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Yesterday I was clever, so I wanted to change the world. Today I am wise, so I am changing myself.
Rumi



We write beautiful maxims; but are we well imbued with them, and are we putting them into practice?
Epictetus



One Little Angel is proud to present

God Love All Beings
Quotes from the World Religion

A Proper Understanding of Religion

It is essential to have proper understanding of what religion is all about. The Chinese word for religion is 宗教 (Zong-jiao). The character 宗 (Zong) means ‘main,’ ‘important,’ or ‘noble and esteemed.’ The character 教 (Jiao) means ‘education,’ ‘teachings,’ or ‘actions that serve to moralise, civilise or enlighten humanity.’ Put together, 宗教 (Zong-jiao) means ‘the main education,’ ‘the important teachings,’ and ‘the noble, esteemed actions that moralise, civilise, or enlighten people.’ Observing closely every major religion’s sacred scriptures and history of education, we can see that the principal contents of religious teachings can be classified into four categories: morality, ethics, causality and sacred wisdom.

Master Chin Kung
Automn 2017, Hong-Kong

God Love All Beings - Quotes from the World Religion

Commentary by Master Chin Kung :

This commentary on God Loves All Beings - Quotes from the World Religion by Master Chin Kung was produced between 2018 and 2019 and recorded at the UNESCO. Although intended for a Buddhist audience, the commentary is remarkably open-minded regarding the teachings of all religions and as such deserves to be read by everyone, believers and non-believers alike.

- Conference 1: Introduction of the association at UNESCO and its role;
- Conferences 2 to 4: Introduction of the conference series God loves all beings.
- Lectures 5 to 8: commentary on Bahá'í texts.
- Lectures 9 to 23: commentary on Buddhist texts.

Vidéos:




Inter-Faiths Dialogue



Quotes of the Day
The Avadhuta Gita

I am neither created nor uncreated, for I have always been here.
I am neither deluded nor undeluded, for I have always been here.
I am neither of light nor of darkness, for I have always been here.
I am the Bliss, I am the Truth, I am the Boundless Sky.

How can I speak of having desires or not having desires?
How can I speak about attachment or non-attachment?
How can I speak about God as being real or unreal?
I am the Bliss, I am the Truth, I am the Boundless Sky.

That One is everything-
How can I say it is one?
How can I say it is more than one?
How can I say it is eternal or non eternal?
I am the Bliss, I am the Truth, I am the Boundless Sky.

It is neither solid nor subtle.
Neither appearing nor disappearing.
It is without beginning, middle, or end.
It is neither above nor below.
This is the secret of the Ultimate Truth.
I am the Bliss, I am the Truth, I am the Boundless Sky.

All your senses are like clouds;
All they show is an endless mirage.
The Radiant One is neither bound nor free.
I am the Bliss, I am the Truth, I am the Boundless Sky.

Dear one, I am not unknowable nor hidden.
I am not imperceivable nor lost.
I am not near nor far.
I am the Bliss, I am the Truth,
I am the Boundless Sky.

[…]

I have no actions that bring regret or misery.
I have no thoughts that bring pain or suffering.
I have no sense of "me" or "mine."
I am the Bliss, I am the Truth, I am the Boundless Sky.

Avadhuta Gita

[more quotes from The Avadhuta Gita]

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One Little Angel is proud to present
Scriptures 360
by


Religious cohesion, bringing religion back to education and mutual learning amongst religious groups can foster social harmony and promote world peace. Venerable Master Chin Kung encouraged practitioners of different faiths to select 360 passages of the most essential teachings in their respective sacred texts, and compiled them into Scriptures 360, for the convenience of the general public.

This set of books is compiled by:
- Members of the Toowoomba Interfaith Working Group (Queensland, Australia),
- Syed Hassan Al-Atas (Imam and Head of Ba alwie Mosque Singapore),
- Reverend Master Lee Zhiwang (President of Taoist Mission Singapore),
- Mr K. Rajamanikam (Singapore)



Bahai
Buddhism
Christianity
Hinduism
Islam
Jainism
Judaism
Sikhism
Taoism
Zoroastrianism





Biography of the Day
Chang Tsai

Chang was a native of Ch'ang-an in modern Shensi, four years junior to Chou Tun-i. Chang was son of a prefect. At twenty-one he wrote to and then saw the outstanding scholar official, Fan Chung-yen (989-1052), who told him to study the Doctrine of the Mean. He started his search from Confucianism through Buddhism and Taoism and back to Confucianism, especially the Book of Changes and the Doctrine of the Mean, which eventually formed the basis of his own philosophy. He obtained a "presented scholar" degree in 1057 and was appointed a magistrate. In 1069 he pleased the ...




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