)


    Now the Lord said to Abram, "Go from your country and your kindred and
    your father's house to the land that I will show you..."

    Judaism and Christianity. Genesis 12.1


    Every one who has left houses or brothers or sisters or father or mother
    or children or lands, for my name's sake, will receive a hundredfold, and inherit eternal life.

    Christianity. Matthew 19.29


    He who forsakes his home in the cause of God, finds in the earth many a
    refuge, wide and spacious; should he die as a refugee from home for God
    and His Apostle, his reward becomes due and sure with God: and God is Oft-forgiving, Most Merciful.

    Islam. Qur'an 4.100


    In awe of my lord's command,
    I skirt the coastal borders and
    Traverse the plain of the sea,
    --Leaving father and mother behind.

    Shinto. Man'yoshu XX


    One day she who was formerly the mate of the venerable Sangamaji came
    towards him, drew near and said, "Recluse, support me with our little
    child." At these words the venerable Sangamaji was silent. So a second
    time and yet a third time his former wife repeated her words, and still
    the venerable Sangamaji was silent. Thereupon she set down the child in
    front of him and went away, saying, "Here is your child, recluse! Support him!" But the venerable Sangamaji neither looked at the child nor spoke
    to him. When from a distance she saw this, she thought to herself, "This recluse needs not even his own child." So she turned back, took up the
    child and went away.

    Buddhism. Udana 5-6


    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Qur'an 4.100: The Companions of Muhammad had to leave their homes and families in the face of persecution, particularly in the emigration (hejrat) from Mecca to Medina. Udana 5-6: Cf. Vinaya Pitaka i.43, p. 605.
    - - - - - - - - - - - -


    How could I be diligent, good Shariputta, when there are my parents to
    support, my wife and children to support, my slaves, servants and work-
    people to support, when there are services to perform for friends and acquaintances, services to perform for kith and kin, services to perform
    for guests, rites to perform for the ancestors, rites to perform for the
    gods, duties to perform for the king--and this body too must be satisfied
    and looked after!

    What do you think, Dhananjani? Suppose someone failed to live the holy
    life because of his parents [and so on]; because of this failure... the guardians of Niraya hell might drag him off to their hell. Would he gain anything by saying, "I failed to live the holy life because of my parents
    [and so forth]?"

    Buddhism. Majjhima Nikaya ii.186-87


    We have instructed man to treat his parents kindly. Yet if they should
    strive to make you associate anything with Me which you have no knowledge
    of, do not obey them.

    Islam. Qur'an 29.8


    If any one comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and
    wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple.

    Christianity. Luke 14.26


    From concern with family, all the concerns of life, arise attachment.
    Discard attachment from which arises doings that are totally evil.
    Brother! discard your detachment and illusion--
    Then will the holy Name in your heart and body disport.

    Sikhism. Adi Granth, Asa M.1, p. 356


    Free from selfish attachment, they do not get compulsively entangled even
    in home and family. They are even-minded through good fortune and bad.
    Their devotion to me is undivided. Enjoying solitude and not following
    the crowd, they seek only me. This is true knowledge, to seek the Self as
    the true end of wisdom always. To seek anything else is ignorance.

    Hinduism. Bhagavad Gita 13.9-11


    If a man does anything for the sake of his happiness in another world, to
    the detriment of those whom he is bound to maintain, that produces evil
    results for him, both while he lives and when he is dead.

    Hinduism. Laws of Manu 11.10


    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Majjhima Nikaya ii.186-87: Cf. 1 Corinthians 7.32-35, p. 948. Luke 14.26: In this hard saying, the injunction to hate one's parents is understood in the same way as to hate one's own life: it is a matter of hating any ties and attachments which have become fetters to the disciple's devotion to God and Christ and his will. Cf. Sun Myung Moon, 4-3-83, p. 898. Bhagavad Gita 13.9-11: Cf. Kularnava Tantra 2, p. 879. Laws of Manu 11.10: This is a typical expression of ambivalence about the path of the shramana. Cf. Mahabharata 1.220, p. 950.
    - - - - - - - - - - - -


    I have always been solitary; I belong to none else; I behold no one whom I
    can say I belong to nor do I behold one whom I can designate as mine. The
    path of worldliness is nothing but disaster. Who, whose, and where are
    one's kith and kin? Who, whose, and where are strangers, all going round
    in cycles of birth and death? At times, the kith and kin become strang-
    ers, and vice versa. Ponder thus, "I am all alone. Nobody was mine in
    the past, nor will ever be in the future. It is because of my karmas that
    I delude myself and consider others as mine. The truth is that I was
    alone in the past and will ever be all alone."

