|
Lao tzu’s Tao Te Ching
-
The philosophical teaching of the sage Lao tzu is,
according to some sources, around two and half thousand
years old and it is usually not considered to be very
understandable or topical. However, Květoslav Minařík
considered Lao tzu to be a sage, who described the world
and pointed out what makes it bad or good. The inner
causes of evil which affects the world were clear to him
and he knew that only goodness and selflessness can
remove them from the world. This ancient Chinese sage
addresses his message to all people. Květoslav Minařík
understood his teaching beyond the borders of ages,
different civilisations and imperfect translation,
because he has himself achieved corresponding spiritual
experiences. Thanks to this he makes in his comments the
ancient teaching of Lao Tzu understandable to his
contemporaries as a highly topical challenge.
Excerpt:
The sage is active, because they have found out that
they have obtained the body by means of deeds or
activity. A body, obtained in this way, binds a person
to be active. For, if they are not active, their
existence will occur in demolition pressures; mental
decline and problems with the body will appear. And
those who can see beyond the moment of death will
realise that inactivity is a path to disintegration of
individuality, to which no one, who is selflessly
active, is exposed. The sage’s effort to be intensively
active stems from this knowledge. However, because they
recognise that activity can have a darkening effect as
well, they are active in a totally selfless way, i.e.
for the sake of the activity itself. Such activity has
a close relationship to te, because it brings out tao,
the same way as the renunciation of the world.
Therefore, the sage reaches tao by activity, while
a common person loses it. Reaching tao is conditional on
the presence of te, the loss of tao is caused by the
absence of te, or, in other words, by the presence of
selfishness in activity. |