    Jainism. Acarangasutra 4.32


    He who is kind toward much-beloved friends loses his own good from his
    mind, becoming partial; observing such danger in friendship, let one walk
    alone like a rhinoceros.

    As a spreading bush of bamboo is entangled in various ways, so is the
    longing for children and wives: not clinging to these, even like a bamboo
    just sprouting forth, let one walk alone like a rhinoceros....

    If one lives in the midst of company, love of amusement and desire arises; strong attachment for children arises; let therefore one who dislikes separation, which must happen sooner or later from these beloved, walk
    alone like a rhinoceros....

    Having abandoned the different kinds of desire, founded on child, wife,
    father, mother, wealth, corn, relations, let one walk alone like a
    rhinoceros.

    Let a wise man, having discovered that such is attachment, that there is
    in it but little happiness, that it is but insipid, that there is more affliction in it than comfort, that it is a fishhook, walk alone like a rhinoceros.

    Having cast off the bonds, like a fish which breaks the net in the water,
    like a fire that returns not to the spot already burned up, let one walk
    alone like a rhinoceros.

    Buddhism. Sutta Nipata 37-62: Rhinoceros Discourse


    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Acarangasutra 4.32: This is the declaration of the Jain who leaves home
    for the life of a solitary monk. It is also an ontological statement
    about human existence which is held in some form by all the religions of
    India; cf. Laws of Manu 4.238-39, p. 338; Gauri, M.5, p. 330. Sutta
    Nipata 37-62: Vv.37-38, 41, 60-62. The rhinoceros-like aloofness recomm-
    ended by this discourse is meant for monks still in training, for whom the attachments of family and friends might be distractions and obstacles to Nibbana. For those firmly established in enlightenment, family and
    friends should be no obstacles at all--see the excerpt from the Garland
    Sutra, below, and Holy Teaching of Vimalakirti 2, p. 965. Cf. Parable of
    the Mustard Seed, pp. 381f.
    - - - - - - - - - - - -


    And [Jesus'] mother and his brothers came; and standing outside they sent
    to him and called him. And a crowd was sitting about him; and they said
    to him, "Your mother and your brothers are outside, asking for you." And
    he replied, "Who are my mother and my brothers?" And looking around on
    those who sat about him, he said, "Here are my mother and my brothers!
    Whoever does the will of God is my brother, and sister, and mother."

    Christianity. Mark 3.31-35


    It is not for the sake of the husband, my beloved, that the husband is
    dear, but for the sake of the Self.

    It is not for the sake of the wife, my beloved, that the wife is dear, but
    for the sake of the Self.

    It is not for the sake of the children, my beloved, that the children are
    dear, but for the sake of the Self.

    Hinduism. Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 2.4.4-5


    Enlightening beings at home
    Should wish that all beings
    Realize the nature of "home" is empty
    And escape its pressures.

    While serving their parents,
    They should wish that all beings
    Serve the Buddha,
    Protecting and nourishing everyone.

    While with their spouses and children,
    They should wish that all beings
    Be impartial toward everyone
    And forever give up attachment.

    When attaining desires,
    They should wish that all beings
    Pull out the arrow of lust
    And realize ultimate peace.

    Buddhism. Garland Sutra 11


    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Mark 3.31-35: Jesus spent long hours teaching his disciples, to the dismay
    of his family. When they tried to call him out, Jesus rebuked them thus.
    The Gospels reveal that Jesus was misunderstood and alienated from his
    family. At the marriage at Cana (John 2.3-4), when Jesus' mother asked
    him to perform a miracle and provide wine for the wedding, he said to her, "Woman, what have you to do with me? My hour has not yet come," suggest-
    ing that she had but a shallow understanding of his mission. See also
    Mark 6.1-4, p. 601. Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 2.4.4-5: The Self refers to Ultimate Reality immanent in the heart, and certainly not to the egoistic
    self. Garland Sutra 11: Cf. Holy Teaching of Vimalakirti 2, p. 965.
    - - - - - - - - - - - -


    Jim Singleton
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
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